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Monthly Agricultural Report. 
77 
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MONTHLY AGRICULTURAL REPORT. 
‘ 
— 
HE weather has, for some time past, 
been the prominent agricultural topic. 
Since our last report, we have had a second 
' edition of storm and rain, fortunately, not 
ey 
_ Sheep, and the Swine. 
with additions. The rain which has lately 
fallen, however, has, in some measure, baf- 
fled those flattering hopes, encouraged by a 
few drying days. The farmers. of sound 
and dry uplands are little affected, and are 
by no means prone to complaint; astate of 
mind to which the universal ample prices 
no little contribute. As we before stated,. 
this is not precisely the case with their - 
brethren on soils of an opposite descrip- 
tion, who, beyond all doubt, have suffered 
heayily, throughout this summer-like 
dropsical and boisterous winter. ‘The loss 
of sheep from the rot, consequent on ex- 
posure, has been considerable, especially in 
Kent, where the repetition of the same mis- 
fortune, in every wet winter season, is in- 
fallible, and where the experience of ages 
has worked no improvement. Not being 
sorich, the continental shepherds are more 
| provident, and venture not to expose their 
property to such needless risks. ‘Those 
who desire to see a practical investigation 
of this interesting subject, we refer to the 
General Treatise on Cattle, the Ox, the 
The depredations 
of the slug and wireworm are said to be 
greatly on the increase, and that a very 
considerable breadth of wheat on the low 
lands, is so much thinned, that it cannot be 
_ventured to stand for a crop.—Much 
spring wheat will accordingly. be sown 
in the present season. On the best 
lands, wheats look well universally. The 
business of the fatting-stall and the fodder- 
ing-yard never went on more prosperously ; 
hdy and.turnips, and all kinds of green food 
being in the utmost plenty. The turnips 
on all but dry soils, if large, are watery and 
deficient in goodness. Ploughing for the 
spring crops is sufficiently forward on all 
favourable soils. Bean planting has com- 
menced, No complaint of a surplus of 
labourers as heretofore. Wool inclining to 
be arising market. Hops rather the re- 
yerse. A never failing demand, at high 
prices, for all kinds of live stock, fat and 
lean. Good horses, worth any price that 
can be demanded for them, and the export 
trade increasing; a certain other kind of 
trade in them not yet diminished. The 
worth of young racing stock beyond all 
precedent. Among the speculations ex- 
cited by the superabundant capital of this 
country, ‘timber, planting seems coming 
upon the tapis: but in reference to our 
great 
