284 INDIGO. 



gation enable the culti- 

 vator to supply his crop 

 at the proper moment 

 with the necessary quan- 

 tity of water and no 

 more, which is a grand 

 desideratum in Indigo 

 planting. It has too 

 been successfully culti- 

 vated in Upper Sindh, 

 the quality of that pro- 

 duced being good, but 

 the ignorance of the 

 Sindh manufacturer 

 spoils the article, which 

 consequently never re- 

 alizes a fair price, as the 

 cakes are invariably 

 broken from irregularity 

 in their form. I have 

 seen Indigo of excellent 

 quality grown in Meer 

 Ali Moorad's country, 

 and endeavoured to pro- 

 cure a man thoroughly 

 versed in the process of 



