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fome places a part of turnips or potatoes; the 

 whole dung made upon the farm laid upon 

 cither of thefe crops ; the whole fummer 

 dung plowed in in autumn ; the dung made 

 in the winter and fpring alfo plowed in, 

 whenever the feafon anfwers. The beans and 

 peafe to be fown as early as the feafon will 

 permit ; only, be fure not to plow or fow 

 wet. Plant likewife the potatoes early ; put 

 the rank dung above them, which will pre- 

 vent the froft from hurting them. The lefs 

 the dung is rotted, either for the potatoes, 

 beans, peafe, or turnip,fo much the better. The 

 rank dung rotting in the ground with thefe 

 green crops, meliorates and enriches the foil 

 very much, and renders it in fine order for 

 barley and grafs feeds the following year, 

 particularly if the ground is cold and wet. 



There is this advantage in laying on the 

 dung to thefe crops, that the barley can be 

 fown early in the fpring, when the feafon 

 anfwers, which makes an early harveft ; the 

 grain is better in quality, 1 having the heat of 

 the fun in its ftrerigth when ripening, and 

 runs lefs rifk from the great rains. 



There is another advantage arifing from 



laying on the dung to thefe crops, that it is 



B b better 



