^74^ Oj the Management] and 



SECTION VI. 



Of Sheep's atid Hogs T)ung^ av.d of Human 

 Or dure y ujcd before fo'Wing. 



SHeep and Hog s Dung come next to be 

 confidered) which, for their different- 

 Quality, in cold and hot Lands none exceed 5 

 they are not commonly to be got in great 

 Quantities, and therefore it is, that the life 

 of neither is fo well known as they might 

 otherwife be, though the extraordinary 

 Goodnefsofthem is fuch, that it would an- 

 fwer the Expence of the Farmer as well as 

 Gardener to colled them together, if it were 

 at the Price of 2^. or ^d, per Buihcl, efpe- 

 cially Sheep*s Dung, as it is found on all 

 Sheep's Walks and Downs, or at the Placed 

 (upon Down Land) where thefe Animals are 

 generally fodder'd. The firft, I mean Hog's 

 Dung, is excellent good fpread on all light 

 Lands, and to have a good Quantity of that, 

 it ought to be kept by it felf, and to 

 be well bedded with Straw, Peafe, Hawm, 

 and to be often fed with the Ref ufe of Gar- 

 den StufF,and milk Thirties before they come 

 to Seed. And the later is excellent good 

 to fpread lightly over Autumn or Spring 

 Crops, being beat into a kind of a Powder, 

 and fpread over it very thin, four or five 



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