FOLDING SHEEP. 



man\ 7 gentlemen over my fields, with a view to ex- 

 amine whether the sheep had seemed to have rested 

 only on spots, to the too great manuring of such ; or, 

 on the contrary, to have distributed themselves 

 more equally ; and it was a pleasure to find, that 

 they seemed generally to have spread in every part, 

 if not quite equally, at least nearly so. The im- 

 proved countenance of several old lays fed in the 

 same manner, when examined in autumn, con- 

 vinced me as well as my bailiff, that the ground 

 had been unquestionably improved considerably. 

 Those fields had carried a very bad appearance for 

 some years, but they were, after sheep-feeding, of 

 a rich verdure, and as full of worm-casts as if they 

 had been dunged. I rolled them heavily in No- 

 vember, but they soon became rough again by 

 worms, and demanded much rolling in spring. 

 They had afterwards a greener and more fertile 

 appearance by far than ever they wore before. 



The whole of this circumstance, the value 

 which I shall be able to appreciate in the trials 

 future years, belongs to this method of dividing 

 flocks, to the exclusion of folding. The fold 

 valuable, but so is the improvement of the grass 

 land, and may, for what I know, nearly equal it : 

 when, in addition, \vc include the greater nuinbc 

 of sheep that can be kept, and the favour done 

 them by letting them alone, there remains, in 

 mind, no further doubt of the fa6t. 



It is common to hear flock-farmers in open coun- 

 tries say, they have not the power to manage so. 



-,, 



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