JWDEX. C03 



much care required in the month of February, 91. 

 methods used in Gloucestershire, 91. 



rolling after Candlemas, 91. 



attentions on admitting the stock to pasturage, in March, 162. 



eating off, in April, '!'. 



statement of the product of n meadow of ri^ht ncres, e.itrn off 



between the'2d of April and the ; in May, 228, 229. 



time of taking out the ewes and lambs ; the barer the ground is 



fed, the better; watering afterward, 2()7. 



important Instructions for forming new watn cd-m-\Tls, 298 to 314. 

 time of mowing; watering afterward, 

 begin the operation of watering in November, 51 i. 

 ft'cu: 9, different methods of, Jo. 



Duke of Northumberland's method, 16. 

 weaning lambs in July, 4 !/ 



Jl'f.eds : burning dry weeds for manure, 397. 

 Weld; its culture, 243. 



pulling; stacking, and selling; produce, 40S. 

 If-'heat : season for manuring green wheats, 88. (See also 1(J3). 



time of scarifying the drilled wheat, 152. 



Mr. Cook's implements for this business; tixt harrow, and a 



scarifier; method of operation of each, 152 to 154. 

 hand-hoeing the drilled, the broad-casr, and the dibbled, wheat, 



155. 

 detail of the sorts of manure for green wheats, as used in the 



vicinity of Dunstable, 1D';> to 167. 

 spring wheat, not generally advisable ; time of sowing, middle or 



end of April, or beginning of May, 193. 

 hoeing in May, 2(55, 266. 

 thistling the crops, 366'. 



attention to the state of the crops in June, 381. 

 general ill effects of wet summers; but almost every thing de- 

 pends on the weather at the blooming time, 382, 3S3. 

 Maggots within the chest of the ear, observed in 1771, 363, 384. 

 stormy weather not so dangerous as wet or clouded, 385. 

 mild and open winters, not kindly for wheat, 385. 

 advantage of the practice of early cutting, at least ten days before 



ripe, 42O. 

 particular attention in July to the crops ; such as are mildewed 



should be reaped (though quite green) immediately when 



struck with that fatal distemper, 421. 

 the Harvest, 427. 



reaping ; forming shocks or stacks, 427, 428. 



. carting ; one-horse carts most advantageous, 428. 



hints respecting stacking, 429. 



peculiar construction of stacks for threshing-mill, 429. 

 singular practice by Mr. "Walker of Norfolk j of wheat among 



Turnips, 436. 



time of sowing upon backward soils ; less seed necessary in propor- 

 tion to the earliness of putting in, 452. (See also 501). 



sorts of wheat, 452. 



steeping the seed, 453. 



wheat 



