Fe fare you Plow up the Rifhes, Brake?, or other 

 annoying Weeds, arid for fail let fome body, with 

 a Spade, follow the Plough, to root up fuch as are 

 left after the Culter and Plow-fhare. 



Harrow this new broken ground with weighty, 

 iTiarp, and long tined HarrbYs, fuch as tis a*Teems 

 work to draw, th.it uneven places may be torn 'upland 

 good tfore of mould railed. Cover your Seed with 

 two or three forts of Harrows, each Harrow having 

 lines thicker then the other : fome put weights upon 

 tfte Harrows in the firft, and a Thorn under them in 

 the laft operation. 



After four years Tilth, lay do vn your Land, and 

 than upon a Crop of \\ heat or Rye, not on a Sum- 

 mer Co. n, for fo the Soard will come thefooner, e- 

 fpecially if the Crop be fowed thin> and as early as 

 may be : If you will double or treble the Improve- 

 ment, the Husbandry of fowing Clover-grafs, f^oken 

 of in the fird Chapter, will here come in molt pro- 

 perly. This I'll Plowing, regard that the Ground 

 oe laid down fmooth, yet on ndges if the Land be 

 cold, and unlefs the Lmd be of exceeding llrength 3 

 fail not to manure it, by dung, or otherwife, this 

 laft feafon of plowing. 



WiuBlhh reports,"and Mr. Hart lip likewife, That 

 the natural helps to preferve Co: n f;om blafiing, is 

 the fteeping of it in thick fat water, or Lime water, 

 Urine or Brine, or the mixing of Lime or Afhes, 

 with Corn well v\et and moift, that fo it may cloath 

 it felf with the finch 1 of the Lime or Afhes, &c. fo 

 as it may 6)11 clothed all over to the Earth, and lo 

 b: covered therewith : Bur I believe he was ir.iftaken 

 in the applying of the Medicine to the prevention of 

 the ri^ht and projer difeafe : I have heard fuch v\ ho 



practiced 



