APPENDIX. 



:o " Secondly, Feculences discharged from the still-house, 

 .mixed up with the rubbish of buildings, white lime, &:c. 



" Thirdly, The refuse or field trash, i. e. the decayed 

 leaves, and the stems of .the canes, so called in contra- 

 distinction to cane trash reserved for fuel, and hereafter 

 to be described. 



"Fourthly, Dung obtained from the horse and mule 

 stables, and from moveable pens, or small inclosures 

 made by posts and rails, occasionally shifted upon the lands 

 intended to be planted, and into which the cattle are 

 turned at night. 



" Fifthly, Good mould collected from gullies and other 

 waste places, and thrown into the cattle pens." 



PAGE 217. 



" But the chief depmdance of the Jamaica planter, in ma- 

 nuring Tiis lands, is on .the moveable pens, or occasional 

 inclosures; not so-much for the quantity of dung collected 

 by means of those inclosures, as for the advantage of the 

 from the Cattle (the best of all manures) and the labour 

 'is saved by this system. I believe, indeed, there 



are 



