A. \ .—No. 33. 



NRW EN (I LAND FARMEK! 



263 



I'aeiV ciiilK lo drink till l.ioy tjuvo It-ii-iii to ;o ipply no fty|is.iiii or oficr nr.ui.rf, tiil Uic biirk- 

 it freoly ; then put in some skinimel milk ; wiiojit is off. .). Whfiii the cinanlity sown is small, 

 fopd t.licm vvliolly on skininieil milk, taking; and the fiirmcr can afford to lose a crop, to }>ive 

 to cive it at about the temperature of milk di- the ground one turn in the autumn, anotlior in 

 tnken from the cow ; by heatin!^ a part of April, harrowinfj fine, and a third tho beginiug of 

 J mixing it with the rest. Care should be May, nnd then if the weather he mild and warm, 

 I not to scald the milk when heated ; also not sow if the ground he in perfect tilth, otherwise 

 ve iheni any sour milk, for tliis will make give it another ploughing. 



scour. The trough or vessel in whicli they Wlien lucerne turns yellow it should be mowed, 

 their milk, should be kept clean and not suf- and the plants will come up free from the disor- 

 to get sour. ; der. [Deane's New England Farmer.] 



Vc let the milk stand about 12 hours, before j 



kimraed ; giving a calf at first about four 

 s night and morning ; increasing the mess 

 ed requires, till he is si.v: weeks old, from 

 1 lime till ten weeks old, he will raquire per- 

 about twelve quarts per day. 

 /hen about ten weeks old. we begin to diniin- 

 c quantity of milk for about the space of two 

 weeks, at which time we wean them. — 



VlNEvJAR. 



The method of making this liquid out of cider, 

 wine, &,r.. is too generally known to need any de- 

 scription ; but it is not so generally known that 

 a very sharp vinegar may also be made out of 

 whey. The method of making it, as described by 

 Mr. Genet, is very simple. 



' After having clarified the whey, it is poured 



r' ,' r ^ . <• . ^ '"'o casks with some aromatic plants, or elder- 



ng the whole process from two to lourteen , , , •> ti f. . i i ■ 



;s old, calves should be well supplied with 



blossoms, as suits the fancy, and exposed in open 



,, J J u t, .„k„-t 'I" t" the sun, where it soon acquires an unconi- 



hav, salt ana provender ; such as oats, wheat <-■,■,, 



■';.,, , „ ., u ij 1 °'on degree oi acidilv. 



and oil-cake ground fine ; they should also ,,■ " , •, , ~ ^, ■ ■ ^ , 



,. . .., /. V 4 .•.! 1 <• ; .!,„ Vinegar may also be made from the luice ofel- 



pplied with scurf or dirt tliough scurf IS the , ». ■'. . . J . 



•^^ . , . ,. ■ . der hemes, mixed with a suitable proportion of 



which is a preventive against scouring ' , , ,, ^ i- 



,■ , , . . 1 J • 1 <•„„ water, and exposed to the sun, as before raention- 



ae particular advant;iges to be derived from , ,^ S , j r .l ■ ■ i- .. 



, .,,<•. . » 41 (•„ii.,...:„~ . 6''- " may aiso be made irom the luice of the 



.bove method of treatment are the following : ,, i i- u <• .u t , -.^ • i i j 



, . , , ,, I 1 . n .,°i. hlack-uirch, or of the maple, when either 13 boiled 



It is much cheaper than to let them suck n- • .i r .V ■ • ru » 



down sufnciently ; or from the juice of beets, car- 

 rots, turnips, potatoes, &c. when boiled and the 

 juice pressed out and exposed in like manner. 

 [Farmer's Assistant.] 



c ordinary way ; whereas it makes a great 

 ig of cream for butter, and that without injur- 

 he calves, if they are properly attended to. 



It prevents calves from moaning, or pining so } „ ,,,„ ^ 



1 while weaning, as they would otherwise do, ) ^^sgat Kenrick JVurserii. 



1 taken from the cows. . \ ^^^M. FRUIT A.\D KORKST TREES for sale 



. It not only prevents the cows being injured ; '^0^^^ as usual uear the Biighlon Post Office.— 

 nsequence of the calves biting the teats ; but '■ .^^JL-^ 'I'he Nursery contains a good varielyof Eng- 

 prevei.U their holding back their miik frd* ' lis'' ■h«'-ry Trees ; and of Fear tree", fror., v.hich gen - 

 •^ .,, , ■ , c . J' • • u .u tli-me!i who seasonably apily can ootain s.iinples ol 



miiker, which often serves to dimin.h ,the. ,„„^,„fMr Kuight's newsorts, sohighly recommend- 

 afterwards. The only disadvantage to be ^^ ;,j ^^^. Agricultural Journal. Also many thousands 

 A in the above method of treatment is that it of budded apple trees ot superior kinil?, good size, and 

 ores some more labour to feed them, where allowed l.y all to be very thrifty ami handsome. Sev- 

 thrive equally well in every respect, as those eral thousands of budded Peach trees, consisting of a 

 , , ^ •'... , . r :„ iu„ „,.!;„,■.,• choice collection of about 40 of the best sorts discover- 



hich are permitted to suck in the ordinary . ^^^ ._^ ^^^^^^^^ ^^ ^,^^ ^^^^^^^^ . ^^^ ^^^^^^^ ^_,^^^ ^^.^ ^^^^ 



I 5 to 8 f'( t high, and the buyer has his choice at 30 

 . , ^ ~ 7~^ ~ ~Z „ ,, ' cents each ; there are likewise plenty of Apricots and 



.ipid Giuwth of the Plane Tree, or Button . jjectarines. 



id Samuel W. Pomeroy, Esq. has sent to the , of good sized Ornamental trees, the Flowering Cat 



e of the New England Farmer, a block, cut alpas. and Horse Chesnut — the Mountain Ash — Weep 

 1 a sprout of a stump of Button wood, whicli is 

 inches in circumference, and was part of a 

 k or stem 32J feet high. The same stump 

 uced 10 more sprouts of nearly the same di- 

 sions, all the growth of nine years ! 



LUCERNE, M'diiago Sativa. 

 some experiments made by the Hon. Rob- 

 It. Livingston, recordel in the Transactions 



t .Agricultural Socittij of jWw York, it appears 



with good cultivation, and abundant manuring, 

 :i six lo nine tons of hay may be obtained from 

 icre of this grass in a season. The ground 



t be highly pulverized to insure a good crop, 

 enty pounds of seed are required for an acre 



wn in broadcast, six pounds if drilled. It an- 

 rs very well with red clover, and is not in- 

 :d by the cold or the changes of our climate. 

 Ir L. advises !;s the result of his experiments, 

 Vever to sow on ground that is not perfectly 

 .'erized. 2. Not to sow till the ground has 

 uired a degree of warmth friendly to vegeta- 

 , viz. in May. 3- To sov.r with no crop that 



]irobahly lodge. 4. If sown with buck-wheat, 



Willow — Silver Tir — L;irch — Sugar maple — But- 

 ternut, fcc. Currant bushes, — the common red of all 

 sizes, by the dozen, hundred, or thousand, on moder- 

 ate terras. — Also the large Dutch White, and Red; — 

 the Champaine :tnd the Black. — R.ed, White and 

 Damask Rose bushes. — Senna, Gum Acacia, English 

 "rapes, — Reel and White Antwerp Raspberries, &c. 



This Nursery, wilhin six miles of Boston and so eas- 

 ily viewed stands in no need of that incessant praise, 

 the interested and artful lavish on some distant Nur- 

 series, which they well know are located in a vrrong 

 direction for supplying people in these Northern Slates. 

 For it is an established maxim, of which they cannot 

 be ignorant, that trees of rapid growth ought not to be 

 robbed of their roots in the fashionable way and remov- 

 ed from a tnild t» a colder situation, — but the reverse. 

 However, Yankee sagacity is not easily outwitted, 

 hence experienced Agriculturisls as far south as Rhode 

 Island, give a decided preference to trees from North" 

 ern Nurseries. 



Orders addressed to J. & W. Kenrick, and sent to 

 the Brighton post office, or left at the office of Dana fc 

 Fenno in State Street, will be duly attended to ; and 

 trees will be packed in clay and matts for shipping when 

 ordered ■, but distant gentlemen should always employ 

 some agrnt to receive and pay for them. On Satur- 

 days, packed trees will be delivered in Boston free of 

 charge for conveyance. 

 In transjdantinj, one year's growth is frequently 



lost, i! ;hi: Ir IS happen to survue, by au unreasonable 

 diniiuulion of the roots, Ihen lore special care shall be 



l aken for their preservalioo . If. March 9. 



Further sicppl;/ of Seeds. ^~ 



.lust received al the Karm'er office and AgricuUnral 

 Establishment, No 52 North Market street, Boston. 

 24 bushels early seedling Peas, various kin.ls 

 ^» " Canary seed , 

 1 ^' Rape seed, 

 1 " Hemp seed, 

 G " Early Potatoes, 

 Early Yellow six Weeks Beans 

 Dun coloured ditto 

 Warrington Dwarf ditto 

 Refugee or ibousand told dillo 

 Uhite Cluster Dwarf ditto 

 White Kidney dillo. 

 Silver .Skin union 

 20 lbs. White ■' 

 aO lbs. Red " 

 Potato " 

 I barrel of sweet Carolina Potato slips. 



_ For sale, wholesale and retail. March i'. 



~ JAMES BLOODGOOD & Go's 



.N''irsery at Flushing, on Long Island, near .Vcw: 

 York. 

 IN belialf of the proprietors of the above 

 nursery, the subscrilicr solicits I'.ie orders of 



horticiUturists who may be desirous of ^tock- 



i;;g Ihi-rgurdens and fields with fruit trees r.f the finest 

 sorts and most healthy and vigorous stocks the present 

 autumn. 



R1.00DG00D& Co. attend personally lo the inoculating 

 and engrafting of all their frxiit trees, and purchasers 

 may rely with confidence that the trees they order will 

 prove genuine. 



The subscriber, agent of the above nursery, will re- 

 ceive orders for any quantity of 



FRUIT AND FOREST TREES, 

 FLOWERING SHRUBS, 



A.ND 



PLANTS. 

 And the trees will be<i<4iTere<l io this city at the risk 

 and expense of the Purchaser ; the bills may be paiJ 

 to him. 



The reputation of this nursery is so extensively known 

 and ha! been so well sustained that 1 take leave to n:- 

 fer those in want of trees to any of the Horticulturists 

 in this city and its vicinity, and if ocular demonstration 

 is desired, 1 invite (hose who wi«h to be thus salisfied- 

 to examine the trees in my garden at Dorchester pro- 

 cured from this nursery for three or four years past, 

 some of which are now in bearing, all in a healthy and 

 vigorous slate. 



Catalogues will be delivered gratis on application 

 to ZED. COOK. Ir. 



Rogers' Building — Congress Street. 



A'oh'ce io Gentlemen Formers. 



FOP>, SALE, the very valuable farm ofthe late James 

 Gilchrisi, Esq. situatid in Chnrlestown, N, H. on the 

 lower meadows, so called, of the Connecticut river, 

 and formerly belonged to Col. Asabel Hunt. 



This Farm consists of 385 acres of Land, of which 70 

 are meadow, ol the first quality, and in a slate of high 

 cultivation; the remaining 316 are upland, and con- 

 si't chiefly of pasture and woodland ; the whole mak- 

 ing one entire piece. The House is large and comtno- 

 dious, well furnished with all needful and convenient 

 out buildings, and in excellent repair. 



It is beautifully situated, between the great riverroad 

 and the bank of the Connecticut, on a swell of land 

 rising out ofthe meadow. 



The barns are large and numerous, conveniently 

 placed, and have been thoroughly repaired wilhin fhree 

 years. One large barn has been built within that 

 time. , 



Persons wishing to purchase such a place, are invi- 

 ted to look at this. — Terms and further particulars may 

 be known on application to Mrs SUSAN GILCHRIST, 

 on the premises, or to S. G WILLIAMS fc CO. Boston 



Barley. 



2250 Bushels of Barley, of a superior quality, for 



seed, and in lots to suit purchasers. — Now landing 



from Brig Sultana from Smyrna, and for sale by 



EBENEZER BREED, No 6i Dock Square. March 9. 



