[ 190 ] 

 8. Oats, and then lye as before j 

 for this thefe flovens defer ve to 

 be han2:ed. 



Of wheat they fow two bufhels, about 

 Michaelmas J and reap from twelve to fifteen. 

 For barley they plough twice, fow not quite 

 three bufhels, about the end of April or 

 the beginning of May, and reckon the 

 average produce at twenty. They plough 

 but once for oats, fow four bulhels about 

 the time of barley foWing ; the crop twenty- 

 four. They cultivate fome beans, plough 

 once, fow two bufhels in March or April, 

 never hoe, but gain on an average twenty- 

 three bufhds. They plough once for 

 peafe, fow a buihel and half, and gain from 

 none at all to fifteen buflaels. For rye they 

 likewife give but one earth, fow two 

 bufhels ', the crop from twelve to fifteen. 



They ftir twice for turneps, know no- 

 thing of hoeing; the average value per 

 acre, 5 /. or 6 /. Thomas Richard/on has 

 had crops that he would not take 12/. an 

 acre for ; but fuch extravagant prices are 

 not in the leaft owing to good hufbandry, 

 but the fcarcity of the commodity. They 

 ufe them for cows, flieep, ^c. &c. Clo- 

 ver is not very common, but they fow it 



with 



