552 tJCTOBEK. 



On peat, and on soils long harassed by corn i 



1. Coleseed, or Turnips, 8. Grasses, 



2. Ditto, 9. Ditto, 



3. Oats, 10. Potatoes, 



4. Ruta baga, 1 1 . Barley, 



5. Barley, 12. Tares or Pease, 



6. Grasses, 13. Barley and Grass. 



7. Ditto, 



On dry and calcareous soils : 



1. Turnips, 5. Turnips, 



2. Ditto, 6. Barley, 



3. JSarley, 7- Pease, 



4. Sainfoin fpr ten years, and 8. Wheat, 

 upwards j then pared and 



burnt for, 



THE PRILL HUSBANDRY. 



Upon settling his farm, our young farmer has, 

 among many other objects that require his atten- 

 tion, to determine in what degree and for what 

 crops he will adopt the drill husbandry. It has 

 long been known that this system is applicable, 

 without inconvenience, to sandy soils and to dry 

 loams, which may be safely laid flat, and accord- 

 ingly, on such it made a great and rapid progress 

 in Norfolk; but it travelled no further in that 

 county. A great revolution which has taken place 

 in the wet land district of Suffolk, has introduced 

 it with equal success on the strong soils of that 

 county. 



This great change is the banishment of the 

 plough, to as great a degree as possible from heavy 

 soils in the spring ; all barley, oats, pease, and beans, 



that 



