INDEX. 201 



Woodlands, natural, 471 ; coppices, management of, ib. ; mixed 

 woods, 474 ; groves, 477 ; forests, 478. 



Woods, thick, prejudicial nature of, 8 ; a great impediment to culti- 

 vation, 154; successfully grubbed up iu Scotland, 155 ; how to be 

 grubbed up for pasture, ib. ; importance of draining to, 183. 



and plantations, 465 ; particulars respecting, 466 ; the soil 



when advantageously employed in, ib. ; soils calculated for, ib. ; 

 when to be preferred to cultivation, 467 ; Lord Bagot's in Stafford- 

 shire, 467 ; in Wiltshire, ib. ; of Sir Joseph Banks in Lincolnshire, 

 468 ; in Derbyshire and Sussex, 469 ; profits derivable from, ib. ; 

 where not to be encouraged, 470 ; not so profitable as formerly, 

 478. 



natural, 471 ; coppice, ib. ; great injury how done to thriving, 



472; how valued at the Conquest, ib. ; on the management of 

 mixed, 474 ; what principally necessary in mixed, ib. ; trees prin- 

 cipally grown in, 475 ; rules for the profitable management of, 477. 



Woollen rags, chopped, their use in agriculture, 211. 



Working, hours of, 81. 



horses or oxen, economical modes of feeding, 103. 



Yarrow or milfoil, useful as a pasture plant, Add. 95, 96. 

 Young, Mr, his opinion respecting feeding on straw, 372 ; his remarks 

 on Mr Pitt's speech on the state of the nation, App. 28. 



Zinc pipes used for conveying water, 141. 



