It RAPE. 7. 



The method I mould propofe is this : draw 

 from the firft land a fufficiency of plants to 

 plant the loft land with, and bury their roots 

 in a vacant ground until wanted. 



Plow the firft land ; burying the weeds and 

 the refufe rape ; and (lock it at the fame time 

 with plants, drawn from the fecond land, in 

 the manner above deicribed. 



The firft land finished, fupply the fecond 

 Vv-ith plants from the third, and fo on till the 

 whole be finiihed, planting the laft land with 

 the plants in referve. 



Befides the ADVANTAGES already fet forth, 

 the entire piece would by this means be fur- 

 nifhed with prime -plants , equal in ftrer.gth ' y 

 and regular in diftance. Hence the foil would 

 not only be evenly occupied ; but the cropr 

 would ripen equally. The large and uniform 

 diftance of ch plants, too, would give free 

 admiffion to the hoe : even a narrow borfs-ko? 

 might be ufed between the rows. 



I' bus, the fouleft crop which farmers have t& 

 deal with, might,forafmaHexpence, be render- 

 ed a FALLOW CROP cf the frft eftimaiion. 



If fod-burnt land were managed in this 

 niarmer, the Erft or feed^plowing ought to be 



very 



