272 CLEVELAND . 21. 



The OBJECTS OF HUSBANDRY are corn, but- 

 ter, bacon, rearing cattle, and borfes ; varying 

 but little in its objects from the VALE OF 

 PICKERING ; excepting that CLEVELAND is 

 more a corn country. 



A uniformity of fituation and foil is gene- 

 rally productive of a uniform fyftem of ma- 

 nagement , more efpecially in a country like 

 Cleveland, which has been long in a ftate of 

 inclofure ; and a minutial detail of its aralk 

 frocefs might be interefting. But the Vale 

 of Pickering having furnifhed materials more 

 ample and more interefting than I expected, 

 I have beftowed on that alone more attention 

 than I had fet apart for the county. 



Some peculiarities of the Cleveland prac- 

 tice haver been already mentioned. One 

 which marks it ftrongly, and which diftin- 

 guifhes it from every other Diftridt I have ob- 

 ferved in, remains to be noticed. 



The TEAM of Cleveland is, invariably, 

 three borfes and a cart. Notwithstanding the 

 deepnefs of the roads in a wet feafon, there 

 is fcarcely a waggon or a long team in the coun- 

 try. The three horfcs are, invariably, 



drawn 



