APPENDIX, 4 r 3 



fides, it may ferve to plant Three Rows of St. Foin, 

 when the fore Share and Sheat are put in, and the 

 Beams and hinder Hopper fet a Foot or Eighteen 

 Inches wider, and the Marking-wheels at their due 

 Diflance, as is directed in the Effay. Thus the fame 

 Drill may plant Wheat and St. Foin. 



A Drill for the double Rows might be made wid* 

 a fingle hinder Hopper, inftead of the double one. 

 And there is a Contrivance to fupply the Ufe of the 

 fore Hopper for keeping the Plough fleady, and 

 more eafy to make than that Hopper; but this can?- 

 not be defcribed by Words without Cuts. 



The Lime wherewith the brined Wheat is dried, 

 receiving fome of the Salts from the Brine, will flick 

 in the Notches of the Spindle ; yet never makes any 

 Stoppage to their Delivery of the Seed ; but every 

 Year we clean the Notches from the Lime with a 

 ChifTel, and, if it were done oftener, it would not be 

 amifs. 



There is an Accident that may poflibly happen, 

 but never to a careful Driller ; viz. a large Clod may 

 fome way be thrown into a Funnel of the Beam of 

 the Plough, either by a Wheel, or by the Paddle that 

 cleanfes the Sheats from the Dirt that flicks to them 

 when the Earth is wet. This may flop the Wheat 

 from falling out of the Funnel into the Trunk ; and 

 then, f6 far as the Plough goes thus flopped, the 

 Chanel will have no Seed in it ; but the Driller that 

 follows may take it out immediately, which if he 

 mould neglect to do for never fo little a Diftance, he 

 ought to flop the Plough whilfl he fupplics the Chanel 

 with Seed from his Hand as far as it is empty. When 

 there is any Danger of this, as in very rough cloddy 

 Ground, it is befl to take off the Drill-harrow, to the 

 end that the Chanel may lie open for receiving the 

 Seed from the Hand. But if the Ends of the Hopper 

 reach below the Funnels, and they are otherwife de- 

 fended, as they may be, thisAccident can never hap- 

 pen. When 



