SOWING GBASS SEEDS. 83 



April is ]:)roperly regarded as a very safe and fiivoiirable 

 month in which to sow, but if the seed-bed is ready, and the land 

 in working order by the middle of March, there need be no 

 scruple as to putting in the seed. And should there happen to 

 be signs of ap])roaching rain, it is worth any reasonable effort to 

 iiet the sowinjj done and the land rolled down before a chanije 

 of weather can put a stop to operations. Sowing before is better 

 than immediately after a shower, even supposing the land can 

 be worked soon after rainfall, which may or may not be the case. 

 The seeds sown before rain gradually absorb moisture from soil 

 and dew until w^et weather comes, and then the plants s})ring up 

 with great rapidity. 



To sow later than the end of May is most hazardous. Even 

 the middle <:)f May will often be too late, especially upon heavy 

 soils, which in a dry season are also liable to crack, to the injury 

 of the grasses. 



Now comes the question as to sowing alone or upon a corn 

 cro]). The answer depends partly on the object in view, and 

 partly on the length of the purse. Apart from the money con- 

 sideration, each method has its advocates, and undoubtedly there 

 are sound reasons to be urged in favour of either practice. 



If a first-class pasture or an ornamental park sward be 

 wanted on the earliest day it can be obtained, and tlie cost 

 need not be thou^jht of, the sowiufj of masses alone will, in the 

 majority of seasons, produce the most satisfactory pasture in 

 the sliortest possible time. Opportunity is tlius afforded of early 

 and frequent mowing, which not only checks weeds but tends to 

 strengthen the young grass. A still more valuable service is i-en- 

 dered by the scythe in preventing weeds from seeding, and these 

 are certain to be quite troublesome enough without that. On tlie 

 other hand, in an extremely dry summer, the shelter of a liglit 

 corn crop will prove of great value to the young grass ])lant. It 

 may even result in an actual gain of time. Without its aid there 

 is a possibility that the grasses may stand still or conq)letely fade 

 away. An established pasture when burned brown by the suii 



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