302 On Liming Land. 



surd practice of some farmers, of sowing oats and buck- 

 wheat, year after year, as the worst of all rotations ; I am 

 convinced from long experience, that an occasional crop 

 of oats is no more exhausting than wheat, rye, or corn; 

 that it is an excellent nurse for clover, a profitable crop 

 for the farmer, and the straw good fodder or litter, with- 

 out which he cannot get much dung, the value of which 

 is not sufficiently appreciated by many of our farmers. 

 Every kind of grain which ripens its seed is an exhaust- 

 er, even clover which is the most ameliorating crop 

 which we know, if it is but a moderate crop and left 

 standing until its seed is full ripe, instead of improving, 

 will be found to exhaust the land. 



Before I conclude I must take some notice of the 

 mild lime, which I mentioned in a note at the bottom 

 of page 8. I then supposed the mild lime above 

 mentioned, to be the property of Mr. Barnitt of Marl- 

 borough township, but when I was with my friend 

 Mr. John Mill's on the 4th instant, he told me that Mr. 

 Barnitt's lime is the hottest and strongest lime in that 

 neighbourhood, that the mild lime which I alluded to is 

 the property of Mr. Baker of Newlin township. The 

 two limes are not more than two or at most three miles 

 apart, Mr. Mills's farm lays nearly in the centre be- 

 tween the two, and he occasionally uses both. He says 

 that it requires 130 bushels of the mild lime, to go as 

 far on land as 100 bushels of the hot lime ;* that the 



* This last brings a higher price than any limes in that 

 neighbourhood, or from the valley ; being esteemed so much 

 more valuable, as it goes farther on land &c. than either of 

 thes«. 



