i$: N o' R F d L It. J?| 



river them; a cuftom which is at once waf^e- 

 tul both of hay and houfe-room : at prefenr, 

 however, it is the practice to raife ftables high' 

 enough to admit of hay-chambers over them ; 

 with floors, not of boards, but of clay ; which is' 

 cheaper, and, in other refpcds, much pre- 

 ferable to board floors. 



V. Cow-HOUSES are unknown in a Norfolk- 

 farmery : a fmall " fuckling-placc" and a 

 " cnlves-houfe" are the only out-buildings ap- 

 propriated to cattle : except 



VI. Bullock-sheds, which are fomctimes 

 (but not. generally) eredied ; more efpecialiy in 

 the fouthern Hundreds of this Ditlrid. See 

 MiN. 118. 



Vri. The hoGsty of NorfollL is Angular -, tho* 

 hot particularly excellent : iriftead of creeping 

 into a pigfty, in the manner ufually done, a 

 Norfolk farmer walks into his " p1g-lioufe," 

 at a door fimilar to thole of his other out- 

 buildings : the building is of courfe higher 

 and more expensive, but certainly more com- 

 modious, than in the ufual form. 



VIII. Granaries are few : I faw none upon' 

 feparate pillars j and but very few over 



G 2 IXv 



