2?o FENCE S. 5, 



An EXPERiEKCED HEDGER woiild pcrhaps 

 be the fitted for this employment. In ordi- 

 nary cafes, as where heading only might be 

 requifite, orders might be fufficient ; but to 

 the raifing of new hedges, and the renewal of 

 old ones, ferfcnal attention ought to be paid, 

 not only to the planting and the felling, but 

 to the fencing ar.d the weeding, until the 

 pew or the renewed hedge be out of danger. 



6. Hedgerow Timber. This is an inte- 

 refting fubje<ft to the proprietors of inclofed 

 eftatcs : and no country affords a better field 

 for obfervatipn tjian that under furvey. 



I'hc old-inclofed parts of this neighbour- 

 hood, when feen at feme diftance, have the 

 appearsnce of woodlands -, the inciofures 

 bein<T moitly narrow and full of hedgerow 

 timber. 



Tlie age, on a par, is about fifty years. 

 In half a century more, the value of the 

 limber of feme parrs of it, ^f fuffered to fcand, 

 will probably be equal to the value of the 

 land : a circumfbance this of no imall im- 

 port 10 the ozvncr. But the dctiimcn:: to the 

 Qidipier requires to be coniidered. 



In this country, it fcems to be a general 

 ![dca, founded perhaps on experience, that 



loftv 



