t 437 1 



7. 7. The corn ftack yarJ. 



8. The hog-yard, with doors into apart- 

 ments, marked 9. 25 feet fqiiare. 



9. The lower part of this fpace is the 

 hog-flies J above a roofting place for 

 poultry. 



10. The working ox-houfe for 14. 



It is 50 feet long. 



11. A fheep-yard, 50 feet long, and 21 

 wide in one part, and 15 in the other. 

 b. is a covered flied for them to run 

 under in bad weather, and c. c. low 

 racks for hay, fhedded from the wea- 

 ther. 



12. The houfe, 90 feet long. 

 J 3. The ftable and 



14. The ftable - yard. In thefe the 



horfes run loofe, their rack and man- 

 ger at d. d. and a ciftern of v^^ater at ijp 

 There is a foot-way around the yard, 

 parted from it by the rope, e. e. e. The 

 Iheds extend as far as f. f. 



i6. A (hed to keep carts, ploughs, har- 

 rows, rollers and other implements ; 

 under there is a rack and manger in 

 it, and a yard roped off, that, upon an 

 extraordinary occafion, it mr'fy be ap- 

 plied to the ufe of a ftable. Thefe two 

 yards, &c. extend 90 feet. 



17. 17. Two fmall buildings, thirty feet 

 iciuare, ufed as graineries. 



Ff3 18. 18. 



