i6 K I L D A R E. 



Potatoes. 



Plants them with the plough, drawing fur- 

 rows five feet afunder, .filled with dung, the 

 fets on the dung, and then covered with the 

 plough, and horfe-hoed them backwards and 

 forwards, the crop 2$ barrels per acre of very 

 large ones. 



Clover. 



Mr. Marlay has introduced this plant {o 

 generally, that he fows no corn without it. 

 The profit exceedingly great, more than that 

 of any other improvement. 



Lime. 



Ufed much, mixed with earth, and found 

 great fuccefs from it, even on lime-fione 

 land. Burns at yd. a barrel; always leaves it 

 on the ditch-earth to (lack, and then mixes it 

 before dung is put to it. 



Draining. 



Has drained much in the hollow way, fill- 

 ing with ftones, and found the benefit ex- 

 ceedingly great, can cart on the wetteft lands 

 at any time, two years have paid the expenfe. 



Ploughing. 



Inftead of the common draught of the coun- 

 try, he ufes often only two oxen in a plough, 

 for he has many forts of ploughs from Mr. 

 Baker and from England. 



Cows. 



