( i86 ) 



I do not think cow-grafs of a very feeding 

 nature. It is a later plant than red-clover, and 

 iheep do not like it fo well. 1 have feen one 

 fide of a field fown with cow-grafs, the other 

 with clover: the fheep ate the clover very 

 bare, but left the cow-grafs, as if they difliked 

 the paflure :— at leafl:, they certainly preferred 

 the clover. The culture of cow-grafs is the 

 fame as of red-clover. 



SECTION LXXV. 



Remarks on the Management of the Kitchen Gar- 

 den, Mv ant age cf the Plough in refpe5f to 

 Peas and Beans of all Sorts, Spinach^ Cahba' 

 geSy Carrots y Onions, Parfnips^ (^c^ 



BY the method I propofe, an acre or any 

 given quantity of land will produce in a more 

 abundant manner any of the kitchen-garden 

 vegetables, roots or plants-, they will fooner ar- 

 rive at maturity, and be in every refped better 

 in quality than by the cuftomary method of 

 gardening. 



For 



