236 SCIENCE OF GARDENING. Part II. 



matter soluble in water, it is evident that their fermentation or putrefaction should be pre- 

 vented as much as possible ; and the only cases in which these processes can be useful, 

 are when the manure consists principally of vegetable or animal fibre. The circumstances 

 necessary for the putrefaction of animal substances are similar to those required for the 

 fermentation of vegetable substances ; a temperature above the freezing point, the presence 

 of water, and the presence of oxygen, at least in the first stage of the process. To prevent 

 matures from decomposing, they should be preserved dry, defended from the contact of 

 air, and kept as cool as possible. Salt and alcohol appear to owe their powers of pre- 

 serving animal and vegetable substances to their attraction for water, by which they pre- 

 vent its decomposing action, and likewise to their excluding air. 



Subsect. 2. Of the (liferent Species of Manures of Animal and Vegetable Origin. 



1119. The properties and nature of the manures in common use should be known to every 

 cultivator : for as different manures contain different proportions of the elements neces- 

 sary to vegetation, so they require a different treatment to enable them to produce their 

 full effects in culture. 



1 1 20. All green succulent plants contain saccharine or mucilaginous matter, with woody 

 fibre, and readily ferment. They cannot, therefore, if intended for manure, be used too 

 soon after their death. Hence the advantage of digging or ploughing in green crops, 

 whether natural, of weeds, or sown on purpose ; they must not, however, be turned in too 

 deep, otherwise, as Mrs. Ibbetson has shown (Philos. Mag. 1816), fermentation will be 

 prevented by compression and exclusion of air. Green crops should be ploughed in, if it 

 be possible, when in flower, or at the time the flower is beginning to appear, for it is at 

 this period that they contain the largest quantity of easily soluble matter, and that their 

 leaves are most active in forming nutritive matter. Green crops, pond-weeds, the paring 

 of hedges or ditches, or any kind of fresh vegetable matter, require no preparation to fit 

 them for manure. The decomposition slowly proceeds beneath the soil ; the soluble mat- 

 ters are gradually dissolved, and the slight fermentation that goes on, checked by the want 

 of a free communication of air, tends to render the woody fibre soluble without occasion- 

 ing the rapid dissipation of elastic matter. When old pastures are broken up and made 

 arable, not only has the soil been enriched by the death and slow decay of the plants which 

 have left soluble matters in the soil, but the leaves and roots of the grasses, living at the 

 time, and occupying so large a part of the surface, afford saccharine, mucilaginous, and 

 extractive matters, which become immediately the food of the crop, and the gradual de- 

 composition affords a supply for successive years. 



1 121. Rape- cake, which is used with great success as manure, contains a large quantity 

 of mucilage, some albuminous matter, and a small quantity of oil. This manure should 

 be used recent, and kept as dry as possible before it is applied. It forms an excellent 

 dressing for turnip crops ; and is most economically applied by being thrown into the soil 

 at the same time with the seed. 



1122. Malt-dust- consists chiefly of the infant radicle separated from the grain. Sir 

 H. Davy never made any experiment upon this manure ; but has great reason to suppose 

 it must contain saccharine matter, and this will account for its powerful effects. Like rape- 

 cake, it should be used as dry as possible, and its fermentation prevented. 



1 123. Linseed-cake is too valuable as a food for cattle to be much employed as a manure. 

 The water in which flax and hemp are steeped, for the purpose of obtaining the pure 

 vegetable fibre, has considerable fertilising powers. It appears to contain a substance ana- 

 logous to albumen, and likewise much vegetable extractive matter. It putrefies very 

 readily. By the watering process, a certain degree of fermentation is absolutely neces- 

 sary to obtain the flax and hemp in a proper state ; the water to which they have been ex- 

 posed should therefore be used as a manure as soon as the vegetable fibre is removed from 

 it. Washing with soap has been successfully substituted for watering by lie. 



1 124. Sea-weeds, consisting of different species of fuci, algae, and conferva?, are much 

 used as a manure on the sea-coasts of Britain and Ireland. By digesting the common 

 fucus, which is the sea-weed usually most abundant on the coast, in boiling water, one- 

 eighth of a gelatinous substance will be obtained, with characters similar to mucilage. A 

 quantity distilled gave nearly four fifths of its weight of water, but no ammonia ; the 

 water had an empyreumatic and slightly sour taste ; the ashes contained sea-salt, car- 

 bonate of soda, and carbonaceous matter. The gaseous matter afforded was small in 

 quantity, principally carbonic acid, and gaseous oxide of carbon, with a little hydro-car- 

 bonate. This manure is transient in its effects, and does not last for more than a single 

 crop ; which is easily accounted for from the large quantity of water, or the elements of 

 water, it contains. It decays without producing heat when exposed to the atmosphere, 

 and seems, as it were, to melt down and dissolve away. A large heap has been entirely 

 destroyed in less than two years, nothing remaining but a little black fibrous matter. 

 Some of the firmest part of a fucus were suffered to remain in a close jar, containing at- 

 mospheric air, for a fortnight : in this time it had become very much slirivelled ; the sides 



