$o January 1749. 



table ' y but was forced to put it upon the 

 hearth, or into my pocket. Yet, notwith- 

 ftanding it was fo cold, as appears from the 

 meteorological obfervations at the end of this 

 volume, and though it fnowed fometimes for 

 feveral days and nights together, and the fnow 

 lay nearfix inches high upon the ground, yet 

 all the cattle are obliged to flay, day and night, 

 in the fields, during the whole winter. For 

 neither the Englijh nor the Swedes had any 

 ftables ; but the Germans and Dutch had pre- 

 ferved the cuftom of their country, and ge- 

 nerally kept thjir cattle in ftables during 

 winter. A 1 mart, all the old Swedes fay, that 

 on their fir ft arrival in this country, they 

 made ftables for their cattle, as is ufual in 

 Sweden ; but as the Englijh came, and fettled 

 among them, and left their cattle in the 

 fields all winter, as is cuftomary in .England, 

 they left off their former euftom, and 

 adopted the Englijh one. They owned, 

 however, that the cattle fuffered greatly 

 in winter, when it was very cold, efpecially 

 when it froze * after a rain ; and that fo me 

 cattle were killed by it in feveral places, in 

 the long winter of the year 1741. About 

 noon, the cattle went cut into the woods, 

 where there were yet feme leaves on the 

 young oak ; but they did not eat the leaves, 

 and only bit off the extremities of the 

 5 branches, 



