74 
: THE AGRICULTI 
LAL G ETTE. 
to discara the use of 1 alto together 
wt C. 
for 
to regulate | it by the quantity , of work, done, 
ease of h 
to render the labour at the handles less severe, would 
be apt to place the breast work at a considerable distance 
m the drum; thus they fin: be. able to thresh an 
more with far power, without carts 
W. 
d it above tw 
e straw is blighted ; 555 sp priog Wheat they 
lo not ee above 4 sacks per day. When the 
threshing the fall sown Wheat, about 5 or 6,sacks of 
last 
day at 1. 6d. day.— 
nand-threshing ae is constantly in use on Oxton 
arm, ys Oars rs and I can 3 to its a marita. 
s worked 
our, o: iha others“ bind the 
machine ; they then 
feeder go to the machine the same space of t 
0. d Mas ahake the straw from 25 
A 8 S uean 
2 n — 
po w=) 
w — — ye 
he 
owed yesterday, 
Peas, as two men could actually: . more — far 
„ in or Er 
me in- a 
ane 
stra 
hig A places, and ans binder A prove t 
deseription. And, as I before: ase 
2. ——— ‘of my calicoes in land, Lhave 
oa dou 
hold. my Seana land, 
I am complained of as infringing o 
te 
=~ 
ie worth 
on mortgage to put 
unable, if . old friends, the e 
more bread, inst 
seribe bandsomely to pe us poo 
pee 3 be seen 
u to con e operty, as m any, demora 
by the 3 y facilities of taking what is not their ow 
well pre 
N, 
> 
e prop osition ‘that Gal 
er 
30s. per makes the 
ense 21 Shs and W about 100 of proiit 4 
t this might be realised under 
And the fo ollowing is a ott 
ould bri» ing o out the quantities and kinds 
have suggested. 1 
h. with C 
year, Glover 
oe ae 
Pare —— T 
Mango d Wurzel o 
Carrots .. 
Sainfoin. 
eadow 
33 
” 
+? 
23 
” 
Itm 
to — great dacht upon it 
i a day’s threshin cultivates in mon lue, be doubted. See be done wi a deficiency of 
which —— to be 40 reer ne e Wheat — for what Mr. Dickinson makes of his Italian Rye-grass 3 a market value far beyond that of th 
market. The men prefer this machine to the flail, and Look at the rich Hams sersetshire and other ficial „cen 
do not consider it £o laborious by taking their — in counties that let for 6, 7, 8“. an acre ? ill they pay aj them, so that 20 tons of Carrots eee furnish y 
the — r des price per bushel for higher reut for 21 years together, and also interest on abundant guano. for the year 
~ threshin Whea d., and for white, 4d.,.as the the cost of the y. buildings, if they were to be — — 
latter — % not, ee ee, o well.—Richar: broken up? I made more value of the first, 8 me 3 
thony Webb, Oxion Farm growth of a meadow properly laid down than I ever Aaæima = Agricultural Produce. In refer 
KEN W a e ofa de. “thet 11 th oved oe s nn were the wish expre im ® Agricultural Ga 
not more use o the tenant than arable he would m ae 
ARABLE VERSUS Resse LA pay ii higher bend bon readers ees e ve reports of 
Mr. Wu. rot asks, in cette ofthe 15th 
inst., W ha on can be given for a so much 
land in las, which of all the plants a farmer- culti- 
vates stands the lowest in will e 
which, though it g est, was safe, an 
Sh np oon R agit and calumny, I invested nearly all 
my capita aud. Some Grass 
. quality in 
staine commaittings 
by ploughing w 5 old pasture ; 
a moderate 
kep ; 
kept ap the levees st kept the. ee eee 
der no 4 2 
acant, I sure} of 
an ay 3 = 
“whenever a 
a pa rd ze me higher oe for: land 
3 equaliguality, chan would the arable farm u 
with this un Pe d 
or 
an 
y for ever; and 
it es. 
8 
on ae land, olay. 
high wep were not | 
more useful to the lande rd — che er, he would 
noù ‘demand pst higher. If the ar. — ‘and would ibe 
o the 2 than Grass, which L knew not. 
that it 9 a ees use I believe the able is best cared 
r when n is most 
either in the r sa erie 
e pu on 10 prefer 3 crops: Si 
but if the public oa the sam 
bert 
det fo ee sagen that * . be at 
liberty to osai EN applieation of his land. Those 
who are averse 
SCHEMES OF CULTIVATION FOR SMALL 
«FARMS. 
. e SIDE has; 15 acres of Grass land about 
HF 
eres in Sainf aere 
250 acres in Tares, 1 acre ‘drilled wae Beads 
d 1 aere in Mangold Wurzel. He has 
aaa — improved the land, which was considered 
very bad — He has also lately taken three fields 
uhieh adjo 
A. R. P. 
A <. 4, S 
1277 HS 
„„ * ov 11 121 
3 6 
No. I is in Tares just eut fo: for bay. “No; 2 
tO.) time it ha 
84 
E mek every sort 
power 
bana ae his own apo 
mae Se buy Grass land pute ak | H 
eit up themselves. (= Lei Pe a dressing of farm 
Wheat, and the cir s under hie 
sree I beg to aa the ee by des 
Essex. In 1845 his „ on 
oy 4570 field held for many 
Watford; sd a shallow, itt gravälly 1 u 
* e rem a plant of two-year 
in cee winter of 1845. 
m- yard dung a 
60 bu she Is: of bones, and 6 owt! of 
18 ewt. of common salt at 18. 6 1 
30 bushels af ashes burntfrom ith at ad 0 A 
produce bei 
Barley, 6 ine rt. Si i 
on repeatedly to break Wi 4 acres sown: with Glover. ʻi 0. 3y Clover a on rer Farm, syon 4 
e Nta 1 sa heat on Thin Seeuing.— You having, in last 
ough several - atte "This lan and aibad 5 ust eee eut for hay. article, adverted to some correspondence 
ver, mn amang Went paiana d mpts were is also light and stony, but it, is of 85 subject of & thin seeding,” I b. 
infactury.way. and there are no ea pee spac beter staplethan the F acres, aud is art, of your readers, to supply you with a 
Ann hah; Ng out manch not y an deen. he 74. An. 9P, grows very good | at large, in explanation. About three 
stags p . hoes . His ist of s le barn stables, unicated to o. r logal papers, ast 
pot, the, braking ap Naren danat aatan e ee As nie pit for manure, covered in, and | by Mr. Hall, of Layer-de-la-hay in this coun 
aiu-thereby ! mt e ee ae shed. = also, a igi manure tank. He two exp imen e in the edi 
e become arable, the ti he commutation’ has e sii 3 N iat 9 site ese spet sail arr r 
15 r wit pa A T appears; then, eS A = pyy 5 * n 
Ts anacre for the tithe ren rge, acres of Sainfoin, an and) ie nent e quantity of seed. rege 
er consented. to the breaking up, I should have e a- and ‘os ne of arable land aa Tiat 2 — ene asf 
my, 1 if 
la 
eee ted od uff 1 — which | 
fi and sulice lf the t bl 
— Oe cane e will ery out for m e presen arie 
more barn room more: granaries, more 
yman. manufactur 
15 and cheese, La better. egies gant ba e 
ke T 
e stabling, | wi w 
"building of | true 
i see how ma 
e in 
f the W 
Clover,” Mangold ur rzel, Carrots » Parsnips, 
ish T 
400 tons While the hey acres would . — say 15t0 ons 
le- of s weight of grain — 600 tons, pr 
cows throughout: the 
litert pine vay. w would keep 22 
year, a and the 15 tons of-straw w oe litter them in 
in This ee ‘is which will hold 
ra nat These 
g {logical 
t us 
uld be he 20 acres of 
Grass and Se foin apai be erect to yield 200 tons 
of green food ; and o acres of arable land, 20 
+ pleading ati, to prove: e by most 
3 that the sma sma. 
and ag uantity, 
st 3 eg 8 return. To 
ae: 
About the year 1770, Du Hamel, and several other 
agriculturists, — ae gase urge ee 
eee of s d dibbled. a warious distance 
ich was decidedly im . A guan 
— . as he stated, the soil 
