25—1848.] 
possesses qualifications for th 
favourable growth of the b erop. 
Sir James — work upon the influence of 
digi n diseases, tables of the climate of er. 
— in “the bo of England are given, from which I 
nen Tachos of rain which fell during the three 
onths, Oct., Nov., Dec. 
Penzance x 2 x 2 
W b — 5 table that the amount of rain which 
date is greate n the West of Eng- 
The next table $a the — 
temperature of the same months, w is still m 
important. 
= 
Mean Temperature. 
Noy. 
ndon 
I men ntioned be before 
r erop depends ee, upon the winter bein 
la a late period. The fros 
hI 
434 SR bes 
good * of = 
— 
ef — lines from the hedgerows. 
n I did n 
— moron er many unt 
223 in — 2 of * 
eve 
vert bag 
sil there was a great 
ing hedges. ‘There 
a ee bill, bat wt a sharp small — at the end of 
a pole, — a e 
; 50 * to admit as much light and air as 
pand prevent t the uppe 
r, than which nothing can be more inju- 
hed 
ges. 
—— I will — the hogged m 
een ane vill produce a great 
c 
while the 
of Riby now of Aylsby—at an saw the 
prams a me * 
ste 
up, and a little elipping keeps it — in * at 
— m 5 e expense. 
—— system for grain sowing seemed all but uni- 
nning for miles in 
Although there 
the Wheat looked well ru 
are 5 
ciall 
of 
which must cause it in this cou 
> » espe- 
nts in favour 
to become 
of 
the season 
also . that it is eter in a favourable 
gives for regulating 
ot : 
kill’sclod 
E 
to go into a Whea 
regularity with which a boy with a light harro 
eans the weeds from — ap 
soil, and givin 
ae the garden 
ong other signs of good fring I found on most 
TOSS- 
That most 
1 1 f, 4 h 
sciod-crusner J 
4141. 1 
155 my ‘Wheat 
ground, a continue sowing a por 9 every . 
paoe th a liberal sup- 
Pel would be fit for stock i 1 June 
por uld 
merel, y er in with them a 
0 
n would 
el. 
sow Turnips; 
quantity of artific The 
und 3 should keep va a a fall ow in the 
hich I intended for Mangold Wurz 
be a profitable occupation ; 
he soil and climate of Devonshire were taken 
of the eu 
TT NEO 
Ww my way acress it toward the foot of the 
an distance of about nic miles, the neatness of | 
ue general cultivation was as remarkable as the 
Sze of the farm 
field suare avoiding those 
p etat. The hedges were 
This | tP 
f whate 
oft 
ý — ill paved covered 
oad — they might — areng two yards deep of 
t ore fame, 
imsby and 
as the harrow. The whee 8 shops have quite a 
scientific effeet, from the 2 of patent too tools to be 
fo 
moh rl the price o ? oak will become mue 
more numerous. Two other wer cannot fail tos trike 
furnis look o 
— to every farm 
er the value of his farm, feeds 
orned beasts for the sake of 
d fine wand 
with about 6 inches o 
upper cut, into the — of a horse’s | cult 
r branches — dripping 
— 
a: fence which, * any ditch, will p 
beas 
| not 
correct the ay ay s 5 * 
cling or a ss —— mech — — — — 
i versal. | imp 
First, — the facility it affords — cleaning iho crop | reason 
Še; 4 jes 3 
here i 
ear | lying between 
— 
g the green 
THE AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. 
„.... a 
mn let us examine the climate of Devonshire, and — { | closely — — — pean In man 
it in t see 
deseribing the horses that a very clumsy fo 
S three horses, is v. 
The roads are excellent and tlie turnpi 
— i far — — veyanees must have 
ur-wheeled 
few 
been 
manures, I found 
soil plough. Pig: all th 
19th, if not in any century, Wee 
and —— perhaps, „ those whieh it is ak me difieult to 
bring rapidly into general use. 
ale pang and 3 until all landlords learn 
uch their own in are concerned in this 
questio m, no grea will be made. Subsoil 
ughing, as we al know, requires care ; if ome un 
— hazard it may fail, and bring th to 
disrepute ; and i N g i requires — to 
ers in th — in jts 1 will call them in 
highlands, learn 
many improvements 
redisco 
am — agrioulturists, 84 rere of me 12th, Rien. and 
14th cen e Wold farmers have eed to 
drain, me ari for them ; calla ie in the fon fo 
wi the Tro is something quite di different to Dean 
— 
ston 
ini 
ees 
2 5 
S 
oe — 
— on — Linco 
aangis flat and — divided in a monotonous 
hich does no d, e to pictorial effect, 
— of the utmost 17 in assisting the 
armer to comparisons — radis of the produce 
of euch field. An ill een country affords better 
icul- 
by quaint 2 
t th ese are the bits the painter deli 
ome and these are just tthe beauties he will rarely ind 
e of another kind. Some new agricultural feature 
necessary — 
plan: b 
the — 9 — a a box with square ho sles fi or at — 
windows. Among other 
be 
engine chimneys would a 
te and ingenuity, especially when stone and t 
ed, become 
convey caper. 
At Aylsby, a parish with a pa stone church, held 
entirely i in two farms, I ted a farm, whi ch I 
o fine oil- cake m 
ho 
er | country in i 
the generally k high tone tone of intelligence 
ce pervading 
~ feelings e, the re- 
had a good 
These sort of specu considered onl 
for landlords indifferent to profit and fond ¢ of agricul- 
small | of the first 
2 I was able to bestow on arse occasion, 
a specimen e 
pale eee a which, 
very decent sort of rule of thumb system, had just then 
into the hands of Mr, William Torr, 
prac and scientific vegn 
kingdom, as well as a celebrated b 
and pure Leiceste He 
„at a depth of 30 inches on 
' that the | love of singularity has led some 
oo far in 
Such is not the case in 
Brocklesby ; an wa a = from a 
attentio 
ral 
are also the most W. pe esteemed amo 
neighbours. 
shire neig 1 ought to have aa 
importation, | on 
among the scientific | 
to the bowels of the land 
