142 
THE AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. 
field on 
of the produce of every 
you — 
t an account 
sen have kep — 20 years), I send 
of 84 ac 
for the 
—— 
uarters 
field 
r (a ve 
eds 
drilled on 6th of — — 4 bushels of Hunter 8 
White 
Wheat ; Gch of April, about 60 bus 
horse-hoed a 
the 
? 
Red, not yet threshed but fally as 
ot — 183 small field, 
thre e sides, Oat stubble 
— drilled « on 20th xo ge with 
a 
naturally very w 
nearly all Spalding 
gs 
5 stra * 
2 quarters Bari y 6 
per y deee te —.— rakings, &c. ; total re — 
acre, Soil rather — 
— —.— ag on mn the moors. 
1 rood, 
, part 3 dril 
>- — Chevalier Barley ; $ produce 
On and | 
other fields I ha . ers per acre. — 
Young, Coddington, near — Fl. 8. 
In reply to your question, ition, which ared in y 
Gazette of the 15th ult., “ Whati is the largest nanai 
produce of any of our crops s come e under Liew 
observation, its date and — mstances ?” I beg t 
send you the ee. statement, which I have just 
received from a ee ed and iutelligent farmer in my 
neighbour — — — ded upon. 
aR Wi — the Hooke, 
Lewes. 
Dear Sir,—According to your request 1 send you 
a correct account of the quantity of Wheat pa on 
in tho year a 
monl, ed i — 
hood Berry's Wheat, bu: I believe the yer name to 
be the old Hertfordshire White. On this piece 
re wasa v 
valent in that year. 
diately, and sowed it with Tares and Ra 
niy 5 bushels ha 
lime — ae — of — supplies 
wet no one be 
— with 12 | Bain 
soot Ta 
nd rolled with Cross- i 
ndent ies W., who 
please to send it to his Sa 
your 
doubted — there 
PPY. recei 
-r ce] I 
ae ilieate ss eee and 
unable to indu he 
This eatin * povera l persons 
to procure re it or the x among them 1s tiny he 
as Fraser Times, whose farm at Barton 
mai at good m mne en will mate 
n very u — soils 
will 
nd one whi 5 
ill lead to nothing but 5 o 
rop was seriously in- 
as in an dee edingly dry 2 
ears. 
and might not happen again for 
any ye 
7 4 excuse the a lay of the pene part of your 
letter. 
— — 
Is 
34. In. 13r. statute meas n the I 
soil is 
employment 
can easily ascertain 
cep 
machin 28 — plu 
re late carted ou g 
the 84555 ad meadow-ground; which carried the cat 
very well.— W. 
~ 2 
SUGGESTIONS TO ALLOTMENT TENANTS | 
—Whether you hold several acres — 7 
ah oa 
gh and p 
e 
| drained 5 W 
end you the account of acer and produce of 
of Man. The lim 
not taken baer! account 
bushels pe ute acre. Weight — bushel, 
W. H. B., of Man 
in, &e., grown in different 
loam, u 
In answer to your a ei for 0 concerning wo 
t 
your right cht hand, dig an 
ery This will bring No. 3 tot the 
Begi 
| stagnate, and 8 chill, ‘canker, pe: rot ap 2 
an of your plants. ese draw their nourig 
by manu which may be 
di vied ge 3 ae pi kinds, solid and liquid.; 
carefully collected from 
sei ; 
clay, wee 
stances. 8 
privy, a c 
slat of a . seat or barrel sunk in the 
r ed i 
sof be ground to be t 
o fill up the hollow whid | 
orking will new have been 
kA two spits broad, and m 
— An S 
— 
end in the usual manner. 
it out, spit os spit, and lay 
— 
5 
LE 
5 
town manure 
per acre of white Se 
AYLWIN? 
In Bristol ene es week; I was in 
— — 
pe pe eee T for forward the parti senor 
person 
t riog—in some pa 
too thin—by way of a, carp he. oe some 
re regular. 
neral adop- | Alth 
e propounds as a 
5 hace he will —.— bis subjeet, taking care to 
avoid 
urai — — Hunt, 
infi 3 quite e 1 of 
— — eee: it may i 
ei 
. 66 lbs. 
the flail. 
being in a perfectly light, 
r what may be 
come Basiep or Turnip : aah er 
old adage “ Wheat in the mea, 
an and Barley in the ak > The a ce of the plant 
asa vigorous as it e 
bein 
roveđ 
remarkably fine, and 55 quality of the Wheat nt excellent, 
per bushel. reshed 
„and t uce from the sev 
land was 363 bushels best Wheat, an ve acres of 
| iting 9 Joseph Blundell; . Hound, 
ge the. sen of 1844 1 took a fresh farm 
of 180 
acres of landrin in Surrey, which was in very 
mediately commenced cleanin 
a subsoil epit, se e on the top 5 i Fo er 
2. Thi 
— B., a lit ittle in e 
and is followed by b i 
dowa the trench, who turns No. 25 over upon 
“el N „ still in ad 
them, is most perf 
which is 8 adopted, and accoun ; 
able extent ioe the superior vegetable pre 
‘de As rain has a ten 
| turned ee the 
a is now so rank that I fear iinet 
la r three 
su 
| pe 2 down your ee at can rig 
o raise successi duri 
son, who 
1 or field- gardene 
ng, it suppo 
bein is w 
trenched, the next 85 of 
— seme > This may pede be done, 
ve laid down, 7 
neers la 
vill send ‘it t you, if 
of the winter, as the field has. al always: been co 
apas the remainder of the farm. 
ou think it would answer to cut ‘it 
rap! [OF seed 
| do not injure the 
earl. | 
Nery wal if you 
young ear, depen ss which you 
Cropping.— 
2 of land, 
os dee in gare 
