THE AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. 



part of it is on high err< 



•ai ©alette. 



IRY 13, 1847. 



■ : : 



tngn ground, and alter a j means have been brought to b 

 ng, is laid down for five years in I tion, has increased so much I 

 jus to the introduction of guano necessary either to buy stock t 

 nures, part of the land had to be J nip?, or to sell the Turnips 

 s is now in green crop. There are ground. 

 5 of upland pasture. The ft 



The The sheep in s 



Hitto>Knowe Iak: 

 :,,, lhnut4 P0 are 



ittening stock is 

 high lands, and 



F 



fed off in the third year, and the cows ; lea, which u to be I 



n e ^m " i: >ev% ° a ' FCJ mS |are disposed of at calving, when about 10 or 12 fences. In the wintei 



-. years old. Previous to the use of guano and arti-i penned on the Turn 



arable. Part of the arable Bcial i mures, the only <tock kept was that bred 'the young stock is c 



1 ^— o . — , . ,.,„ . .■.— , . ,„ ■ ., ■■ .— »—. . ...,, , „ „.„■., . ■,!-,■ ■ ■—' •VA Closed UVIU lug me xuJiup i 



son, and when the irh 

 p 1 d in spring. The enclosing of the fi< 



| would greatly improve this fa 



I . being kept. The land is well draii 



■ ' annexed plan : — 



rlE 





^n 



11 



m 



• 



- a shelter to all the reat ; 

 and it will also be seen that the 

 re, H, is conveniently si- 

 r.-gard to the yards, cat- 

 tle-houses, and stables ; but the plan 

 i* by no moans so perfect in other 

 respects. Perhaps its chief defect is 

 ■ the foe I'n .- ; >use F, 



The dwelling-house here forms 

 part of the pile ; and there are many 

 obvious advantages connected with 



'ficultthanto obtain perfectly | 

 C. / 0r ^ e . ence as t0 the quantity of M'tki- 

 J '® e . an 'Dg azotised) matter which a given 



cause of defects in the pro- 



" " ' ' • i 



<* in 2 t! e - '? CCOrdin & t0 the condition of the 



•sltW f- grown " Buckwheat, for ex- 



^ Wheat being taken at 100; but it appears 



- ; - , : 



>\m\L,. ,i e t00Tia its val «e represented bv 



- .7 ; l, " :,i ' ; ■ ■■ - • 



^achllii 1 ! 8 " fficicnt n«mber of an dv^es t- 

 ^' *' thern.r ° bta,n ^ good average, and we 

 tl«w!S I " earer the truth th an that which 

 *«rrivedt b ° rrOWedfromthe Dail V *«" can 



V *2Tert h P 7f eV ^j anotheT P oil,t w 'hich requires 



; -n ; ...,.:. , ^ 



"' l»".>dnee which ;m a<— ■■<' 

 - . ';■'; - .- or, ,,;,..,. .. 

 ^inatinn .Twf* at J u,d trustworthy stati 



ear alight h v 



, « , »£ C c o a,p,eted - Th ''S 



r^°ai an „ r aa ;,?' tor ^though a cron of 



•;^eif Urn5she % thegre °p te ; f 



^>'F manured snfoT^L? 1 * *^ * ro '" 



i good if the different 



— without manure 



en in your Tables 



>ut the weights of 



average produce, 



—•--estimate. Thirty 



W urzel are more thaii 



-and where the farmine 



Peas, or 30 of Oats, is much 1 

 following Table I have given w 



would yield the greatest amount < 







■•Ofr 





very * 





difference of a dry or wet sumi 



influence them. It would be, I think, ; 



time and money to plast in Ireland this year any 



extensive tract of land with Potatoes, and a very 



i will arise for seeds of different de- 



V\ hen manure is plentiful. Man-old 



desirable crop for economy 



I will be 

 d ; it should be dibbled 

 should 

 ter return for the seed wh 



borne in mind that all crops yield 



In America, and many parts of the world where 

 produce of Wheat per acre is not more than 1 

 12 bushels, it is not unusual to obtain 30 to 50 ti 

 the amount of seed, while in England we do 



plethoric wisdom), admits the general and antecedent 



-."■'' 



nvalidate the truth of the rule as against r 



iOIHSOi UU CUC.l «»i». »4~- 



i in a mirror, as he beholds 



• ■ 

 old Experience, leading them i 



' : 

 ............ : ■ • . ■ - ■ 



rise and break in succession 



upon the shore of life, and need no reproach but that 



- " i:ilLt : ., 



on me, m the 



autumn of no, I dare not say h 



when the arrival of load after load of Draini 



at Annuity 

 and Wisdom herself had pronounced undrainable since 

 ^Bu^why can't it he-drained ? asked Greenhorns. 

 Because they Uve^Wiadom. 



Not thL V wL h not n a to q« • - 



sional nature, only seen (if everyn^ 



to do with farming. T 



unfair and illogical : 



that it looked as if 



