THE AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. 



, that where by Natur 

 ultivator is ever calle 



f Kent clays, the produce 



vithThose of the Midland 

 iculties of the poorer dis- 

 ■ implements ; so might I 

 plough of the rich alluvial 

 st with the highly-finished 



_ 



_-■_.... 

 .. . . 



I ■ spade, we shall si 



- ■ 



up the subsoil, turning itTom- 

 ; oloiv of the gardener it is shat- 



: ., - '.,,". . ■.'.'■■:■ '.-. 



. •. .. 



sight of the plough. 

 I . fertility of land is 



sphere until suri'accscratcli 



■ 



■ 



tming a hard und 

 surface. It is diffic 

 • ' *■'■> -of ploughs; to he u 

 bed when at work. 



iopt tl 



i tillages at one period, might be employed to di 



advance, 1 use for bog ska patented one, 



nee; by Mr. Wm. Ford, and is applicable to pipes of any 



" Velp of a boy, will 



help of a boy, wi 





nitted themselves.— Tyro. 



priety of withdrawing tl 



darts into the earth during spring and 

 which is the most beneficial, to accelerate 



livalent the action of a higher 



ourable to production V In reply, I beg to call his 



fknowfhSman^ 



Agricultural Sofl ■ expense of 



manufacturing pip."- ,. I t , - «■< , . in ;. . , ,tir. 



'- 



to 90s. per acre from 30 to 36 inches deep. Pipe drain- 

 ing has been in practice here for upwards of 20 year*, 

 and I believe we have as good tools and workmen as 

 can be found in the kingdom. I admit, however, that 

 the pipe generally used here is more costly, because 

 larger, than the " inch pipe," which Mr. I 



materials, as a m 



eans of producing an early and 



abundant crop, and 











Btion™^! submittrhimwhether 



favourable to produ 







proved, or how can 









vered crop \ Perhaps too much 

 to sheltering from the winds, and 



has been attributed 



ag and young Grass. Or take even a stronger case 

 e a large and bushy- topped tree fallen and lying wit! 



also that the droppings of cattle are o 



The Lancashire and Cheshire cele 



below the sets, and I believe there are partisans of hi 



jelebrated growers < 



during the winter (Pelargoniums especially) i 

 lent health, by a thick covering of horse littei 



fs probably equally beneficial with the protecti 

 frosts ? and when, in spriug and summer, th( 

 mat at night over their glass-lights, do they ki 



"England, and altho 



SS* ; aiHi t v? er and differe,u ; .'- a "> lv,e " ■ " ol lC:,t ir . ""> l "' ca . hl ° 



"-;•■■: 



-'■- soil, as the much imagine, i. u-ioncion ofhea 



r Croyd,, 



i Correspondence. 



m 'of"" h 0Wer -~ 0n takin g a farm 



were spread out horizontally from the top of th 

 the border below would be pr , 



; ring. The gardeners' nightly f: 



n d K 1 sks >rt may pr< i t h\ m; il 



will be produced. A bright and brilliant noctur 



- ; : ;-.. :•.■■:.. ..-..■.'. 



° almost 11 coevaY" 





as for fixing the outlets of 

 through hedges or into wat 



ry. It is a more 





:'■■■••■•: 



■ . ■ 



' , die * wa y ' m 



patches. The most powerful manures u 



disease. Old banks a 

 egetable n 



often seriously injured'/ Clover, by standing 



'hole year, approaches nearer to natural pasture 



— * at whatever 



the whole year, afford good harbour 



En 



a any otner agricultural crop ; ana ai 



