172 
THE AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. 
ELi 12 
yis ieties. 
ROYAL KERU ОВА (L SOCIETY OF ENGLAND. 
W 
rard, 
W. 
Napier, 
Powell, * к of "Vetus: 
Pro 
t 
year, after a с 
He thought the ren 
be BELG 
Isabel Mead, Har 2. wn, near ys 
the Council with the — account of his cultivation 
White Belgian 
mber, 
ridge up the land to — ſor ү winter. t the 
ex if ppm ground will о well, harrow and eo off all the 
Cou 
24 bes s apart, and 
dung, m те їп {һе 
lan а r so well th: 
approve of too 
cut off by the spri 
А soon a 
the ground, so as to be seen in the rows, 
©. C Mr. 
Mr. Fisher Hobbs, 
. Mainwarin 
rain Ml, fio 
Gadesden 
Mr. K. 6: Key, М», : Majendi, Mr. 
Pain Pocock, Mr. 
HE Ro dn 
tus Smi th, Mr. Reynolds 
. Fowler, of Dart- 
with large granite 
middle of March last 
which were carted off, 
d odd be about 5 qrs. per acre. 
AN Cannors.— Mr. Edward Smith, o 
terbur лене bo 
"e 
the — of the White 
wed for several years 
^d 
Abou 
strike out > fu irrows from ‚20 and 
n, P 
f | Professor Way, the consulting ena ist to 
them again effective, 
— T He 
——— of Urwin's lift an 
s 
easily be raised to different altitudes, or conveyed ш 
hi 
continuous flow f gher to a lower pe over 
walls, turnpike-roads, ther intervening eminent 
The e from his live-stock was d into 
tanks, and the liquid manure distributed, by tubing in 
len Nes SN yards Иш each farm-centre, over hi 
Grass. other resident remarked 
ens every ау afforded ys r the distribution of liquid 
crates! d 
Pouttry bis ui Mery of Vries yr — a 
th 
po 
| exceeding 13 hands hig 
of interest and importance to the 
can 
in the case of cattle 
thousands are en exported to other coun: 6% Б many 
pony is w ien a yearling m untain-steer Yearoiq 
given a prize, a to co ie — for three rar 
promised 
the re ge pueri moie Society 
ain pony stallion and mare. 
mall h 
“ pony ;" b 
d 
is di tl 
он Пу a er Na “bred one, with handsom 9 * 
h 
— 
rage d 
is sure to be m ing 
will become more valuable, m Psi 4 as the i mptovenie, ts 
of the C 
extract from 
armer wif 
» market as it was a few y f the 
mplish the pame task. 8 Kills do 
1 a pim so wet a iable e, where 
€ —— mel which he favoured the 
Council at this meeting. 
паме в a large eel of Cochin China Fowls, I began, 
autumn of last year, to иа ihe rdv of my po rd 
and am now poss sessed of t E three tons of it. 
of.animal food, Hemp-seed 
— 
At prese A | pic 
еа: sapis to e p in that — but "аһа ба MES 
On one of m 40 бопе, 
s І feed every win 20 head 
of cattle on es . — Gorse and е, 4 food which I also gi 
instead of Oats to my cart-horses, I intend, should my lifs be 
spared, to wd — € - a ы paa to 
supplies, I shall do everything in my pow р 
objects. I am therefore putting myself in communication 
to precure an analysis of the доз. panne thus 
my management of the Shanghae ltr ape AL of this 
— or cart in the b 
same as for Turnips. 1 have found this 
y 
a boy 
best time for sow! "akt the 
early sowing, as the young Rosy 4 FAM y^ 
ng frost, "and much stunted and injured, one 
so well after. I find about 4 Ibs. of see 
wet the seed a week before — 
8 s th ots ear above 
e Ca p 
Itake advantage in dry 
"weather to hoe between the drills, to give air to the plants. —. — 
— 
the Carrots come out i 
the weeds, I have boys 
twice before > {һїп апу 
= seeing wh — 
or 5 еа 
р th 
and ey injury. T 
I the horse-hoe 
rrots get up Strong, as tlie « nm ch is apt to fall upon the 
I have me by enr di the e — rth fro 
"ther are about h 
well thatched 
a нө, earth, — е аа 
сае — in this 
0 
white Carrot might 1 be grown with much success on man 
‘ y, soils 
in addition to the NA as there is sometimes a failure in one 
y should be le 1 
= amarae pe 3 clea 
to pull t n the rows by hand 
of he Carrots - it gives an opportunity 
the Car about 
can be rige 
m the — after 
ide ve boani much larger. I 
4 25 in, which is a great 
d other stock, when the 
in the season. 
сэ will show - d. this 2 is likely to еее 
ranch of our rural е my. The оеша т the 
— at a trifling — — and the Ith and NE of 
the gp are thereby greatly promo u^ 
іѕн Farminc.—The Tho Williams of 
5 in Glamorganshire, having favoured the 
Council with various suggestions ecte th the 
ination of prizes for the South Wales district, | c 
etermin 
the following « extracts from t ndence 
a general interest connected with the ensuing Country 
Meeting of the Society to be = ^ Gloucester in the 
middle of July next, were re: e members at this 
weekly mating 0 of the Cun" 
eneral Character —South Wales la ee under many disad- 
vantages which militate against good farming as it is conducted 
in England and the ands of Scotland, . ma poupa o a 
which 1 may be cited к а and uncertain climate, much un: 
closed, common land, — inefficient — (who with : a 
few exceptions are attorneys), an which no useful 
d 
rict deg ce md nearly the half ot South 
Wales, a ferruginous om ay. In Breckno Monmouthshire, 
and part of кекеч the old cory sand- stone redom 
tt ot by its S prizes for vere m the cultiva 
tion t — and ma nery to effect the g of the 
plant, к mone =ч ‘encourage its cultivation 42 pits ibe its 
prizes ter, the ae of that 
but уашаме 3 the Wel 
Con Competition for Poni suggest tha 
prizes —＋ — should be so de fined ‘that d those уен 
are bred on such high mo — — as our Welsh ponies are, shall 
e qualified to compete. Of course, the motive for giving хи 
for ponies is to encourage the breed of such ee Bs 
th 
pan ge the climate, Pow: . in tolerable 280% on heath and 
ich coarse Grasses n mounta; = tabove the level 
of the sea, and on peg inis nd and i och MA ‚ deer- 
stalkers would expect to find a ete in the Biehl, of Scotland. 
Unless such condition is made, any — small Arab or duo- 
decimo cain punch—can compete En such ponies under 
certain circumstances are in themselves M hee thejudges 
award the e prizes to ponies of this clas „though Such would in 
ountain- 
ә. 
е 
g when the 
snowis 
too —— All my ponies have been d uri за e кы of last month 
8 on some m land more than 1000 feet above the 
a, having now and then a mouthful of hay and chopped Gorse 
wap pied to hem? and I hav гай some of our ponies that have 
not been off the hills, nor had a pr in foo = em ера 4 
winter. Where Highland deer can 
not so, however, can s 1 dwari ti hk Pw valu. 
able to carry ап alderm of 15 o stone, a miles an hour, 
me time 
are accidenta tal abortions. I saw Her these 
ЕД e 
a mint of money to 
real Welsh mountain-pony goes in 
I trust that such entries win be required as may exelude all 
мева nf eb ntry is either mountain. unen ммм 
or consists of hilly farms, with a right of grazing on the adjoinin 
mountains. On the sea- -coast there isa borner of better land, md 
inter- 
each —.— and a stiff ae soil, 
that South Sabena is e minently consti 
and dairy i 
large distriets . unenclosed m 
2500 feet 
TOSSES ches. 
Sheep. —The Welsh farmer is fonder o: than 
lse; because, as he will tell you, “it . him no trou 
He turns them out on the hills in May, where roam at 
pleasure. About the 20th of June, there is a gta ae 
lls being ed b. Es 5 on each of y 
there is a large fold surrounded by small ones,’ owner 
having a right to pied bets of the hill opm 
maller ones; пов 
every sheep-owner rashes Aker them, a 
which have his own ear-mark, and throws ee: ‘of them over 
-— into the smaller fold, from whence they are taken to 
m and washed; being shorn the next day, as the 
wild creatures night and 
be in the other, : 
2 above the level of thé. sea. Perec nt this farm, obliged to watch | thes 
i Gee Pinna TUBING. ee Key, of Newgate Street; | si at an elevation of 800 feet, rises one of these ranges, prevent their being off, would assuredly b 
stated that he had taken the earliest oppo: rtunity, as а which is EM agen и "т Mu elevation x еа, this, | their —À haunts ; when turned — pose of — 
‹ : м rr 2 which ave a right of grazing, my | way again to the hills. The farmers have two or 
5 й mar Society, of submitting to t notice of BK — the 1 madd of of Ар April to the middle of November. gatherings during "e summer, and. they are regarded as high 
the ( an essential nt just effe in I keep all the епс n hay, excepting a res, | holidays. There he o preparation made for the winter; m 
the manufacture of elastic tubing for T which I plough кэе лее тте of Turni — Ае Il — to help the hills are generally commons, are parts p _ the 
water by А ааа ае out the hay; and I force the aftergr. , in order to | winter as is the case in Бони d lambs are sent for i 
: Sellos if ah Iniprovcinent coms mount good supply of Grass afer x 2 yet m the fest giner ts be wintere rs ani in der dente n 
2, Ё ^ ta them in to graze the stab es an 
‘in the peculiar form given to the ere ng gra БЫ that 
the pe ac Cattle.—The stock of the country is inferior to those of the | charge of а Е 
which, instead of being that of a revolving plane oe ee р parii- classes to which the Royal Agricultural | there are only wo breeds is of hill pc ales, namely, to 
uniform diameter, as in the ease of ordinary glass Society of E gives prizes at its Annual Country Metam: Radnor Forest sheep, and that . "known as more al l 
metallie tubing, 4 з or I do not think that either the Hereford or the short-horn breed | Sheep. The former is larger, has fine 1 and more 0 
= 15, was s throughout its length, by | flou ү in more inland districts. ave ob- | tamer, and requires more attentiou tha "e Welsh pet 
the introduction of a spiral process of conv served that they all degenera SN Devons have not had so n account this very good 5 bee has ae 
and concave depressions, Mr. Key exhibited | a pers зе gry Shere ү. ск Mei осі orar HAM (—— LEER ‘son — ага M I found 
to the H е у animals o reed to at - short-horns or praris some black-faced Highland s otk nto o" iene better 
at a "pompes of the tubing two unwillingness for change, e neeived for the 72 
great to establish the me district. A8 U. 
less liable to be out 
simplest 
application i 
being most aired b 
a flaw was disco эрде ЫЛ 
х 2s ш 
man snare, but | ind fund 
ure, е 
on which this i 
in question ; ihe thes Were 
of order, and they were so the 
in the common workman 
I have po s thought t 
s — om age | 5 vets ef Walon 
men tm x — succeed Ar _ ses where they have 
ze for 
‘for the hills of Wales, — a PE in the distri an — 
elsh Penies.— The Principality y generally, und d South Wales in 
i celebrated for its breed of 
the breed not degene- 
select a stallion: they take 
paid much „ the Welsh 
le more 
= Fe e — districts of Wales, d 
e 
ugges 
have contributed to the carrying out of those objects of the Be 
Agricultural Society, at its Gloucester meeting, that have se 
reference to the improvement of the husbandry of the 
“South-Wales District.” js 
e eountry. 
= members of the veterinary F 
the one hand of making M yy: 
seen | Seere to the ve mmittee 1 5 J 
their po tow in promoti 
the ity by sending to 
т | College, either alive or dead, such 
, and ae the 
animals of this breed will pay more on the same keep than either | 
and foie wah he 
soon have lost the whole of his 
