412 
THE te Ad GAZETTE. 
[JUNE 25, 
anted the usual liberal 
ntry meeting, had 
ensuing country ng, pra ot dedio- 
concessions of a free transit of live stock, a 
ts to an 
= uld be 
th Жеден for 
the exhibition of agricultu sini — set machinery 
already reported) amountin gion 3 yards in 
ile 1 5, that a Way's 
inl its m meriin applica- 
d be банкі: befor re the members at the 
held on Wednesday, the 29th of 
Жебір. 
ks and Suggestions on mie System of Farming 
— — il of the County vis 
Remarks 
adapted to the Character 
Carmarthen. J. Ridgway, Picadilly. 
Tuis pamphlet is prefaced by a Nox ph by Viscount 
Emlyn, in which it is stated that these remarks, written 
e — of crops pr 
tem th 
for the distriet, which are actually prevalent under 
bu 
twhich are in marked m: 
moist season best. The Wheat is sown with the usual 
mixture 
d 
e nothing in 
hav 
pasture that cannot keep a full and well-fed stock. — 
ner 
а 
» е — adjourned to their next Weekly 
viel 
d to recommend. The pa Lae а s 
ор 
contrast to the existing state of things in Carmarthen- 
shire. The rotation prevalent in that county at present 
is as follows :— 
“Ist, Fallow ; 2d, d ; 3 Barley; 4th, Oats; 
6th, ‚ ditto ; бш, ath 9th, 
ery year mows 32 acres of old land of fine quali, 
the same fields bein ng mown every year. One half o 
t 8 esp Seeds, Rolling, and Tillage, 
ould b 
re, ie wich is laid on either immediately after the 
in the months of 8 nd November, 
i ing. The ats aia h 
undant pasture for My ctm herd of short-horn 
cows. “The crop of ey Ду wei, ighs oe 
y of Rye-grass hay i is stored in | mak 
whic 
e 44 ^ secured in this manner is 
of the — quality, and ai the advautage of careful 
managem uring the mer this farm fe ne 80 
attle, 40 of which are e large Mio ien dairy cows, and 
, 20 cattle, id 150 
, 
ber is regularly maintained in milk throughout 
r 
ing, en dk. 
In Yorkshi 
таноо, ж : — refers especially to 
s it bears remarks on this 
PM 
heads— Draining, Fenci 
rares 
t 
sibjoet at p. s we pike. че following extract 
h К. 
this part of the boo 
* Com sisting of rotted weeds, burnt A or 
rubbish, ditehings, road- пар, and such like, 
with bones, or lime, or salt, or guano, d nitrate 1 pia 
&e. RIUM r excellent vd for pun land. I 
steel add that fold and sta Ne 
ad), is decidedly one of the 
lage a can pe! applied, 
at 
па; 
е dust, guano, salt, rok pt Nitrate of 
manufactorie 
e that 
is „д; ме. ae with the refuse flowing toh om the sewers 
of a tow village, its producti 
e 
eeing large al 
passing away through itches and sewers, into 
our canals and CN thereby losing what might ‘have 
i used e ad kae pd nereas e ce of 
r land to an amou o have never yet thought of, 
But there ye 4 remains an easy, rue nd a 
effectual way of ME Grass m d— 
with cattle and shee 
f the herbage is Jet and grows ‘into 
5th, Barley ; Grass ; the — those which have become d the 
ditto ; 10th, ‘ditto. This is fena very different from | fed ‘off or sent to another farm and mo erate UE hillocks, which are i reat measure waste, 1 
of the already and if Stephens | feeding, till they are ready again to take their place | although they may be XS AE eaten üp durin 
ice of taking two corn crops in| among the milking stock. The ~ st heifer calves are | winter season, t tain very little nutrition; let M 
the fine land owrie, | reared to keep the stock good. ode of feeding the | plan of giving cake, at the rate of 3 or 4 Ibs. per day to 
he would not much approve of this; and, indeed, he | cows is as follows : on „the st of Novem er the winter | each head of cattle, and half a pound to a N 
con it, is not nagement begi м constantly sheep per day for o ne season ; and whether. the beef or 
possible to give any good reason for following such an | housed, except being turned out two o ta time, 
e case worse, 
ec 
instances, to make the 
nothing in the shape of сь is applied during the 
— course, with the exception, perhaps, of a little 
me," 
All this is contrasted with management such as ы 
following, described in Caird's British Agriculture 
The. farm of Moresby Hall, w 
rotation, and is never 
no 
interfered 
prar erras right to adopt. The lea is broken up and 
with 43 bushels 
ef dung and 2 UL OE унар r acre. 
yield from 20 to 30 tons, = yellow abou abou 
the Whose 
suitable for Wheat half the Toig erop is deno 
be consumed by the p on the adjoinin zai 
n wet ge and the other half i is fed off on the land 
red with by M Tab landlord as to the management | per 
ber, 
bw aee 
0 bushels an 
variety, which from having presas long 
з become 
district, bas acclimated, and is found to stand a 
t WE т — before to one of t 
te 
acre of the old English 
grown in the 
о for a few minutes daily, to the байр. ке They 
t Turnips twice a day, t each — 
They receive likewise a cooked mix — Oats an 
— се together for that purpose, а and cut by the 
r, then boiled with c 
iay a kei to each e 
is placed in a stone trough 12 hours 
a 
ay, the 
at 1 ,an 
ey are then all turned 
after bein — g; the mo 
al 
mid- -day milk is sent to Whitehaven bey £s — evening 
e qua art 
milk is e into butter. Milk sells at 2d. per 
for new, and 14. for skim, and buttee ын 
r lb. Th he annual produce of each cow is very c 
this stock present to the 8 system of the dairy 
farmers of t Gioneestershire and how pine a bec 
and quantity of the rich manure produced a mpar 
with the little dried heaps of wives droppings which 
scatter sparingly over the land ; the work is 
done on this farm by four horses in 3 e in 
| — 
whole essay is iu calculated to induce its 
— if he have hithert ly 1 
th 
h 
n ased—the result 
f or others, of the old. fashioned kem ard 
сэс re of ee, under very simi 
circumstances rring and inevitable іга 
ped fighting in poverty, 
= and agriculture generall 
are indebted to чакон Emlyn for the iets of ibis 
simple, unpretending little publication. 
Three Essays on Grass Lands. By William Barratt. 
Being Papers read before the Wak Е 
Club, and . printed at their expense. Sarna 
Office, Wak 
he Essays here 
sy in which i 
ing one or 
urpose passages 
Moment of — ete 
з well w 
"The whole publi- 
а 
8 winter feeding of | i 
acted on, would tend both to th 
with 
See ork — reappeared for | i 
ating | 
such grounds, is particularly full of instruct 
management of meadow land is considered under six 
crops in future years i so. In faeh one of 
the дее remunerative wee of farm 
system of manuring land, by m 
of he produce on the groun 
it 
other kinds. M i e is prae 
e from eld to eld, i it gives 
ng o in the 
serious thought, ag place, and a € 
extended application Indeed, this subject is engrossing 
a attention of a large e of agriculturists, as 
und 
in n and applying 1 lace E from our prey cow- pay 
piggerie and o eni ae 40 to 50 per 
adn of ос ur coun hs d s los 
2 There xa Pis another mole of fume Grass land, 
viz. A to it Scotch uci asia 
Ca 
292 
zz 
© 
Pa 
“ 
4e 
2 3 e 
c 
T 
8 
E 
u these be applied 1 a the e pro r localiti 
of a field, such as “the knoll of a hill, or where page 
and the Grass subject to burn up in 
and y^ effects will be very visible for two or three 
years 
We. es . wi dere seat as containing ud 
excellent — on im ing cedi E 
pastures the best Gris кй for alternate husbandry} 
and on ihe] =e method of laying nmn lands io p 
manent Grass 
distance between epe drains 
