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ы ы S AIR s 
_14—1854.] 
THE AGRICULTURAL NES 
E. 
The "is distinction i is obvious as regards the n north- — 
and -eastern ts and environs ; PA ue cours 
improvement, 
farinto the co о the ; yet, 
a short walk of Kingstown hery the line of | 
ing along the т 
d 
continuation of the firs 
sary accom entem for Vader sident мса 
endent, has n 
Itural pupi "я 
uni- 
offices for cattle, &c., wit 
junet, are 
arti "at ri ht an ks ЖА this 
rar vi Ке row M t 80 налобний 
en, carefully с 
апа apparently Lage orgy а 8 y of food айдо he 
reat many head of cattle dus coupe nement in 
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at ele imm 
of К йому арав a 
е m л of ins struction ps these ны 
ел and if 
mbers. Опе year's tuition is the period 
tion for the печа of this .class; too 
i d experie Extra Wes re 
aj. payment of a fee of “E guineas (for 
se cultural books f neral 
of 
A Bowed except at dead 
x throug 
ве, ge 
.| railway under 
а 
^ 24 er ou for the moo 
of i instrue- 
ort а | еп 
investment 
by means surprised at their 
bargai 
of money in the purchase of estates, I ата, 
meme not to 
| in n very elementary p 
along the AE ilaioug iem mx 
Killarney, and from Dublin to Galw 
ravellers dive ийт fro om the trun rines ды them 
h Carlow, Kilkenny, and 
rect ‚ Dublin and Cork line, visit Cahir, Clonmel, Car 
, and also the parts of Wexford along 
— nh bx 'ed 
with gentlemen's seats and well managed farms closely 
arr t "m m go by ma from І 
poder Maca ery different will be their impressions. 
eeply ia ppotittéd б e been wit 
die artes Ae fro m Dublin чйр by Mi railway line, 
my sensations on seeing the m 
refe неа са and the decided progress which has 
made in these di opi have been of t the сет p lie 
kind. something of eee will be better than a 
general qaam ssion T opin From 
Monastereven and Mou isadi: the soil is a shallow 
of peat over clay, yielding g. however eg Oa 
Potatoes ; p^ tw най in lazy: bed 
because the soil is thus 
small farmers are of "a present constitution 
Ав the practice of moulding the Potato. lants two or 
Mi^ times in Me beds, iy sca wm the soil obtained 
л the furrows over ther evails in the south and 
Ir Іа 2; die sinking of "the pedi nto the subsoil 
of the пиене for а supply of earth for the ннн of 
e beds is i effect. a.sort of trenching, and e ally 
| i ич нү in thin soils, which thá jus оа dé Nai 
n course of time. e Dun vari 
e favourite even 
eapable of producing heavy crops of Barle 
To estimate the value of land in the actual condition 
“л large proportion Ж the vit bri m of the line of і 
notice would diffieult. I was told 
ге 18 he probábiė avera се rent 
that 308, per (Iris 
bout Portarlingto 
u 
no indications of neat 
gerows, and gentlemen’ s demesnes, these are 
of the MEM 5 A.M. 
р 
pe nn in » the winter half year, to 94 40 Р.М. ича, со 
he year. 
d, milk, butter, meat, and vegetables will, I 
m, and thus all 
Hu 
s the 
erary 
* èl 
assed the undulating down of the Curragh, 
S0 admirably suited to vie eediug from the cal. 
careous rid = the soil, be is passing over a cheerless 
expanse of and, and learns that the Bog of Allen is 
oue of the чы “distinguishing feat features of e эти 2 
being the pecias ard] 
the fertile and € parts of this otii ; Mi on eye | Where there is such de of shelter. толка there 
rests on the bog, bog—undrained, ill- | is no deficiency of timber a few her of ; the. 
Тепсей land —straggling, crumbling furze from |splendid woods and plantations оп Lord Hawarden's 
Mon soes tehed soil. I think | de of Dundrum, which compri 100 acres, 
1{ was betwee ^! топао d Mountrath I saw a present a very жези лиз moun- 
ph rawn by tw —— e ган опе І vem и tain nobl 
seen yo ess of the It 
pro many 
, nd highly embellished and well- 
— portions of Seres inteseupted- 1 no doubt by. 
that British whether 
'of th turesque or with the intention of pur- 
rm == generally see the least favourable parts 
going southwards, to Killarney, they either 
e vast bog of Allen, or skirt its 
forbiddi — , and traverse 
yw n the counties 
e Cork and Kerr rry; and if they take uie western road, 
тө ле favourite line, and visit the' wilds of Conne- 
treeless, an 
кайыш ter fo cabins; and only relieved by а 
"s house and trees here and i enun their 
miras m у of. 
Mist to very наога enitn pibus 
Жаршы sil ge ae M a view to the. 
behind or is passing through a wide interstice be- 1 
ed. | for cattle walked over them 
тош o 
азе of dio ped d levelof Ireland. 1, was is not peprising, 
was no 
of the season, accounte 
the ану of the land-. 
The t Ми unster СРЕ зон, 
passed, and very high prices had been ob for 
cattle, and I informed that v Ead of t 
had recently let йл, to Englishmen in the 
Mine of Tipperary, who had given unusually high sums 
for us stock 
ant of trees apes egent м ату E iin. AP 
ut the c course of the ney, w king. was 
been chiefly oo кнр oned © the жай s tha. last months 
of the pas nes for 
in Irel е а 
eraa and Oats in the succeeding чер... 
i "i th 
g of 
den "Thuzles, 
appeared to be utterly useless—ce A asa so as fences, 
wh in pleased. 
0 be continued.) 
ual halves, then cut 
indi joint. of the backbone, de wil appear mis 
Dublin 
: but let these 
m pa 
rting from Ye iti 
h the aspect of not 
more eastern portions am h 
лина T ju 
la 
И for а month o 
sa 
to be de 
EI шка ша of ers dietriet, 
d loin 
e өя is rea 
e where th 
a number of t е sides ү ou m 
the first day lay upon some fla; boards, oum. i karam 
ss each oth ds y mà rim. iet Sushi ap ing 
and thin е it with salt 
aKes " 
on the vou undermost, giving t roma 
veg lying two or three weeks pnr the pm y be 
or smoke- Боша or if the 
5 
5 
oses y em over in without 
givi ng them - more & firmis which state they may lie 
wo without c GÀ any harm, until he 
сдана e v.s 
iek —The 
salt 
boitom of is tub or kit, about an inch thick, and lay i in 
the pork close ; cover it with 
and make all as firm 
in another p “of pork w 
manner. Proceed thus till чуед M". inches of the 
top, when the ce or kit must be filled 
dow and cover it with 
t 
exclusion of the air Me the 
It. is «е А 
d 
e and weight; “it ота | 
nately until the cask is nearly 6 
salt is laid оп the top, and ће cas up. 
fresh pickle out of which the pork маны taken is then 
salt nw mme through a hole left in 
r the purpose ; when the cask is 
full em hole is засну чай up ied the cask sent to market." 
In some 
$21 
Much of the success in the curing 
ping ar of pork D A upon the preci 
and the state of the weather. Many ed: 
"rd rode will not kive their pigs кун in the wane 
of the moon ; this is preposterous, but it is evidenee of 
the influe ence of the weather. It has, however, been 
clearly ascertained that changeable weather is highly 
injurious ; ; that sultry, moist, and oppressive N^ 
i. e., when the air is much c charged with electricity, has. 
ап extremely prejudicial influence; that excess of 
u the at here i 
rb 
n no aecount should 
and feu state ; Ан 7 M pigs to án. 
` cold weather does injury, but in hot iem itis certain 
to spoil the meat. n the eei is à 
many e prineipal 
food of the inhabitants. = wes арена i is to kill ihe 
pig in the evening, hang the carcase in нее 
the da day waxes hot a cold cellar is preferred for pi pres. 
iri 
