22—1854.] THE AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. 363 
тна аатыттан тазове - argumens base] поп dos КАБЫ тсе 
were kept exaet]y in the same kind of building as that It was partieularly noticed in the field a arrangements ! arguments based upon the hei atmospherie i 
че >. мие ibed, bu the ventilation was noticed in this here how easily and perp all the seeds of root | column, or upon a any айыда ght eont paani 
ease as being superior. | erops may : put in with the liquid drill ; the drill tank | may be, three miles or 30 P^ our head, must, to & 
The riext object which engaged attention was the may be filled with liquid in T^. quantity, at any part of | very great de be mere assumption. "Until balloon 
4 boxes appropriated for'the use of the store pigs and the se, by the aid of the hose here se, the manure ascents are systematised, the small amount of =: 
1 ws. do 
rom th 
n osphate or other о ked upon as the most interesting > 
boxes. having two. compartments, one for resting and | ficials, So inquiry I found that the Баша е ari bad work of induction, but still only as the work. 
another for root feeding, уу? both were quite small and | not been se here ; I must, therefor end it| Air and water being both fluids, © R.” may see what 
under eover ; the roof was much too low, and the place | Y невен consideration in көлдем with the | gave me my first idea of tatory storm's-eye, if he- 
Ш ventülated They = 7 "Iittered iid: ud traw. I management of this will pull up partly the batch which regulates the flow 
: i ra ill-dam that may be near hi 
f . Mechi f him, 
breeding and store pigs ; at the same time I believe that | me that the system of X liquid in manuring must become | Immediately the downward of the waters 
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space of rS, tby "io feet rod poa and also а space must certainly be recognised as опе of t reat im- | the surface of the mill-dam without wetting i£, Simi 
of 12 Il Е cut fe oors uncovered, in the | Hime she of our time, both for the purpose of irrigaton, | to this I conceive to be the atmospheric fluid which is. 
absence. of а covere leid where it may re- and also for the dispersion and application of fluid carried round and round with an upward, i of 
i h ero | Tnment rt of t i 
placed in co а um, the other Duildings, ^y: bed with this subject, irrigation is only а m matter of expense, and the cause of that upward pressure is expansion | 
Pell гардан die g paved brick floors, with gutter | for in vario = I of the kingdom I have seen much of the air from being heated, i.e.,as soon as nir is heated 
to drain away the e plenty of space was sal otted | pasture lar mparatively barren state which may | it rises, The motion of the earth round its axis causes the 
for the Horses, and the stable lofty and well ventilated. | be M "ey тобат by lifting water with steam- heated fluid to rotate in contrary directions on different | 
After. having seen all the ровая: it oceurred to те pow red level, and distributing it for sides of the equator ; and as the area over which this- 
that their эк пты position and general arrangement was iron dés the рр» adopted in catch meadows. influence extends is enlarped—in other words, ав the 
defective, and somewhat inconv чена ; it is, sip |. In conclusion, I must say, that althoug т. Mechi column expands so the storm's-eye will extend; ùe., the- 
only justice to Mr. Mechi to say that he acknowledged may not have made his system of liquid manuring | calm clear weather will prevail over a larger space in & 
this, and stated that > 55 of some of these e— profitable at the commencement, yet the persevering high latitude than in а 10 in Ergland than in the 
was not contempla e commencement, ап i 
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he wi have cet: and arranged his buildings i in lead to great and beneficial changes, both in irrigation | falling barometer with a rising thermometer and cloudy 
a M - | and the icr of liquid manure. J. B., May | weather, probably with rain; then the weather clears. 
The ex sof "Tiptree Hall — "e im to Mr. | imi up, and some hours of clear bright sunshine ensue, 
Mechi, wa tid to Бе 140 acres of land, and I w was | | the m i wind 
also informed that he i erue about 30 acres in Жып e Corresponde ence. ‘round ~ the con barometer- 
addition, which he has recently hired. The whole of! | Thick an d Thin Sowing.—Never іп our remembrance begins and the sky clouds over again ; the 
ere Tma did corn of all kinds look more encouraging than at the | changes "d the „wind will, however, depend on whether. 
it is i planted | Y 
irection, э 
ed. eye, In reference to a quota tion of & e from one 
мее | 
(feet apart, upwards of 80 m" t ears, containing 50 | 
kernels each, or more than 4000 fold. Our specimens 
his se i 
occurs in our (пог in any) latitude : I merely assigned 
а h this orin- that height hy polbeteay (hough f or Ке purpose of ће 
value of this farm, taking it on the whole | Spection, eorroborates theassertion. Thisgivesupwardsof | abjection I then had under consideration, the greater- 
at фе commencement of Mr. Mechi's occupation, 1:10 qrs. T acre, from two pints of seed, b are w^ die eight of the colu ат the stronge $^ vod т that 
rec the а 00 
i 
parti icular prend and, therefore, I put the 
hypothesis m t unfavourably to myself. 
8s. per aere. 1 is, however, n mu 
changed ; for- the draining (although ^ somew: what. trentient ав grent 
— р» forking; and breaking-up the sub-. gem than rv cw dard, it isan utter 
i oval of the roc 
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{не | present buildings, iran saroe в g, we 
ч. have raised:the value оѓ. е land, and в-ве every grain of oed 
be now то ise he айин tbe id, eui i as the ) ғ Wheat; Barley, or Oats, sown їп the United 
annual rentak: 1: à № om, simpl ушр сут. Miche does тшу | 
(with the sole ion ofa j j ope ear, say 40 (nay, not ; 
is not quite. A чыма патио to tho money | much ini gr grain; and were it so, Ей Я aet 
successful farming, and without paci i necessary consequence, it would produce, of course, Жодар id wi Tus Wa ^ 
which ав been бен usly expended- upon I sa say, | times as much per acre as is sown, say 2 bushels or |j, Keranos; М9 FN MS. of a lecture mede Ye 
without- кымы, that itomay эрч made profitable | in; 128 pints of Wheat, and 3 bushels or 192 pints of very sdmirable review óf Рр f life and writings, - 
ocempation, at the above named rental, without the, Barley and Oats, as an average quantity of seed usually delivered Бу , of Kelvedon, and from it wo 
annual ошау ofso ries sum» fiv feedin ng stuffs as Возуп, But such crops are never realised. Loa tiako tlie following icit D. the life ое poet :— 
Mr. Mechi bas been in. the-habit of expending for some | are raised, that by ee tarda. late mildewed crops a xi элүү аны агг др кш, 
ч metimes the con gran but. sowin n chureh, уер m the throes of the R Refor akio мөзү жүз е 
I-now.propose- efferimg afew. remarks which have early will be found to abris this evil, dam ensure more u /'allingford. "This. arose 
р to me, resulting the inspection of this | yr йа T am bountiful harvests. Неў rdy amd боп, рну from МЫ рени «п шт! эзе фи La 
vT think 20 acres of tlie land may be advantage- Maldon, Essex. г h ^ 
ously laid into permanent pasture, or otherwise 20 С | Labowrer? Friends. — Last year ап — pe SECPIOdI [ur 
of land sown: to Italian- Rye-grass, in addition tothe Society in Lincolnshire itum an offer of a premium M ultimately c St. Paul's, and speaks with gratitude - 
quabtity of land now under that crop, The permanent from a gentleman Tuis of the soit d mcm f his pro acp i musie under pez были} есеби a. we iar hod 
pasture máy be made highly productive by the applica- One portion of thereward was to be given to the married organist T тетра) еге ro e aridi 
tion of manures in а liquid state, and its general pee and the other to tbe single dici who should and poer good 
for зір ауе been most nta in their attendance Cambridge. 
extension of the breadth of Italian Rye-grass, the at the parish church during the past year, tbe same to 
crop авав as it becomes fit for soiling be cut be certi т ші стан rm — um Con- he obtained em 
and removed daily, and the li applied sidering that the society 
close upon its removal. І do not consider feeding upon mets bes for ile etas Cheb and iat moreover i first titled hr nome, of the Anglesey fam ашу, ос 
advisable for this стор during the summer some vid bs t be stepp g forward, an d (though | 
as і iously inter with the succession, | inconsisten is principles) offer a similar | tbe 
upon the quickness of which its value so much de . mium for chapel, the ав at. 
pends posal w ] 
With regard to the management of sheep stock npon once dece ani, op оз repetition of the offer, рн be. d 
this farm, it is а question with me whether they would | rejected, С. | ba 
not yield more profit, and more benefitto tbe land, if. А Note from Tuam.— Great breadth of Potatoes frown 
they. were kept entirely in the open fields during Loth planted. Emigration not abating. Labour risen con- E: 
TIMES, and winter. (even admitting tbat the Арине!» siderably. Provisions very dear. Land letting mu pode |in 
if fed in higher than in 1853. egre lower ; Amas also; but а 
| узт затна dani erem ий, o The. Digg: Semiel ef Banbury. КҮ 
root erops and n t expenses will, е gger, iy Semel son, © — Having practi f кеш in 
li T imagine, be be agg | greater than the gain to be. obtained murra ове 1 of these i mplements i in June, 1853, and | "Y ve pue Huc is h He 7 
muelson having made пее of my name, I think it. " f Husbandry,” the firs t айдоо which was publisheit: 
E ofi feeding. renta in: ea T aee the method of - due to the publie and the inventor to state that the. D d lere. кше уой doy Ак pained Me илсе, "who, 
trouth feeding being of course adopted, e bowever, фін impression I formed of this most useful ана Б held ту. oe must 
with the rotati crops can | implement is more than con another year's for some Dn producing. 
jenem from in the | trial of I have used it this season on all my Turnip | even à the rude "Y which an issued from tbe whieh 
; "et ormed the germ of h rk, for in it is found s 
the completeness lows, and have found it superior rřect outline of „кийын which could only be drawn by & 
arrangements: ce feeding. In the саве | ment, both in the economy of labour, and the excelleney | practised band, and the m in ishing of the pete: 2 
of ħeatdeattleit very different; for both young|of its work—indeed, without it 1 could not bave got pue trit ы» LE ^ra eren 0 EO 
eur мы = pote d CEU ми жай I Sud но berae ard diee ы wi de ае | Enn langunge, Tibe I CMS sioe онн p" 
jdn Lr E. 
day on pe retentive loam, E. W. Wilmot € edition ане Ич r al ө pn ' 
Congleton, : : : ева ea э, ЕН н tions mar 
* i LM. 109—4 R.” asks me, at comparatively а $0 d 
poner gian rio o e. Eee Per nds 
: х $ E 
; 195 and how the eskn-in the centre із pro- so admirabiy designed. Аз is meni 
