NOVEMBER 26, 1864.] 
THE GARDENERS’ CHRONICLE AND AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. 
1139 
tilth, and a novice would searcely believe such land to bes fear is more injurious | than useful on ae soils. Af 
———— enema 
Vex ay pa are turned out annually in thousands set 
firms 3 and a single maker supplies to order 
year, 
be heavy and wet clay while making such an excellen g mig 
se smali quantity of at too, suffices, wem poids as they strip m e 
goa in almost ora a plant, and in a ver i short time | frosts D 18° on the oth. E 1 on “the Ba 
the first great blow 
r the successful management ot February of the preser d B the frost 
heav; vy. € ir la nd i Ape pleted; all other agricultural | t | I s into the ud with sn d 
from an n early and successful Wheat sowing. W. 8. field, 
=r 
ON Hei Bear TS. hea 
(Concluded from p, yee ue them to withstand 
Havin me laid Gre the reader ot the m and keep weil till far in the Pa ab The 
nefits attending the ug the Swede | vs doy is, unless the am care is taken to 
crop, we will now wore closely confine our remarks | spread the roots that, are trimmed off when the crop is 
à earth ac" 
rere i ye 
o the em. AST of air in E: 
; stored ze this way| 332, 264, 399, and 
the most, sev m 18 
ir ber MER of the same 
used when Mr, Pusey 
into gen 
indeed a im) 
use of the poe of f this class He 
food en forced every possible me! 
to the subject of this paper—the -best method of | nsumed 
worthless on tho se spots the root- heaps. are 
| from the reasons Met aided k z I te bulls us 
tic aes 
e of 
and nutritious food with that w nad ped. nutritious, 
is not particularly palatable, Ciffesius v cut up poor 
ài e ond mi aud straw LM Ti urnip-cutters, a 
corn, and cake to XU me 
ns any with this chaff, and M T 
me it. 
PRnother manufacturer of oileake breakers, who had 
(only 49 in 1859), had orders 
| particularly M a 
On consi te nantity of the| much more Bg A6 
roots is consumed i Here good | provisions of Nature, by which the plant can a 
root houses are a toast e dic, to the farmer, ^ wo to a variety of circumstances; w Uh ae Hin 
where a large amount of food can sal of rain, the food is soluble, must be 
without fear of injury from frost, and also easily acces- | more widely sought for. One ar e 1 causes | 
sible during the most severe weather, the value HP of the roots becoming rotten in the k is 
which can only be appreciated by those who have e exp e- | put together in a frozen stato; however “alight wr 
at. th 
for 107 iu 1860 ; ; and bis mauufacture of eo orn-erushers 
rienced the di pry expense, and 1 
D distant fie Ne ched till the frost is com 
cutters for the fou v past yea ra—200, 420, pe 760; 
carting the daily supply for a urge number of vds 8 | they never keep well, if got up they ps lo be kept | third gives the following as his. manufacture ‘of chaff. 
ough dee 
nows, or in severe | untou pletely possible 
d seu 
should be a sufficient 
fro The bes rot gures we * seen ar S n the | there 
eem farm o w Leigh,» Esq., ark, 
n Bedfordshire, and that ed Earl Radnor, Gothi 
ar Faringdo n, Ber aj = a d ke capable 
P containing 13 the oh. as root- | as the weather at this season of the 
houses ad. the had wn ped nfine our|changenble and the roots that 
no k^ the — ‘systems of toring se ex suffer much more from 
he and the estead. In laces 
fare Gone with the al h bc We ha 
n p^ a win ng a 
to sr heap and "i 80 that the vti is edit 
as Je... d the hands might pal, E. 
the Là ning and heap and cover in the 
when 
y roots as i hol deteriorated in value gi the loss of a a quantity of juices | m 
coheed and tai ted, or topp , in accordance with | from the sty of th pang » the wounds made in 
the atr Lom LU different individuels, when cleanin, them elean when | roo 
one bout of th h throwing a dee 
hod side, and "eni at the top, completes the o . 
i i a large breadth ean be quickl 
. ey generally keep well, an 
are turned out cither by the 
2 the row, or by | € 
and e perfect) ly 
e they dn late i in the spring, they 
toon Sey tow out many small r qe re na to which the} 
— 
es 
y. That portion p y P 
cattle in u. » oes, v “one ou by 
nly ea 
when the lace 
year is Ea 
dre pulled and | Du 
dee 90, 110, nd 180. And ree 
`| locality, r 
items, 
of this class of of implements 
he economical use of much food that has hitherto 
Aeree 4s we owe to the in 
ent of Turnip-eutters and chaff-cutt &e., has 
latterly et extended — an invention of the 
t-pul t of which the manufacture 
dat d nly fr om boe Fon r years ago, but which has 
come most rapi: pidly 
The re ^ the Manga gels js ae - porem 
inm much n be 
ye ea pe th Moody's of 
which » how + ipie very — 
thus 
any Tar Iago 
|Warmistr, to. 
testi the sequel— and 
ps ff 
ng a ‘ork ; 
ni is used $i is necessary to ae out the coulter, 
and run the plough fairly under the roots, otherwise | 
there is some danger of injuring them. Four years ago | houses are not used. The 
wa 
e 
e root- | 
our of ours & f 
and we conld distinctly traces the lines where the roots h the 
nly t the follo 
do 
ES the muli Peg scared = Y 
i chanel at 1 
in 
, thongh | the 
d fela - Swell socked "wil that sins This ca 
easil ted fi Christmas we greatly 
r incurring the extra fate tet of ca 
brous roots 9 er 
bs ng the sam "hs 
, as. also | ha. 
in some p sound dry 
e for ee 
125. per acre. he Nov. 
be wis rua 
0- | 60 aer 
them poetam with horses and cai exta; |t 
inte pis of the farmer the pud 
andoned. The. A e ha 
t up Y | or 
tho iere Mf y stat the Man 
dod 
t 
t way to store ant is in sore ble taste is su 
9 v 8 pat iud at the bottom, stacked rather del case of inferior Ih 3 is e atari aad when it less. 
ns of the roots outw tapering to| valuable as food 
p sep, a din hay eget 
wens weak mh of the the flare 
eA, M e fiud | 2; 
bec 
cos 
seared of Lagan’ —" Up to this Momoni Jan. 
and | fhe mis fos vs : 
and so 
ubstituted for tha which, in the 
than 
Mmi in dicate: 
' shared 
using 
ean be for present use during the. early peri Ter ros season, — Pedes ASIE 
till after 
Bo 
bsorbed by 
nor has the 
ES Dent, M.P., of Mieten. a teras. thas 
scribes the state of things in Yorkshire 
“On — wn farm and on the wh 
5000 acr the Tarn rnips of last year 
t iiy ow re only crop 
after the October 1 frost e AWAY, Et. in 
this was generally tbe 
And 
them tone 
Me diflsent E for | for ie whole was 6s. per acre, 
p we think th 
Eom ech oth: 
the ee to by ad 
or Swedes, 
ff | advan’ P 
which Swedish Turnips especially are too 
e o tri ML Ks p be | saving the waste of thia is visti v Ir an 
having a hook on the MA which inge es waste. The 
can be struck into the root, in order to assist in E [ete t le machine has been stated to 
i he ground, while it Senet the keep Aii" » E would at once be ‘admitt ed 
dus 
when 
d| 
economy 
u$, 
as 
account. appa- 
ming mor TD than Siero 
| int use, A single rer, pde 
the 10 years previous to 1855 à made 200 ts of 
apparatus for this purpose, has ma ade 300 in the five 
at time, of which 95 were sent out im 
a oo y fan 
g rounded u 
F m 4 to Bacher a e of rap ap the Y less than one-third of the whole 
of et sider a e im poire ida am b darent, again, had long been well known to 
e ht land we do not use VM. MM dard ig Bt MD Me w 
su 
eod Bot pre prefer ae iu ie heap only ; + Bome n tat, year b alt Club. The nse of both of bes 
In small Ach ries is e , as it acts ns a | machines nes has, however, latterly enormously exten 
conductor of rain and frost, be g to our expe- * Royal Agri. Soc. M pong Ti i 
sorts of fodder 
tus for 
