784 
THE GARDENERS’ CHRONICLE AND AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. 
[Avcvsr 13, 1834, 
satisfied by y that the main difficulties in due 
at 
way me all a ral improvements are 
TRONO by or estbury’s Act. The capital 
oorr for buildings, cot , roads, land drainage, 
everything which the estate requires, will be raised at 
nd without any 
his pro er y to the agency ô any any or 
ation o outside, gy tho title, Of eases that 
Act provides so simple and x ible a declaration, 
x have been obt tain ned. . Reed concludes as 
" Tt ills remains now for the writer to summari 
the points he proposed to de 
namely: Th 
necessities, or the gr an it may yield to our 
feelings, as the unt of o commodities for | 
"ei it may be adibiqed. that by its market | 
ce: 
is 
pri that the —— value of land is in 
Some cause reduced t b 
of the proprietor who not want to ‘The 
pr opositions simply haie flle sentgaiaed doctrines | 
4 politi tical „economy. They have been handled briefly |, 
dim ness to show the value of Lord Weatbory' w Act 
for the emancipation of land from its long slavery.” 
Farm Memoranda. 
TATTENHALL Harr.—We centile here our report 
of this farm, 
i now got 
, 9€ 
est, which occupy a ipo e 
alongside the fi mall 6-inch cylinder engine, 
12-inch stroke, a e cutter, which. has the 
recommendaton al se Duran ; it also : Es the 
8 root- 
g the dirt; 
root elevators and chai “cutters ; the exhaust steam up 
a drain and heats the water as it comes. 5 e Zo pump, 80 
water is to the steam 
that without waste of fuel oe 
boiler, into an bo Rr tanks and p v4 re tap at -— 
straw cutter diui Se Mir Gar uh 
elevator pou ri m and ads togeth weet ugh the kairo 
whole "s the stock Meus. days, all mire 
steam is turned zs KeS Lte boiler, whi 
e € i duped vor the building On the 
ove the — 
will water — bey won't look at well harvi i : bay 
But we will take the prm Tw d rk, c 
putting the m to the feeder on the bo: x; ihe putting the 
w from the im h the Mum. one Len ing the 
— : = gece one 
, pu het all 
c 
Boking at Som 
sides e Tweed bave am tha ws the: vag Fs 
will also he position of the threshing 
8 ate b tbe iilos Hiid ed. of the straw loft, one man a! 
straw, od 
Our worthy agri- 
Ti MX cannot 
paid for 
obliging my 
at liberty to s Y^ my 
many as will MAE me in the required Ee oer 
"The food | is cooked and prepared, -— of Lor d 
Kinnaird :— "Certainly the Prosding very 
venient ;” and this i apparent from the f fact, that ài 
man, through the winter, looks after the 80 dairy rm 
epi Afi Th 
secured by Ú spring, is assisted by a man helping to 
Scie gorge eel 
bont Meese 
sheep, pays i5/., includin bg 
have also a sl shed o or T for x LEi d feeding and by 
ual and tre the cartage hcm Ag 
tien o f manure made near where it 
Crops. 
aving traced th be he mat 
to im and milk, we have mers t6, glance 
referen 
8, 
ei number, 
r difficult 
o 
g I 
tins, brings milk, 
Taille down | ft 
MAT 
se | 
al with in this pamphlet, | blind, with hinges in the 
map that the homestead is placed in solls o: 
Sunday evening's milk is put in the ie milkhouse, "which is also 
well ventilated, and the bi otl to the north ; vs Monday 
morning the old milk of thi vious day, and then 
direct ow the shippon, is "divided. into three c! yui 
» a 
I Mee passing ved four laige slate cisterns, pet: x 
ovi ver 
last plugs a audited. Takis pipe, 3 inch dein ; jo M: Mit 
rey cement, is em puse to the Windsor pig troughs on 
side of the pig food h When the milk in the cheese 
fab as been change 
sed, and so soon as the curd has settled at the bottom of the 
—this is pig fee ding angem and & 
far as is enia is naw, ga d eodipietely í disposes of ar the old 
pig trough, and makes 
38 between the cheese tub and the 
roe 
n it a ak Tok ere. gir to —€— his e 22 ogs, and t oque c 
g, but get: 
es E the and labour of hea 
Sh e: d 
"ON this ? 
pan 
d to fe an — curd breaker is | out on the estate, i 
Draining has been largely carried out on 
the tenants being ca 
th tl 
on the str ron gest s 
nyate, on the rim ah they are b at vide 
intervals. 
ming appears 
per centage of magnesia, as t 
tural purposes. The t 
lower of the magnesian limestone formation well. 
igh as distinct in their physical, as in their chemical 
characters—the one contains from 30 to 40 per cent, of 
ign E vs Loa is vec f a re limestone, 
with me magnesia These 
beds s houla diligently be etie ‘after, as they are 
admirably suited for pon hag 
The build dings and cottage me estate are mostly 
good and i in excellent ee R the ul d his stock, 
Each 
hyo and 
results, All appear 
n this respect on the 
e enc couraging r 
me ihe! rin effected per 
panin Society meeting. was 
district. 
Raio one of Mr. — pner (d AA drat 
from mm M d give ribed to the 
slate cisterns; the mkt grow he mill, 
instead of by the old dintory practice ‘of braking with 
e hand, which yet prevails in many dairies—the pr. when 
ite and sal ted i is put i pred Bt vat, mg br dinner time tbe 
Laien is finished, and if by chance any of the whey gets split 
as ‘the : vacet pee expire. 
His lordship jeu himself with his property 
l rtion of it himself. 
on pe ved floor, the dairy "add removes it beh le — 
and so keeps her Fei chen aud herself bo = clea and n 
t ith t = a “of, hav 
vessel boiler, and a door lets down -— em 
followin ng morig whieh they are Aet 
which, except in hot wea diet. is wardied pd the flue of the 
Fosa jaa. passing under both it and the flags of the six 
stone cheese ran bm in ny hae 2 A by pulling 
ponds — tenis ex es by which 
stone, 
turns 
e floo: 
ey me Aei 
e" 
not ATE since, 
by 
€€ h 
tains about 1690 acres, of whi ch 900 acres are in 
e plou 
of c 
ge enerally—sitr a a five or seven years’ cou 
cumstances m: make most advisable, ‘The iad 3 has 
all been deep SU well limed, 
time past a rout po hes ha 
ste has been stirred far dee 
5 m en a rough con 
steam-ploughed in the early part of the 
The plough was rtm from 12 
to 14 inches deep, and “throwin HN the soil ina 
manner that it n never had bee: opera n before; 
an f steam- 
the justice to say that J nover sv eben e hav 
on a farm before ovii 
ia 
iry vessels, cans, ai 
ral yea and 
This is done to Pers 
22 o" i 
e have had our dai 
bs jen Y with white enianel. 
mox and so 
gp severa 
cheese tu 
festiots by Mr. Cornes, Barb: 
difficult to keep sweet w und "en ibe 
yh much labour in soiig, whieh TAMAI wears q^ ou 
am aware that Professor Voel T disapproves of this 
his 
far fro 
ood by scouring. Weu 
when worn, are liable to rust, discolour t the milk, cream 
prol sis often accounts for black spots — 
I have alluded to the disadvantages ich, at Tatten- 
hall Hall, Hunday. sao -making was abolished. T Ne you | 
will bear when stating that for 30 years, wi Fas E p 
dairy m aids, p eb ve found the duty a delight. hould fea; 
a dairy mutiny, with our present arrangements, were I x 
order cheese to be made on Sabbath da; I am confident the 
plea would be, apak from its sacred oblígition, “ Pray do let | 
us have one day of rest." 
orsi on ay roperty com- 
was in such a clean se creditable condition.- 
mis quantities Ei stock be fattene: e e 
t-brea. always well treated, in order 
00 acres 
hay, and a large a 
| used in his lords collieries Below 
the “steam h h has done such pn 
on the surfac Ps, “has es introduced by his 
= p^ 
the Turnip and Bely). 
, The e farms 
dis 
A breeding flock of 600 ewes are ke a S 
ff fat—now a qc 5s. each, 7 
antry n 
| are ee: held n on for 15 or r207 
is the 
ane fe fro: to 800 
were of “about Pts pn rali" aie 
became vacant they hare 
of the cars 
ormerly they 
0 
more enterprisi: 
e for 
mmon term. Some of lane dert iid 
however, ; prefer still tohold their farmsupont the original 
e 
T ro me the Christmas 
always disposed of at = pub 
about the middle of Danae which, 
known quality of the sot erent: em mos 
which 
= 900 sist, Cheviot, Cheviot crosses, 
t 
for which m "ec obtained. As on 
ar counti 
ce tothe | The leases are lib Yd drawn up—they contain the i 
sent back | usual ttio ns as to cropping, pat sied FA n the other large e e two v bd = 
obtained to ee from them if g creased portion of cime ‘coils on he ems 
prevent | 18 M Vo bellow» five oF tate f cropping— practice is to sow seeds E uM 
or Potatos,— Beans, "Wheat or B or Barley, ~! o crop, a to feed cen off the first year. He and bas 
or Türtips = Wheat or Barley — the practice of te them with a corn — dq 
Although the game is ed, is rabbits the — v i never succeed so well as : 
farmers greatest ies, rigidly kept down. Mii 
venti-| Formerly they wore the perquisites of the keepers, The "buildings are well adapted for "ador 
ho then had a direct interest in their abundance. | and the cottages — e ee clean, comfort 
Now they have strict MÀ them, and |able. The hinds by tbe Jeo cul 
to, | Lás, per week, viene 
| of tong 
: 
