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950 THE GARDENERS CHRONICLE AND icis GAZETTE. [Ocroszm 1, 1864 
1 better | nips and other roots m be ey deli, T 
l give from 
ood. Hay, clea brun; brewer s grains, &c., ver secured. Wheat, aae is beyond what was pu - et T apt qe y^ vi The 1 Bene oh ems to two 
dearfand scare Grass much epo by late rains, | in quantity and quality also’; weight of = vem pro doe anything ; si were pus recovery when ra 
and store cattle — T be out until Christmas. | to that we are accustomed to, being unusually he p HER Vn cipe en They a are merely now puits ES the 
To shorten the r early Rye and & spri ng Rape will | Barley very good, and well secured, a good erop, and - M Net Fahire BO figu Tac. leav, 
— ted | likely to malt well, as it grows so well in the reap NH € M wi nek he Mp iR E ole shu 
now will grow been the next two months, and be | | Oats on the whole a fair average crop; Tares com "M bay grap deficient. hy a third ab tie CD apply, 
ready before ithon. In my case I 80 wed i n | market os om v was — and still com- cos 7y bi map eg E - The Gm 
August 20 Ib. of Cabbage seed, ‘which i Srna tg dy e. a hig h p " th which our graziers rely upon for the winter 
a h á iet in Marc A thi f * i 
which wil ac sear b vt vory ental pe riod. Until progress. - eberedet that E Aw tho ong ght ote yii o a Dni cu id A a CIA x 
nearly t the under leaves A iise | boon sown as early spring food or sheep, t main, | carry on, am d stockmesters will have Ye AURIA 
Mangels, carefully stripped off, will furnish the bul RM we — of n pas eis since the ry eal Of audi their 
de fi food, nd from that time to the | will he p to pass away time abun ; b 
our aecaloat fm the root themselves with a few old hay whieh is in many SDN s of our county, and i Mee ap large. number of ied must b 
Cabbages. will be the m ain ! support: it | hi h, I hope and think, will not be dearer than at kj er, 
id t hig wi t straw of 
r 
e iud. sold out by this time. To meet 
to pie wi ; 
Ah ry wo 4 eartlonds carried i ina bunch of Oats or a a tle baeo wu e in some 10 hall h is 
sas they are | all, now cheaper than the 
tely 1 "half sheep have heard of Wheat straw cut into chaff, Pasar adeb ig of pens. ead Gu X cooking the 
d " t with a little hay ede nt of Oats given to ewes at | food is Uie pg very much, and 1s found economical, 
ecd rne niai oy wong 1 wre E ma littl as | n: all kinds of straw are so dhera of ime is E. Tai it ee ril " 
| 1 thi equal to ba ad hay, that o erwise, where practicable, i e most economie] 
— D n Rape for ns: () Stratford Fred. P. Tolet particularly sweet Pics ne rom my expe no of it I should 
ea oan y d iiid me in this| may not Gk be noted whan y appear at the present time. | “so much Gorse given so mue saved,’ "This 
on to dod xe threshing wei - be used to Warmth i isa A great thing when food i is sho rt. I find Eos tru ue whe en iti is properly. eee 80 that e" 
siderable extent, it is found that the Wheat g muscular powerin 
elds badl. E. sasos the animals endeavouring to reduce it to a & proper state 
ve sols far crops are found, it is under an average,| Yor : Sturton Grange, Garforth, Leeds.— by, xm iE 4 Eid ond dos : k Panli y 
^ eet so on the > lighter raid - x m bae surpédt" to Vah iat harvest in = neighbour E pos : i an ba ieee ih ^ 
rally deficient. e Barley crop does d," the e = crop is under an — noe sad of 106 use menti 
_ odo cost t of the. "c e th 
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yield s time sinned; the zm small n the mple Pa ey 
much smat Me 
pain being 1 Meis thin in consequence of tho. con- | I think the best tbat wa- oci D for yum YE a n. 
tinued dry weather throughout July, yet it m The harvest has been wel nen plenty | £^ 
| it exceed 10s, although I had to get the Gorse 
full wie Pe although none of those large "o of corn ready to thres h, selling a t a bad pri won White c Ve daai off loizesovi, QUNM havea idem 
aon there en a — tionen d than usual hed the frosts -— off until the end of November ihere meh. on s T 3 
he grou The ere sown early are à | will t some good fields in this part of Yorkshire. |! 
fare fais erop and the diva: being free from blight will be | Upo — ong lands Turnips are a lost crop. For 
omm — € fodder. The will have to b t 
ei 
cording umstances, In no case can it 
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eadows, The wor xia 
ue , provea with proper appliances, such as 5 
K fs Ihave never found an diego. in getting 
upon the ' deepest and sat con- Peter in ei the t Barioy, Malt-combé, Cotton-eake, and any ani imal to eat it ctp a heep, "an are a 
aiioned soils a fair n to Locust Bea I give my lambs wa t been on snow is on the qo" 
very bad. The filu of Swedes and annie ts is very Qs ecd dx cakes ceo eat it eagerly, Cows Lr eat it anywhere, in the dni 
general and as many parties grow none and others | me "IM t 62. 10s., malt.combs "s per hali | OF on the Grass. nter there ag was & good 
only a small quami of Mangel Wurzel they | also give Barter if ‘ine 1s. po Pos think o orrespondence in wp Times about this subject, n 
wil be qp e a to carry ipn stock ought to use as much corn as they omen sieh will wrote twice to the titor in — to queries, 
come m bi dis M" = es E that -— os tag e and ee dani rk 1 eene e sabia meae title to the 
rties in is. trick ate a growers o at | be wintered upon Grass, with an ee of r 
s root, (and no doubt next season vos umber | head pe per r week in attificiat food. B. Michohon. | Walsh, Stedatt, Balbriggan, Jrolónd, Septembar 
be much inviéss & nd as 
et 
Rea 
jr ph and Straw.—In the too probable ity of Sattar m this subject. The 
‘or gir masters daring. the coming winter ‘and due to à 
ante it may be of grea’ public M "that I make dena " um big. a ant mos i es 
known a recipe pee given me by a grazier, and which, | o experimenters, for it was ve he 
ek when I ke ept two or three Bre inas table, Lyk to | won the R. A S prizo forthe ot cy i e 
pare Trifolium, Rape, Rye, winter Oats and Vetches proof. the help either of this| Since then m apers haye been writhen spe 
Tula R had; "win e dating apf different qund ,the "of be e ta the kitchen, mixed Mes da as t directions TE d the different modes of dis 
De of straw with a little hay and mixed with the | Want d of bran and Wheat s sh aved nes by acid, amongst € i 4^ 
vil be vereri nore o ad en’ tesi tenet ires SP "And doing oe ite; wht et vendu Cdi ed pelo me d 
for cattle, the chaff being Heer se make a good | iay was selling at IE a ton, and when it c bathe acid. In order tos M. this wide in s tin | 
ut the ink is, men 12s, » MY 5WO | tity to agriculturists, the world had been 
roots can be had to pulp and mix with it. If Wheat eor ag aie Wit. TN. Ap i ily Sa the qnte sil, and he producta soni 
no doubt will be used for — m the — - MM place, and gave as much milk as any. ri 
&c, and may perhaps have ai of wbole Linseed be steeped for 48 hours in other countries. The impo Dapper 3 
the ensuing spring. Althou oe the “Gass faiis e» 54 gallons n. eat water, and let this be occasionally | and the wants of sehen demanded that every 
looking green they yh i" tle keep, and the stirred, and at the end of that time the water will be couragement Should be given to the 1 
different. grow d* it ba diy "€ thi ckened, My oaa said, to the consistency of | developme: new sources of supply, in order 
arrowroot, hi must say, h however, tha5 his atrowroot the de AN. be supplied at as cheap a p 
not bunt sufficiently Lnd thein r growth. G. er thin, “Sti wA so much of the oily possible, and nothi ngg an be more injuricus to 
vy WARWICKSHIRE : A Milcote, Sivatford on Aum à and glutinous matter cape s the water, that, if} turists than th to induce them o sr Da ur 
you wish to warm ib, “boiling, pete iuf ee froth sinplay one form of | phosphate of lime alone, such 
r the opinion I have | nd: is oui the question. I cannot, however, see inch bones. If it be a desira ble gor to raise. 
previously ‘even you of its p Mee m resulta. m land | any need of boiling or even simmering it. My opinion adi manure some. a 0 per cent, in price, then 
o wth of Wheat and well cultivated, | i§ that if those 54 gallons thus saturated be mixed with | m means use it, and use it slopas bat if “otherwise iit 
"i e. wil prove a full i ‘erop, nae not as|% quarter of a ton of ng a Oey wrk PE encouragement o those who y 
that who taught him bad sometimes | c 
kee; he ock i fair geom through ‘the |g 
win ater Pg ping MiORUN; the failure of the y 
seeds is eA disastrous; they are now being ten 
gen mene e fields bei ing lef& to be planted with 
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“rte tn ngels bore the extreme tne a forks that Y spere of the — y | phor: rie acid, the sulp 
ind ve dryness wonderfully; since the rain | takes them up, and thus derives from them full and equivalents of lime an med sulphate 
came, they have grown rand are still growing rapidl bornofisie benefit; whereas a vast portion of the| gypsam, whilst the remaining equivalent of lime 
ax ‘As this root is Aa oileake and coarse Barley-meal commonly given passes | with the phosphoric acid soluble phosphate, the 
enltivated, where a few years since Swedes would s through the animal in an undigested form? Henry.| and most valuable ingredient in com 4 
been , many far arms in this 1 locali ity have about | Moule, Dorchester, phate. To show that it was really so, the lecturer 
thei quantity Comms —The corn crops have been pretty eT à some superphosphate in water, filtered it into 
buts ee "l'urnips have been the be ory a | housed about pe in spite ze the broken weather, | test tube, where it was quite colourless. To’ 
different state of things is present, and numerous| Wheat'crop, of which there is but a limited Re em ,| presence oured in an alkali, which, uniting 
farmers tly puzzled to inp their usual | yields ver a nta tmt is of inferior quality. | some of the phosphoric acid, caused the 
r of sheep the coming winter. Oats, ces lu are dis.| phosphate of lime again to become insoluble, 
; heard of (nor can I suggest) any means to meët appointing in in dina Tx thog irm being fight, and con-| fore visible in the form of a milky cloud. 
. their “exigencies. All fodder will ‘doubtless be cat | sequently center img verage, it | was called Drevipiteted phosphate, and 
and wards mixed with flour or bruised grain, as a | is said not to ereed a a "halt crop as compared with | which it w en up by Tini whils' 
ng the sheep to eat al quantity of | l The str w also rare on light lands, MR fine Was - i in w i ote at 
ae geen m and whe mot Vini get was very much | h the soil. Tho precipita 
roots were plentiful. J. e. blickened with rain. tenda m ter in y m ben finer state of division than a anm 
sni has turned out more productive, Of P so they not delude 
I| Beans, the quantity cultivated hereabout is so small as | by the Nen that by i contin their bones, or 
to be hardly worth m Long ae ; it is a good cr p. ing them up with aoe they can opisie the p! 
| Potatos "— a fine as to quantity ‘os soluble. He had submi both 
‘The | quality, and hit bete vitepietely dros Bond Deo | pronphole ve «i MO precipitated ttiug, both tha E 
