1090 
THE GARDENERS’ CHRONICLE AND AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. 
‘eather than ly 
y to imme- 
a is 
fr e constituents 
soil n eh is, o of ene the less M E back 
give h from E But 
it surety cannot b ded ied, that t ^um realy is 
era 
d redress nor sympa pal ids cii ging rvesing ‘the 
should ‘they be ent en? 'by game, or destroyea by frost, | 
[November 2, = 
| southern and aided inn nties 
—— 
redre: Within the last few yea 
ope 
iad a greater degree of a 
on the whole, there is pou 
Throw 
great bone 
— g 
sof England, to Z 
sown from the 25th of ye 
Oth of Sak ais, "herus for à good ero 
common Turni AT 
to the 
mer 
may be oe 
Bi. 
which on some soils 
for 
In these days of high farming, 
ties of the most ane: "- 
f the s are 
ro A 
a 
ins, the 
considerably n xhausted ~~ Davi to tampok a namn 
when large 
res ‘ao 
n of highly foren 
i om the aly iim s zd 
ing a rapid Eros, bed the t Me 
susceptible to the attack of fros 
tion some feet in heigh 
fields late in te spring, | pm as far as its feeding pro- 
perties are concerned, of asmall deg ree of value. The 
willdo which bave not been so forced is hexyl tiim 
supply of suitable food | properly quus, E. iym 
an annual liberation of mine constituen 
able form 
1 P oae 
ii m for the growth of plants, at ide 
may, W Ms be sold off the 
farm for good an 
ha exact Amount of annual loss of mineral u 
T 
(TE! 
o f hé oti- 
ditions at present ipe the na itur re a “atid extent 
of the loss to which our soils are s ubj m are such | 
cient o lable nitro- 
gen rather than of av. alla ble wine e prating 
so far as the requirements for full crops of ixl 
ie sisting strongly, then, as we have always 
done, upon the absolute neous of a full supply | ™ 
of available min nera ral eo nsti Cip the soil, 
relatively to t l be st that, 
in the actually ciii oondition ns 0 m tish 
culture, it is not they, but the availa ble ye rogen 
g the first run, and are either followed 
C Je up the hulls or 
or two for 
en rri 
ane severe weather mien hele c seyn stand still, the natural fece and death fa m 3 
oceurrence ce to see whole folds deendol of their leav ves, | appe to follow t me law as the natura à 
1 tl death of animals. s it approaches maturi len 
he crown and s the Those cavities | lows more feebly ibn its vessels, and it is ^ 
— Sled with vata on the pv ‘all of train, which | propelled through every par rt. Tha opposi osite " 
| ses the root m the varions 
co still Tager of t the sheep on the growing thas ÀÓÓ hes plant fly off mbine oe 
e rere particularly ene the early part o to form new ibas We believe 
whe age ar ve put to Turnips; a large fold is set : petere of cultivation to exert 1 m 
| and the sheep turned in and left to graze hok down | destructive influence on the keeping pr of the 
pets sins e to the dnd, the best or most forward in Turnips ee " t m n on the Tand during 
Hd havin; nter than most o TI E al 
" 
the 
or e duilling ab M (dient “the f fre t 
and hand- hoe, i vell kno eee o 
wn to all experie ced gromen 4 
Bar st put on Turni ips, ín 
e freely, we think: the pen 
d 
and also to ward off the — of mildews iet 
ze their Mint 
a ) Opera ation that opens the soil, allows ‘the 
ealth of the animal, though we have often p a ered oir al changes, yo 
do well which had the first run of a pen fed in my way which the rpg: and mineral ma tained in 
refe a to; but those who followed after were under — soil could not become didis. to the require. 
| the m: t favourable circumstances of weather, &e. A t vi the plant. This proce hoeing so often 
that i is asian found to be eri hs deficient.’ 
The n then weed Wha the eee 
he nds ueri nit n to ih. us sum mu 
look? The main resource is js the adop noti sue ch al 
n and fodder cio 
great quantity 
eaves the tenderest pet a of the bulb more. 
th being 
E 
into the system, which always acts injurious ly on th 
healt th of t the anima wl more particularly ¢ on sandy soils. 
worked away from the — than under the old system 
r 
hd 3 pal MRY + 
rotation, chis dd 
i mh form of manure the 
1 Xr their ded leaf 
pd no doubt bed Feed 
Bu besides x there is t prm — n 
of purchasing and applying directly 
manures, And the immediately vrac taut 
from the whole diseussion the last 
paragraph of the paper, which w — 
“On u- ^ 
wt "11 2 D 
along TT. Joder t 
of pets culti me n, where one or at most two chops 
r with tl e hand- b ys HE Chak romathan yer à 
the. as ems which frequently termina 
‘The Swede crop after having been got up mmi ad 
ange, a 
ts soil being little fere 
m size, but, burying themselves 
J a much 
th 
for some time undergoes à chemical 
Jo of the apm and other fruit. Attar this chan 
from the 
n observed 
stand pendet d n 
when grown on the inodern Eco 
reason already refer red to, We hav 
tagen n» ce, they become not only m 
are also more palatable and wholesome as foo od for 
stoc k. 
5 
ange as 
re nutritious, but | du 
asters p ere is danger “attending the 
Y changing of bee Áo. White Turnips, to Swedes, 
mn 
suffere 
"enr n, EUG et a m 
Tur nie, which had oe „been secu 
vix ie expense of get 
y great. The ive TE pa r ; 
dingloved;. pon erops i oou. more requi iring the pude. attention 
quently than i consisten the part of the farmer, so that the change may be 
erally been considered d nelle rales aa y and Tudiciotsly effected. The Turnips and 
of good fraie, n m my without injury to the | Swedes should be mixed together for several days; by | w 
soil, but with pecuniary — o the prod wt: d 
On heavy soils Barley of better quality may be | ^"d the change becomes Great Jösse — 
obtained after Wheat t rf a root crop, | ently te P m pricey when re sheep a are i 
ut when corn fs taken after corn, great attention | 2 forward state of condition, and the change has beon 
should be paid to the cleaning — p cce de Swedes, ner 
manure s 
poe should je Aa i A applied. When Whea 
ows 
another ot less than 50 to 601b. 
nt of nitrogen in some 
the land, ie 
Ene 
they invariably su 
of t rex or three hundred sheep, in ord 
the 
, 
ich ex 
er has several times had to bleed d iie oc 
oth 
scp in DN MUS Fabel Kad V 
Consequently the syon 4 was chilled, andi 
animals ls progressing i opposite w. as the resul 
nned and 
Swede crop, og the greater part of the 
progress of M inflammatión brough 00 ra vai which came out of iud heaps as d x imde i 
Bois e eid follow a corn crop, from 40 to 50 Ib, | chan the Swedes have” been 1 stored ft some | there had been no frost, G. 
M M aioe - employed with the | time, and have 'nfetgoné the change elsewhere referred piece 
dtmibis sh A e t r for vel than for id b pos Aan ed h bonc may | 
autumn-sown : "hs manures should = z mgr aa DE e 
chest s bus 4 Gros: Sw any or fatal results, lbs AS FOOD FOR CATTLE. S 
"P sides ie s eh iat ^ reotiestéf, is asserted by some that selection and forcing have fes. NDENT pub his interrogatories adult 
ing nitrate pl on of 1 owt, | ender the Swede less enia. than gn fesse This to And I shall ast attempt to reply to them in the order í 
2 ^ È th | nen gc ed we know bk cow 
EU LOCUM CE D pcd 
with Eugtuh agHemtal vhemits have ur ones 36s saat the" cultiva vs producing a ar | worked by steam, hte, Ut hodie 
directed us. weight o easona bly e is| Mr. Walsh, of Balbriggan, has d d M patet p 
M spl Pe o ET weight for gh i in the one case | pulping pn for - time before t. the ‘ 
ot ardy Green-top would, |a paper in reference to it has 
ON THE ssc a - ROOTS. et p ourable dreunstanc o l, season, and | of the two jast numbers ot Mee Curb Din 
x cultivation, not produce e more that 18 to 20 to ous per | an nd Agri icultur. al Gazett is machine va B i 
f th icultur 
now gen A d A one «£ the most important under the same man bah give a return of Society. of this coun Md. pep eds ^ 
operations of the farm. ‘The e A hanced prices and in- fally 5 tons ro acre more, E a chemical analysis | published in the waia report of the Society for tein 
creasing demand for butchers meat of all kinds, assigns to each the same feedin; value, Asaproofof the | It was to the elfect that the hine is ea 
also the value to which wool Peel nemen and we have kept | of bruising and ng the Furze into fragm 
rice of corn, it e pee oh Aberdeen Yellow an a the mon Green-top|so small as to offer nob the least i iment 
ritish fer d T utmost | White, both quite sound till bte, in the spring. In only by horses and cows even Dy © 
each they were got up without. frost, and were|and sheep; that, worked by means of a , 
stor Ru dry. While id 2 i point we would | gear, it is capable of so g Furze at the ri’ 
can | beg the readers permission to be A gow it|3 ewt, per hour; ler ut het 
the | is Our opinion if th of rüips ut more tas 
farms to be te died dut dl saad hike ed es antity it was caj yel of ab i was hao 
of Swedes, the land, and ally the oeeupier, would | tic nera wa iso could 
alike be benefited. rk; an d dat it was adapted to meadow, and 
nem Beas other vegetable woh pigs bore € | bush Fur nasmuch » n. bit of old steni, que i 
a on uce of the) in diemeten di nb Th " 
Cet er Deseo p t Pe Md before the machine dl £ 
stated must be 
