64 THE 
GARDENERS 
CHRONICLE 
AND AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE, 
[ЧАХСАВҮ 21, 1865 
; for dinner, hot meat, pies and puddings, vege- | 
tabes and one д еы of ale; for supper, hot meat, bread | 
and mil By this 
К, or pea soup. means they have NN 
thr es milk twice, and bee 
ey pay for their own washing, and are alion "y an 
interlude of three four days as a holiday at pe 
fitting pena E the year, which always expires o 
the 13th of May. The annual ene: of their Кога | 
and wages ma л be set down as follow 
d d 
Fore wages xs 3i 
id stones p bacon, at 7s. .. 
of malt . e 4 1 
ch ‚ 6d. h per week 1 
130 stones of bacon, for 5 men at 75. 451 
200 stones of flour, at 2s. .. 2 
| carefully in in the middle of the field, reaped and "threshed as 
ried, The produce and weight were as follows :— 
rs. 
.| E 
very 
5 
and when 
els 
These items amou 
Aria for each тема ЗН. e. or v lm a е " v4 
per week. 
dar of ое 
JANUARY. subjec M e we "Mte this 
Eu as among the [сч sss special attention 
onth are the pm 
he following account ar 
P. Нең heap is taken fro 
the Arria Gazette of 1852. A NN 
then spoke of th ways in which alone manure 
is perfectly saved px —1st. The plan now general | m 
отг if the eter farmed counties, of Lens ghing in fresh | 
n the au "pen stubble, in preparation for the 
E green 2d. The plan of liquefying 
e whole exuviæ ty disizibulion by fiam power and 
A pipenge g over pa gand, Sor T 
red ards. 
droppings m end litter 9 stail fed piis and the 
e from the work-horse are daily thrown into 
being ЕЕ that p 
an of having 
The | bus 
E^ ч iw 
crop w 
Potatos the e prec codi 
six or 
obiil market 
anuary m light 
hey are sown han 
Winchester B 
" pop rood 
seven 
high, a vob 
bushels per they 
ssary quantity of yore i Toni feb ge pes dob pt 
is іп good Ш and in good бав 
will be seed тұтар 
the land і 
Ъу 
БА е Band жое, 
аз уоп 
ing year, 450 Ма 
уеагз. 
ushels. 
ery go 
a till a 
be 
arr un between the rows | 
commoni 
r acre 
dit 9° 
bs per Winchester Га as воор ав threshed : — 
ie 
ood. The Aes id yielded 
hels per acre, ati was n 
wi v for that orthe Oat crop; it had before that been Sirs 
The soil is a red loam, Iam | 
o think that ths М б... 6 will answer here, as 
Xpose 
sown in Jan 
£A 
| them, a piece to suck being put in their mouths af; 
drinking their milk, 50 Кре и аге easily accustomed 
to the taste of it aea full of sweet hay shoul 
ould now be fed liberali 
with chaff of hay mam pie with pulp ed roots 
either Turnips els; and they ipe ro “ч 
thoroughly x йа, NY kept perfectly a by meang 
litt e it is am 
old, t 
food. in p icu pna quant 2 en, кы per 
bei ii it is ab чр ог dri r^ m 
ш is not НЕ 
access to p ieu modd p 
| shou 
piece. 
eso b 
chaft, pulpe d 
ans and Barley m 
oistened, or their нт E in E os pods 
are gleaned usd ipia Farmers | 
p 
ure о 
daring is d Ы: 
and m 
as the fatten ifr геад is go ee Ө One 
|quantity of roots formerly commonl 
|$ ewt. d i о it 
half the 
| fattenin ^n order on the b we 
as already аары —or, if heifers, on the |. fatten- 
fl Les diet to which reference has already been made, 
ices to Correspondents. 
Noti 
y ww Pop: e рма following is an analysis by Mr. Kensing- 
r 
n, F.C.8 
In natural| p 
or | state. 
Ouod cake. Water „| 142 | 0% 
Cattle in store condition may 1 Sug | 9407 63.03 
and, if young, in a growing T4 on a E oues, ог Чыны (and other digostible respira- ч m4 
yr ria West 7.41 200 
Mangel Wurzels daily in yards, and fr iei Straw in| wo, dy 1: ah n 
their cribs, and a meal twice а day, consisting ofa | оп | 0.96 ы? 
hel of straw chaff, over which a hot pee ош! pr Eur mpounds (fesh- forming 7 " 
эч thin, e den has bee own. One va Д 
о poun Lind eal аА Аан Да, бё qnis “Ше inorganic "matters (insoluble Hd ^ 
n to тот sees " dam may i» thus birra in : Soluble organic matters (soluble ash)..| 1.18 131 
ррег and t ove LN о bushels Een: 
cop 
а ап 
шїх апа їпсогрога{е Ше 
В ra lind 
4. h 
nnot be too m 
ipsuffcient, and lets them 
n 
of chaff, 
y dx pract lon " Белш cows in calf up till 
uch repro- 
e 
CAUSES OF Poanes 
The large amount of sugar deserves to be арЫ noticed; 
Lu deme p which it contains about 17 per cent. of other 
ratory at-producing principles, and about 1 per 
pe "of ready 1 d fat. For these pompe me Carob Beat 
appears to be especially well adapted for fati p 
В the ive k rred to four several agencies by 
able time, and that, perhaps, the most luable, in | wich; iHe: Pm of troak Os SHOE Wc 
getting again into flesh before they give their usual agrieultnrists amd their customers have bees been bane 
quantity of milk; but if - have been well and “far ends” are ;0 
sufficiently wintere Sun Lie 99 [^ ken ран entia Mts p" nformation ich wem 
Ve oie — ean б) the ДОУ Agricultural Society 6 | 
he proper food for c England, established at the mencement of the peri | 
one half hay e: the eum er "lai Sud. v а goo unde idee: anı im Sved” draini nd the it 
bait of Tu Cabbage Or, if green food an fluence of these several ** 1 new resource, all орепіщ | 
3 
А 1840 "—formed th toj fd 
at first thick. Тһе still open side, to | thin Linseed mucilage, as а Mari said, may be substi- | шуко vla cepit um utter fs юше 
which we are adding, admits a small degree of atmo- | tuted. -For young cattle, the same chaff, and as much | times attributablo to the cow having been Jong in mili, - 
Lene €— which induces a gentle ii When Cabbage or Turnips or Mangel Wurzels,as they| and the annoyance has ceased when the milk M 
has gone on for three or four г da ays, e add 3 «dme quir mixed with that fr freshly-cal төй pat Dore pes 
i мй r soil, over may, some of them, calve this month. If the uber UMRC may Пн a meadow 318 it | 
Y| them easily, As to the узы: both lawn an 
urine i the fermentation going on in the 5 been receiving fodder in the straw: yard, as just| want of manure. Apply some ot thia A D. 
pre the gases from which have to permeate the illl They амо acid, and some amm manur 
ere they can Юта the atmosphere, and inn now well- | should afterwards receive more succulent food than M nds S Wee te of UN ees v WM 
known мату тше of Indeed with by- alum inal earth | ау чыта M Mangel Wurzels. After p eei tg ras n! régi » um yards pore 
preven iu a box ; ahorse will make 19 tons of man 
covered boxes, Ж теме! land be fed | ina stable, Wellcultiv ted lai d will yield 4 tons of manm - 
m ring tl кты dilute | urine is upon а those emus and е t chaff, mixed with pisos Pudor pes y MAR гае 16:ton НИ 
Sent Т! even with manure d 2 or 3 lbs. of idis daily. The great x Ms r 
there Ares i 
l be an кенин of nothing 
but pepe ey v vapour regles gain, as there 
is less weight jr aem w e groun 
ten days — the heap has been md it will, if it т 
ргоре 
?, 
eig в 
cooked in its own steam. Should ie um be. 
"e" a month or longer, all that 1 
it a coat of 6 
be cut up when wani 
to work ozoeodin gly well. 
70 loads of ure, carted oui 
чей. 
I да satisfied that from 
and with. 30| 
bed up in the old mode to 
8. Se x: Time.—Wheat may be sown when the land is 
fit in jy d Autumn Wheats are still proper for 
use. І land be in good order 6 pecks per acre will | o 
ss find this ied this i 
costs, and not at vm it would sell ix 
and i nd 
expense of winte 
that expensive 
In esti 
t 
r-feeding cows with hay alone eats up 
the profits of the dairy, even if none be ey 
n|calve; for supposing them to calve in 
February, there т 
foo 
PM ti 
uary or EPILEPS 
aude three orjfour кыа for 
be kept and consolidated іп covered pits, and when carried 1 
out it should be То оре ngs 
and Grass are a 
a 
e i о 
p lant, Коб габа п а quit or 6 oz. ог the s esh plant, are downtos | 
| whether ii it will 
is easily made: 
that i 
ны 1 ew 
Straw 
In the 
answ 
duri mix: 
3 lbs. of 
without any disagreeable taste. 
more economical ood th thau hay. 
weaning o of the calf thero are many methods. 
su 
tale furrow. situatións where there is 
ter |9878 inen afterwards de the 
ter | nilk for 
wer to give asa 
uck for а 
bucket with new 
n-meal, give butter 
And this is a much 
week or ten 
m it can driok n giving 
much at хана 
ilk skim 
and half a pint. of good Oat atmeal for 
a eal рег. calf isı mixed wi ith bot water for some hours 
After- 
ке ally sub- 
each 
and boiled e beer -— к 
s а. дау, ші 
ч n three чен 
DON, Mr ps апа a ee should be talon X1 | 
- und е Тһе дове А на - n adult, I 
n proportion to age.” said to 
heie ft gi vet 79 the geben b 
FARM-YARD MANU 
T 
B 
8 
Р 
HUE 
RE 
ui gatti 
g 
á 
E 
A 
9 
в 
SE 
S 
R 
* 
32 
Е 
uc 
E 
up prr 
Of 485 — 
р 
“The жаш: time of sowing Oats 
bee. of March to the end of April: and it is the opinion 
le here, that Oats sown much — woul wem be 
Table to be estroyed by spring frosts. — De m 
favourable for the experiment, as the ste ies 
Christmas for sowing, gaa the E" E. the е spring. g not s унд 
I divided a йе! of 8 ас ually e half w: the day 
after Christm "the "alf the middle "ot March. 
Five bushels ere adcast on each part, and 
thesame ; the soit à в ite Oat, here called short | 
smalls. The early sown were ripe il cut one week before the | 
others ; Mid re beris s equally well, without being | n 
е: any bad weather, I hidi 
kars 
here is from the borea 
calf receiv 
kei morning, 
warm mucilage 
t eim milk x 
meal and water a 
Ves, ны 
pap eoe 
w Bas 
y calvesare thus fed 
me: al 
ein Re nii ity enough, if boiling in 3 
warr till mehi, and 1 qua 
I hen be I 
with 3 vid 
ad not more A. ess mov Tee vo " 
н ян А dried and then sown : UE were placed it iy; 
of earth without virage, p т ен 
85 were placed with dra баре, ^ "аргон i 
The 
eing gradu 
Кн 5 M the sib tuti 
rood of each set out very | food, with id ссезв to water. У itu per of dr 
nd f 
ly ; py M 
Oil eake 
en to 
ry | 
с u 
dii 
cal rain 
answer for seed in properly dra 
| IRRIGATION ; Cor. The following е ге 
^d { 
V erolessor em 
