26—1850.] 
THE AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. 
411 
with food. I must here a that warmth * ee 
n of milk; an nd e 
nea the quantity of milk which they had pre- — account a the 
viously livered from 
—— ‘mentioned this fact to show how ve 
process by which the milk we 
cow shed is here to be con nverted into 
but * tent myself with p 
e year. Every c 
milking beasts especially, should have a Ave of —— 
so that the animals may help themselves without ex- 
a 
r ot "that — r 
which lod 
in quantity—and, 
iry being instituted, it was ascertain 
d abat 
to water, —— ted in her milk 
accident 
inqui ed from his milk to Le 
om milker that the —.— lay upon the eight cows turned | and 
ha 
cheese, 
supply of food, mere on “aie management of the 
ue 
t the of milk is upon the su sag 
— the . of aes operations depends 
upon the attention — ed upon the anima 
‘erence 
s. per ewt. 
should never be cow, will — 21. 11 per cow, or 
ow 
—— 
mirar shed for the -e I have a few | care 
n the time of milki The usual Higher prices, it is 
ice a er we can in 
ay. Last season 1 adopted the — of milking thrice ese-making opera I lived 
three ren in a . where butter alone was made. I 
I have had o 
visits from home, vi with 
ies the families i it was em and in compari- 
son with the easier ee of 2 — I then 
ce y should not — been by choice an ur 
producer of — a change in locality requires. 
ac in management and five 35 
duced to contemplate cheese-making as the most pro- 
fitable — of working this farm. As i —ů— ' 
rown away. To make you fully 
at the abatement in the milk of th 
water permitting the cows again to 
they gradually recovered —2 — —— 
So much for the influence of warmth upon the secre- | I 
tion of milk; but a time must come when the her 
em. Before 
of the sh ‘should be par- 
Objections — be raised to 
will say the co 
ws to cheese, and if | 80 
unnecessary 
n to the lot milked twice, 
d crushing, a large quantity 
es of curd nee butter are separated from 
y the 3 to the loss 
he * time — pears going — should be 
when the ind is still and the is shining ; 
e mass, 
both in w . and — . bot er 
ssion — with the 
rch N To remove the whey fi tg: ta — with the least 
fier gy are = with their 
ble of 
ot — not zemeih out too long at a time, nor must 
th 
propensities to fatten ;—and i capa 
also — Ma ea apable of improve- 
—— considera ly and parnih raised, 
I adm rall 
transmission, the ey are a 
ment by cultivation 
It behov sg — yoo 
—_ 
t there is genera 
e 
| ae qualifications ot all animals 
her It behov 
a | greatest abundance, 
| powers > ape to the utmost 1 
supply of airy, 
— in lookin: ood a of descent i in — 
in is 
see that these qualifications | 
2 pon its mre er 
at once > the vat, whilst 
are —— in full power t R ‘ a Prgin 
aa be further sir in his n s by stimulating where it is e 
oods and regularity of milking—by k warmth, | On reference to our last- vndb 
and general oo to their health and habits. In , sormea average of the — — a 
short, a dairy fa 
that — y — 
milk at 
but that they 1 their milkin 
1 will = unnecessary occupy L time by a de- 
means of pro- 
| Seription o 
I e — to — 3 that you ag _ s 
personal i a 
—which I A admit 
ry to 
milking. ow ours to walk out in the cool of th 
morning, and during night in the heat of the summe 3 
but such exercise as that given to a herd by the attack 
er ue I — object to, — do my utmost | i 
reven 
E e may begin to mow seeds 1 
the third w ee in Ma — May, Ryo wil te furnish a little 
re; erally runs so rapidly, that this food 
ome. Perha them in 
5 
d R cheese-making, after which, a the discussion wh which 
: — 1 will follow, I shall have easure in showing you 
e dairy, where the arrangements in use may speak for 
mselves, 
t desiderata now is a means of 
es 
cows, “the milk does not 
flow to the hands (that i is, che udder is not so distended) 
of milking and * 3 
as is man a little furthe He 
ag m but it e by 
i — — rr days. After seeds, Grass 8 time, and = 8 8 quantity, aad w: a not s 
es in—then Vetches, a secon of seeds; and | has often wondered where she 33 it it. i 
of August, with management, we have | This man isnot a physiologist or theorist ; l e e and is ‘often ‘to cause of great 
plenty of Ripe Thee _— spring-sown Vetches, | matter es o iria K 3 
rna some saved C Get wel — that the e many years m : 
once over May, we ed — little trouble in ob- in a single season be cast away by some of the diseases causes and — which in eee a as un- 
taining an abundant a ply of food. To- ate tely introduced into this county ; almost all of us, ing as other natural laws. To p. con- 
watds the end of the — if — weather is favourable, more or less, have suffered by them. Four go I version of to curd, a certain degree of tempe: 
the cows are housed ai night, I should not reco) 15 upwards of es from the mouth-disease ; and m be ; and we have 
mend that the beasts sh be tied up entirely ; = then some of . had half their 82-84 (about 12° lower than when it 1 
that they be turned out in the middle of the day. When dairy cows carried ple It is to cow) is the proper t to be observed — 5 
| the colq n sets in, or heavy rains make the land 55 hoped that these pestilences wi of | season for putting the milk together, and u higher 
bender, the cows — Ar confined wholly to their time, become less virulent, or that — nay afford in cold ther, to allow int te ith 
winter quart is then less waste in fesh, them more decided relief. I believe it to be right in all heat by surfaces eoming int contact with a cooler 
mik, and ap n iea with warmth, a smaller of ma 2 known, e benefit of the publie, any | ns Hts is no necessary 
of food is good thing we —— have ro discovered, even though it | appendage to the cheese-pan. remy as wel add in this : 
ö! if cattle ar — 8 60 receive — papa part of their sho — expose us to t our friends. I plaee that 525° . ture for conversion 
od in sate Pato y great n must be given to shall therefore tell you —— one evil evant hangin; Jan milk apatan „ and th = in ta — 
m 3 — in their food, over dairy farms and a great i often prov cream (which we sometimes i 
and they must larly serv it A man in to be, viz., abortion in the dairy cows—has been suc- butter is cle telly t be atbuted to its low 
ny employ, who attended to a lot of 33 milking beasts, | cessfully treated and'prevented in the only three cases rai 
thet to the funeral o i I left home | which have come under my inspection this season, by But although 
to e day on busi i in charge | administering e specifies and doses of homosopathy. the cheese tog 
hig SOUS man who lived with me at that time, under | This science yet but little known among us ; it has — — . 
del Promise that they should have plenty to eat. I n laughed at, and I have joined in th laugh; but I then sufficient 
Fes he of the rain, which fell on that do so no longer. trial of some months has need plete a 
2 therefore neglected his charge; for on my me of its efficacy, as applied to animals, and I shall be | separation, i 
at night I heard the . ir hes rc 1 happy to afford st such information as my limited know-| the whey, wl s 
med ae pat The rning t me to give, to any one, who may wish to raise the who I in 
at et falling off of milk to the extent er 9 gallons; 5 into the sub We will now leave the a few minutes 
n. t 11.5 and the 3. This was shed for then be drawn off as 
in the year ; — for that season, never; Tue Darry.—I will not attempt a minute and che- allowed to remain too 
