FU i i E 
ey 
36—1850. | 
THE AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. 
air and exercise to 
to dictate 
fatting when connoisseurs * g widely as to the 
result most worthy to be aimed a 
3 3 ence 
Ought ure to be 4 a 
Led to the N58 2 isa question has been diseusse 
cure for thi 
hich I am a ae and, by 
ecided e affirmative. 
Boussingault, Thaer, wertz, Coke, ed others hav 
admitted r 8 attending the decomposition 
-y he manure 
eap na pte me farmers 3 poy butter becomes 
black snuff, graan fa: l that have pas 
h rural districts ; a vulet of blackish 
in a liquid state; so when practicable, an epoca 
attended with pecuni satisfaction by its effica 
action, a person cannot be sane who would follow the 
practice of hi ndfathers. azzeri ascertained 
that horse-dung lost more than 
course of four m 
Fra 
derade er was 
tive 4 of the differe 
well understood. 
properly qualified b 
time to the elucidation of t 
an 
s disease is to give the land a 
orto grow a erop of Potatoes, so that 
peins Nene to ree t 
fallow, 
bare 
the Turnip er 
g 
habit of icon 
of money in gets for mgm 3 
Serr 
of “ fingers 
8, a h other — ame from which the 
farmer sustains ious | 
on this subject would only produce 
be dear at the money ; but let 
WAS Yearly 10 
wg tale 
no reason why a 
my toe 
disease should not 
, | crop is by this means quite pres 
a similar — of the “ finger to be allow 
be 
similarly useful. 
> E.) Allaw 
uses for . tu 
Cow H. h 
5 offer a few na in repl y to your correspon 
| dent “ Seotia” on the Heracleum sphondylium, and its 
purposes. 
t, yet it is one of the 
food, more 
on light and heavy soils, but 
ee. 
— 
unferm 
2 er 8 — will 
of a medi 
trace — it was 
trea No 
he manure vira be equally efficacious | 
a | this and last y. 
A st 
HOW 
ips | which the present rental, whether fair or 
nd parchments, and en- 
make as ils, Wee. and 
ine—is likely to gain ee 
to discriminate te between 
care y very little about litigation, . 
also m 
min consequently well 
fitted for — daty o of puey Kairi ox — 
ro iti The lan 
p 
B 
— 
I of the eo 
— An an argument by — than 
mens of both elasses is equally so. I will, thew spun 
t these desultory remarks to a longer extent than 1 
. leave the question in the hands o 
and common sense to 
vi 
o- | Wheat fields, and om a very little Clov 
ts | crop 
nd. insufficiently 
ing our ideas on this point, we | and th 
ured this summer to improve it, and esti- 
re.— Seeing remarks in your Paper 
of the Zach ma p. 537 rp on pey failure of 3 I wish 
er some, the result 
than a year’ experience in f. 
with a ede p previous observation. 
I commence seed 
ei 
ver, with a poor 
Barley field, which had been 
guano only, for Turnips, 
d on the land. I 
had 
ye-grass, 
ty 
— — — 4 the 
ar the best 
es to lay 
> damp soil before it 23 
en —— in answering any 
lati 
ae or 
in- 
your 3 
to 
de Capel Brooke, Bart., 
d 
f being spring Wheat 
ese the Clover and other 
crops upon these allot- 
423.57 
of many is not deep enough to ensure its succes 
growth, in anfavours seasons 
the ea uses of ilure ; but there mystery 
yet to be 83 George Summers, Stoke s Wake, Dorset. 
Mr an 
sent 11 me and pees in your journal about two years | 
ago. 
1 
arley is 
t may no 
e 
2 | with from 3 to 4 pecks per acze. The 3 T 
is also Peas and 
tially injured by the fiy. a ccnp are mu — 
than last 
— 
improper 
ral 
state that the „crops now ‘growing pr these 350 — 
lb na 
21 
quantity of land i in this eoun 
— e same into su 
Pp 
part of it more so than from 
y 
Hen from your pen upon the 
gi 
quantity and 
van- 
f landed 
worked ie ay hard, , keep- 
— — 6E 
the hands of the 
— | 2 
who has manured it well. 
w from peice iron facts ia is, 
ost cases, if fairly in- 
arises m pA 
tly manuring the. ae 
mind th 
comm said to be 
this, as also to stiffening. straw de brightening the sam- 
ple of Wheat, and if so, is I fear too much undervalued 
in modern farming ; but as I — di 
aine requires. further information, 
shal gladly give it. J. Clutterbuck, Long Wittenham, 
Abingdon. 
Disease in Turnips.—Attention has been directed to 
Serious losses reran pE N growers suffer from com 
“ fingers mo _ "org 
ite as teas on 
pinion of tas Beats teh farmers, range * 
o 
estates, Your 
ception, both in himself and 
corro- | land agents. 
subject, touch upon t 
the 
I will, en going generally into the 
r three points upon w 
correspondent may certainly be an ex- 
his experience, but th 
which he makes use of far from illustrate | to 
which 
yet, I only 
e | general — of divers persons who in 
this point as venture to state 
nan their own assertion. No 
7 Wheat.—It may afford some gratification 
to the corresponden t who a this subject 
