pi ween” Ee r A 
42—1 850. | 
THE AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. 
the seasons w id of course 
t so plentiful, the prices were higher. 
In 1838, 1839, and 1840, we had cold ns. T. 
1d. per quart. When 
being 415 $ years were, Lenne 
the least pro rota — provender was high priced. 
and more had to be given to the cows to ig A the e supply 
f 
s co 
3022 quarts from each phe and 8 quarts per day on 
be recollected here that if any ae 
here | — Ean 
Mr. —— 
see 
pr 
n 
som ee in, 8 advan- 
es derived from rs reservation Peat use of Pasi manure 
o had 3 e in view 
is ation ta wiy a gre eat 
— * d . laid from the 
adds o the comfort and 
health of the animals, as well — - W connected with 
farm; and r, I consider its value not yet fi 
1 AA. ank, u ntil the as 
the depth of winter I was tal iqui 
three weeks o onth. I he ave “mostly appli ed it t 
dows, excepting on one occasion during winti 
I 
would, 
you would], but I pee a a period in neludin 
8. co A giv 
extra mber ‘of e w 
was applied in 
f 
of Beans the following year, and notwithsta qr 
the dept i 
the e liquid | t 
1 h 
of more value than any other portion of the 
land was of very uniform „quality, I git a . — found that 
liquid bourho 
months of November, ee oe ary, 
March, did not 2 much good pril a 
Aa districts i it a be applied — month 
ail 
669 
rather dangerous i ana a otra ̃ — — = 
is rather — Professor Way: I should think so.— 
as well as the great benefit it would be to the health of the in 
3 —Mr. 5 hg oy he h — arin * DHe p 
ence, a ould furnish the mee 
upon the | practice of t . ng, tiger the a pplication of gud 
manure, and upon the Ser W. which — mshi 
eee the meeting. He 
ks with 
pr of am: 
The a mals, by a li 
at it had been KeS 
er a could n 
squar An pa of 10 feet cient for 
3 but the l 
to—brashed and curried ev: 
JeF 
25 
— 
— In 1847 my landlords rebuilt n 
srm d vo are now both exte ahe atid 
nient, and in * evailed on gE em to make 
— 1 e tank, * nee of the ars 
mall. It is — a and are 
14. 8 1 * at 1 
Ars. The cost to 
e 
one e much too 
d over, and will hold 
my lan 
rche 
0 lbs. the gallon — 2 . to 64 with 
about = 
221, ni $ including the excavation 
9 fe et 4 wide, and 6 feet lei. A eee all 
Taal —— at my pass n cost, consider ia the duty of 
nder similar e unted to 
value of produce was * 
arable and dairy farm; the 
per sold in oar: from my Ayrshire cows 
9 quarts of “arty ould produce 1 Ib. of butter. W. 
Rothwell, Winw 
The proper Managemen of 3 d b 
75 ‘of first- ra rtance, 5 
m ponde 
the pepe det Wiltshire 3 the present day. A 
the management from an experienced 
I think, be — to many of your 
agricultural readers. Eæper 
orieties. 
TRE, Sept. II.: (con 
Farm-yard Manures, especially in a li 
The CHAIRMAN said he should like to ask P. rofess e one 
* Which would be the best time of 
o a farm? So le a 
subjec pim — —— 
. Way’s opin — on. He thought he = 
n print, though he was not = ae oe 
the 
unfermented man as CO! — 
paratively worthless a might be 
e expre; 
ug k 
W. 
great diversity 
poo — to have 
mistaken on that poin 
ression.—Professor W. 
Suppos the 
b eimer exist upon 
a or with it —— an 
nure 
ta 
Preparing g 7 Ap gre tags 
ed eig re 
[ applied it in April and May, 
obliged to my landlords, Rompres: hoe 3 
and earnestly 
n the county will Join their ä in 
as I fee. ve quite convinced that after 
in th nthe of March 
‘ing any other s 
where proper convenience may be had for a it, thatic 
may be suitably used after Grass has been cut, during any of 
mmer or autumn months. — Ca ph Hantisox 1 been 
aking a rs gee that upon a s 
8 hrough 
in 
carted out from the b pax to Allow fo two or three w 
landlords i 
ks; and I would strongly urge them to make them m 
n 
ê. d it 
then they should have it fe „ nd if if the ey w. waa it to la 
the soil some time, and plough 5 Mead i would wih better to 
etn the boxe es. ted to 2 1 
me as he applied aur och — he wi 
hed to be laid o ‘or its eee in the pt Y 
with a mo ‘solid manure, that would at once set 
the ‘question at re at. i > 
olid manure to 
an 
was not of euffi 
e was not su wore to know 
pense As a principle, uld by 
means cover it over, and if they sd ‘dilute ‘their ‘heap 
with it, they should — — at ee discretion they liked, 
and not let the heavens do it for them neo a lik: 
— Ds said ha i at them five years’ 
33 of the use q bo 
ars ago he buil ile his first tank, and he had n the 
2 Habit of using liquid manure APEN He piali it to * 
land at all rred applying A = 
ere 88 8% 
d never 
one 
w onths, not one-half of them 
would be properly used, and it was the proper application of 
hes 1228 en made them so useful. Hes pesos 2 poe to 
wa 
he land, which before had been in a 
wrete state. The soil retaine ndition, 
he might say, for 7 — years ; and in 
£ to S 
any change, “th ey ye 
se liquid m a 
7 liquid to a Turnip trop p. a iat it on the mom 
it coming out of ‘goed sham 
— it ‘ane by a sort of 1 constructed on a small 
cask, with which he could pour 
once. fe this cask he could 
and contrary to 
— — th in the | fr 
ident how many he agen 4 
r liquid manure tanks, and he 
quid. tanks upon a — romp a it would be very 
jectionable to lay ay teed down, when 
he erstood and appreciated. Ona en their use was not properly 
between 20 ee ind at ee 
t year, 
e to say, that ae 
entu there 
| liquid exposed upon Bo i. =! a shower of ping than no 
a day, h merely havin 
liquid. Te i 
own to the 3 it was snepi 
what vigour they came on. Some time ago, s 
i as omitted to be man 
2 
d the e of 
— 3 improving, and w swer very 
To a crop of Italian y other 
ec 
of manure, ie. Hinde had had experience of the deodo 
ered with Mr. Smith 
e — but by all k 
ome por- ente mel hat 
d 
Rye- — man 
onvinced that the liquid was the life and soul | p: 
rised 
p he was standing. 
into s wii 
co 
ouses, and then he would deodorise it. 
a plan fo br the deodorisation of the — 
W. h the plants 
could not become food, if, after pd into a clay, it did not 
n t ex 
2 Is 
AAR. question, ibs, that the liquid manure may be put in 
safely in the new state ọn lighter soils, whereas on clay spils it 
it soe the show — oe 
h in deod 
bog earth very 
If they riddled 
p: 
S 
F 
2 
af 
8 
had some —— 
with the Adee manure. 
the manure over 
ips were d 
E 
o 
3 
8 
— 
c 
5 
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et 
79 5 
* 
ree 
© 
4 p 
8 8 B 
+ 
on o 
4 
. 
o 
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g 
= 
8 
ty 
BB SSB NTS U 
t lo = ir certainly the best. Mr, H 8 
ving which might be eae 
the application of the . — of towns for manuring the roe 
5 laying the he quid upon the soil. He ee paid some 
little ml enda to — which was the best mode, and he 
thought that the most 1 de, to have piping for 
