THE = A GAZETTE. 
[Nov. 30, 
Farm H 
ally, ogri = piece. 
nns 3 
ORSES SHOULD B early an 
If y * e this, try on 1 
and the cag adel, th 
your horses, 
u do Ferd nag horses, 
taking es should be ventilation at 
the highest point i in 109 table ;—this is te effected by 
iron he nh worked in with the brickw 
and mix 
ndon breweries, they roa drink at 
ae time ; — it would be as injurious to them 
ourselves cold water when wian efir by 
— — 
Animals ining do well 4 bing roofs, unless you 
a lining of boards o 0 
n cut food and 
by gripes, provided we 
m , when first attacked, 1 oz. each of spirits of 
nitre and paregorie in f warm water. 
always keep a few doses 
EEP CULTIVATION AFTER Daun GE is essential to 
rofitable farming on 
a 4 
pth. summer, 
large plough with yt hen 3 t open the 
—— and follow with another plou a four horses 
This brings up immense clods an 
blocks ae the nasty undistur bed sub 
by the sun, the Crosskill roller, — Be 
cracks them ; th i 
to root 
do g 
— . 1 — the apie or freezing of | the roots that 
destroys the 
3 that if a pair of horses could plough > 
feet ins of 5 inches, that her have been ou 
general a a cultivation. Thi * nir. val 
manure t crops baia ng within 5 
inches of the vg got ot died, and the root crop failed, 
Not so buried deeper, like 
tion, below the rete influences. 
u 
and that a man may not grow * 
a 
and gradu- quar 
you | and 
farthing per 
re 
beef, and 
pays him best. The fact is, bad farmers, who do 
keep much stock, or buy much manure, dare not grow 
toes with the ordinary m 
heard hem say a Potato 2 exhaus 
For own part, I like a L 
It . a heavy return 
the deficie 
mode of arung. I 
their land for 
years. exha 
crop. 
the pressure of our 
They react on the landlord, 
nt, and re at la 
Daarxsce.—Little n 
* 
it 
ni 
giving way. 
Sream Enornes.—If we are to house feed 
cut food 
imc, be 
y Mr, * 
ting questions of the 
of FEEDING on OPEN Bo. 
ie kor coats tT onder to do tnis | tuen 
b consume a 
“of the farms, — out into chaff, | 
i grou We are 
-| Before I leave the boarded floo 
i loo 
30 bullocks, 
10 cows, 
ore 
* ee 4 
eep .. see 3 
cae 14 ae 3 
pA small l pigs and lambs . 13 ad 3 
2 3 
For r largo Cotswold or Kent sheep, 13 ple ka would 
not be too large. 1} openings do well for Ham ae 
2 oT but are rather too large for small res 
9 
lands, where animals cannot be p 
winter. The area allowed for dah animal and its 
ing apparatus, is thus 
eon . 
Larg 
Small balck 
Larg 
Small pigs 
ena 
rofitably folded during 
feed. 
Superficial feet, 
te 
epends on the season and wea 
om. AE ha 
cold 3 pigs and bullocks can scarcely 0 9 — 
m to lie down 
bes eee and tempera 
meter, because our own fee 
a — criterion, 2 — —— coe ated shou 
pul- 
pigs, having little hair, must have a 
When pigs — 
they are not w 
enough, Cold, pies the circulation i in the skin, drives 
EE 
I have often — struck on seeing how soon m 
groom will get a horse into conditio 
d per oak; “pe — — sure it 
Before I — ‘ius open uld say that 
bars or planks may be either of Straight yellow ee — or 
site 
wo to four 
t essary, once in = 15 level — 
— w Nr its — the boards; it would 
soften them, and cause them to break. I should say 
at we 3 sweep sath foo ; 55 the animals are 
ee clea Of eo nure i en at 
ce from N the eset to the f field, without the 
— ention at oe ense of a double carting, shooting, or 
turning over of adung-heap. The effect on the crops 
is unmis 
ope cent. on your een 
wit 
n order to y 
for the whole — * complete trough- 
ul 
e stout lad, éek, will -l 
atis t 
usting | and _ to 30 bullocks ; at — to 60 grow 
re- 
ile occasionally at the current belief, that Mr. 
e ee less, 
fom 
cannot too highly — 9 the system on heavy 
t th 
prepared to go w 
n by 
ma 
om. The 0 open — 
ow, for ventilation should — — ‘the highest point. fi 
t| Fine b much of 
the 
guano. 
| chas 
ing or -like. 
r farmer An 
accounts will possibly — that . 
oors, I must confess that I 
k of my animals so we 
5 on a little mountain of e 
asture ; but — is not a question o 
— I am qui 
ing pigs, not 
ound some of them get cap- 
is surprising how quickly you may fatten 
on these floors. They find it it inconvenient 
to run 8 so divide their time betw wend bera 
sleeping—a most agreeable operation . che a 
J thi Tai 
k. Hen £665 £4450 will Son- 
sider the er of how much meat Sni = of Turnips or or 
hay — ee under Re us circum 8. 
ut system w be given nr 
— sdi — on ‘an turning-out system, t 
| of mf farm would ired 
75705 future published 
workmen 
If so, 
My old “fashioned | 
can beno doubt the ani imals are see 
confinem: 
nd r surprise s et especialy with | the 
igs, fed entirely ooh i meal $ for the 
under them 
roper 3 4 pnd — 
acid, ashes, 
I hope 
have a ton coming o 
think common sa 
0 ere 
stock, you will r abun 
to their attacks ; and, of cours 
ir 
all mean 
so 
greater quantity of e — by Mr. 
M’Culloch, Bes Sogo coe 38 ass the 
othian fa: Law 
not feeding on n Turn one, but Fusing 
the productions ‘of the farm in l fon with pur- 
ed food 
Whilst a searching - * facts to guide me to the 
Le iti aoe „Imet with tes e 8 two 22 
hich à firm, by comparison, m 
y 
| one 2 — that. on sete quan utity iia management 
For your inform T annex a comparison of Mr. 
M’Cullch’s Tas or Srp with a similar one in 
ffolk. 
Income and EXPENDITURE of a good AVERAGE MIXED) Som 
Farm in SUFFOLK, 
EXPENDIT 
Rent, 28s, ; < Tithe, 7 7s.; Rates, 38. 6d. 
Income and Assessed Taxes 
Labourers’ Wages x 
[radesmen’s Bills, &e. Gis 2 Y 
See d corn, grasses, K. z J 
—— on floating capital, 22501, at 5 per ‘cent, 
sses of stock 
Depreciation of horse-stock and implements 
oss to balance 
£1155 14 3 
hel acre, 1504 at 58s. 376 0 0 
1692 at 2s. 6d. 296 2 0 
Peas — Beans, 32 bushels per acre, 
752 a . 13112 0 
Clover ond mized Grasses, ent once for Hay 
Pasture, 
„ Pasture — i 
Mangold Wurzel and Turnips 
INCOME. 
47 Acres Wheat, 32 b 
Barley, 36 
waste fences, roads, c. 
* These 1144 acres kept 10 — and 1 nag horse, and 
in addition produced, in feeding 
. £150 
10 — stock — ‘ 
Forks i E f 
— 
— — 
14 0 
EXPENDITURE AND agg OF THE ——— bee 
AUCHNESS FOR CROP 1849, NT, 260 Imp 
EXPENDITURE. 
hte cere eee 23 
ED MANURES 
4, 1921. ; ＋— 1380. 
uL r Foon, & 
284 0 0 
105 0 0 
cattle) ce 
Oats Ec. for servants and 
ä — 2 
—U U 
(For seed of Wheat and 
oe see statement 
below), 
