THE FAE E a AAIETTE: 
a 
yaso 21, 1858.) 251 
tion, as it is very well | over the manure when spre bott f the drill, | camb f the —modes of 
e sweeping accusa insae ip > an o rop—modes of stori ing it, the 
mas jor Tho ko» animals shown there a are eonly picked panene] Aty this means there is no minien pe a hick it yields pe mA) its valuo as 
an oo omaisting of aths bahi A and | contact with the seed, the vitality os ind ‘ch. it would | food eran ‘ite modes of co ing it; and it is 
Fe a ked of at the them, but he himself had been much cs nerwise destroy. es en any other of th ll written production. 
Baecent modes of tical analysis of all that had been ares are used with the farı save dung, aay may be 
rask with the Pre by a an of Faringdon, eee gee! 3 
subject t the best plan is to ge 
Tor aika mood dea oam, give hin 5 Dri ipe nd of ined of of first bout of the plough when the drill is s bei g| Calendar of Operations. 
poian animal as Jaa 1 fellow to look after him.” Faringdon sere and is covered in by the second oul, whieh | eet 
mamn, aad mpletes the drills. By this latter mode it w vill b i 
retin. nearer to the young plant be a w R rg gpd (i} owt. 
4 | nf RE rae RcH.—Top dress yo eat. Apply gypsum 
eviews. and therefore There are v arious per acre) to Lucerne, Red € ire, and Sainfoin during this and 
a | modes of applying them, but in am cases care mu st be | next month. Stains indicate the springs on wet land now. 
a s hes, can be 
= Iivation, , Compo osition, an th ed, | This is the latest period at which Beans, Peas, Vetches, 
peren, Mangel wzel. By Jobn n, a | as like the salt, all tend to destroy its vitali : ee ae a cae puch on teal iret mance a del climate. 
the ie Alert ational Agikdlarel Teich, “ Time a sing —The season yi win : th: ee land put Trefoil o 
as H. Saunders, 31, Lower Sackville the Mangel Wurzel, in this climate, extends from the | Clover should only come once in 33 year on a eae edhe poet 9 
ee of April to the middle of May; but xa bott a ire roar en 
— | en 0. e mon ew ‘oun where ppice m 
The essay publish hed wi ith the above title was n April is considered the best time. If se © | grubbed up or a fence ional delights this plant, and saves 
written in competition for a aize offered ae, De cal, the liability oft the abasa the crop, as a rule, from disease. Plant Hops. Cut Alders. 
p of the erh: an tion, Glasnevin, near | gr ultivation, is | Begin os “wn water a, Des eg Top yo 
. in i young neats. uly to y es. ares wi 
prr contains pw fare at a Sery d — p ked d sed ift Eha 00 late, t the rop vrei in a backward foaling : give plenty of bran mashes and boiled Beans, there is 
itten history an and d scription , 9 e plant, and suf- | state during gro iak season, and never attains its | nothing like Beans for producing milk. Ten days after foalin 
directions ar iis cultiv: We ct from full | perfec ction, especially if dry weather set in imme- | put the to the horse again. K: cure bacon in col 
ient aring 0 cree will s after sowing weather: it does not do = — as riba mane Pi 
ue Pare ho owever, through aayy cause the ee ee rant 
operon 2 aa a a go part i of England 
$ 
Gis on 
i aa id manure | ing for young We ewt. of nitrate e soda mixed with 
driceof manu r wts. of salt. Sow the first su etches for July. 
omg of the tee those districts where the | for p ac. or four ae germination will be so far pro- Ke the roll “wel 
lig le oa the soil also cag and light, and moted that it will be ou ivalent to having it, at least, | h er donee at sccm Whit — Gras lands, | acer agen 
becom deed, 1 many ersons recomm enä | land deeply ploug and manured au f your land 
P 
f the steeping of th is not so prepared, manure now and plough it in shallow: or 
Ginter y > 
peneropsare ually g grown ses ie ‘flat? but in this, or | safe to do so, í fi ing, | ana ei foamy oll ene aged rari rte! giari 
spothercoun! ovat ssing a humil atmos phere, andco g in yer Relea poy receives a|dung. Give more hay with the Turnips, as a be 
gat Tue of the above ke the raised- check which ten proves no or pi rious. laxative this month. Shut up meadows for mowing ; handpick 
commended, and is almost univer rills being opened, the ead a ia E erry Ps ror = Ere ea gana is capital 
kor T ing as alri ay eh ye by splitting: the dr ilis with the ouble monl- | given on the first suceeeding i aur: 18 out gua: 
drills should be opened, 27 to 30 inches apart, plough 1 should have t r jiwa s.—Mr. Beevor in E. A i Moe 
peste ara lo ugh, or, if it = pns = tops nightly levelled by a ht roller, and the | Cun: amon a inte Pein? Revie rtile “appears of the 
comm: ugh must be If the seed either in a S Eat S line along the crown pref on «tit sin of January hasundergono a groat 
inot becn tpt in Paini it hodiè at ak have of the. drills, or deposited in tufts or ches a ~ the frosty deg which poa nearly throughout the month of 
- en carted ou nap h a winter months to some con- | distance apart which the plants are inten ‘o be e | Fob . Sag ery until t ee eee onth, and now the 
valent place vanags] ning the field intended for the | left at the time of thinning. Owing to ‘an, peta besa: a E of mane oe uxu ing) aii barren 
order to fi te the application of it now. | construction of the “ A which the true | fallow, but as the weath changed again we have 
f are 0 n should be imme- | seeds ned, ni wing peachine has cae had some nice genial showers, ‘whit 104 have appeared ‘at toned 
‘bey deposited i in quantity pr ‘oportionate totherequire- been a top employed. If, er, an efficient | Ërst glance a scourge to t the land from which it would n 
aS : “oes oe is yall means, tobe vecom: | sa lve tay Spe Be hire eens 
sly spread in in the bottom a the nie and at once | men ch, the hand and - | the era dry frosts and the small quantity of rain which has 
eed in, and the seed so No more drills should | mon Te PA or PE are efficient though rather e RT I Oa nter, piama air ebere pa 
kopned at a time than can n be manured, co vered i in, substitutes. Under these circumstances, the m ing thie spring Cropeas wo eyerremantber it to have’been, ‘andthe 
energies of the furmers are dire to that important int ; 
slovn on the same day ; for practised, and which is most to be 100 | oergien e ng in all its branches, and also lanting e: my Pota: es, has 
a E ju 
faiple, a great portion of ai n, ingredients commended, is with the ha and- hoe to open holes at the | commenced in and, asfar as w 
| Pemaanre i is preserved If to | Ste urable ew pices. an considerable inher of | fat cutie ws ares 
| tak learn thati y instan: 
fod thie seed being sown il she A arth, |2 inches in ina ansther person follows and drops | the prices realised were little if any mo more than the Rest cost of 
nega Hie a assisted, circumstance n | three or four capsu ules (or, as they are commouly called, — nimals, consuming & rtion of the uce 
y 
secret of successful cultivation in a can ale e. in each hole, y by a third, who, with a i o ea = Tie to be Auni x that for e last few mg 
r zons, : all agricuttu: r been unremunerat 
depen : pae cape Pcie oe any iher convenient implement, grower ; we trust, he owner, that. the lowest point of depres 
he manures employed in the pro- y of mould over th ya: s to cover has reached, and as the spring advances th 
yard con- aaa a proportionate to the re of the zing Bae will be better employed and enabled to 
staple, but particularly so for the ngel, st i the average henga inch A a- a f; but if a preg more fully the a of life, which to a isy: 
raise 
i si es, and | inch of soil above the seed is qui is available, and we are inclined ‘strongly to recommend the 
ne or when ules | Sond be abd 16 to 18 inches aparts] Hy this atelectasis a 
manure is not to be had, the deficiency | mode of sowing, three careful bo: oys, women, or girls, | to es i posse i a E peered 
p by the use of extraneo d | would sow at least a senor in a day. ‘About 6 lbs. of dreadod, Man gol age ore pkn ina oral a and. are poles almost 
cums require. se te acre is th sail usually sown, | UBiversally ven ng an ing horses 
hn or in con- | which, iF- nok saved on the fart, sowid be provare | AML ‘every ese beings Farther totimony of ha 
_and from si and trustwort d merchant, in | exhausted or become ted ity, as is the case at 
ication in spring. The | or 
d be consmensurate nu the 
of the soil; but of 
hy see 
toe what is gennine, &s great losses are 
often sustained” * farmers from purchasing cheap but som 
siy to land ately with “taht (cut allowed to 
tons per statute acre, when Dalei: alone, | “ wre.—Like the Turnip, at after culture | remain two or three ys to admit of fermentation ; others 
sufficient. eous man’ be used | of t Senge Wurzel may be said to consist i qe sn Sate A mink am en e e ried — 
0 Kao ry ct. of vitriolised bones, Aira and careful hae attentive e weeding, and |ia little cut hay or straw to abeorb the moisture and prevent its 
à fair application ; it t advisable, how- | keeping the soil in loose and friable state by | being lost. We are much inclined to these views, may here 
o Mangels with these manures alone, wh in ans of the seme “grubber, res a and | mention that a short time gt ete pany yearling calves 
, aannre can conveniently be obtained, and-hoe, But, to e part he- ypung |!(oo: being turned into the, edifshad o —s 
ail be b, 4 3 lar, s e hake AE KA that th 
j very rich, A dressing of common ing plants wit pert a iia ound in | Turnips placed before them had been cut on Saturday and were 
highly beneficial -to this crop; w. wigs about 10 days a powinna mer -or later, | quite warm from fermentation, which by our informant was 
its effects by gee | ae on the crop, or |as circu urable otherwise ; | assigned as sue pana With apresio ahe papon ira 
tuned by rendering available some SK eai and when sufficiently. BE tity the drill-grubber, | ou- mind ow Moody's haa Ta n ae abe 
soil, T MEN ae be attributed | or, — the og anit olerably loose, the drill- | wi the cold weather ewes and lambs.appear to have 
it has been ascertain harro! ‘should b een the drills to destroy | done well so far, the fear to be apprehended now is 
NRA te ath of both tope and bulbs | whatever woeda may be e growing, and at the same time | beginning of Apri, from the fact of Clover roots and Talian 
of co salt. The paitiey i anki in i tiling the soil. When the plants show a are their chief dependence) having been 
in the Mangel is so lar; pretty strong leaf, and before rane is any. danger of rely cut yi ‘the ‘Tate te keen frosty winds. Store sheep still 
le to the tastein the growing plant, | injury from allowing them to grow o0 strongly, = abet Eig pe nghe Seepehon torsarepn iG 
e amo gar contained in thinni eding should commence. or the seed coeds vend a ad Sooni 4g ain tat 
he tact, oo ey : p) create 0! 
oug had Á in a continuous line by a ne or int eae ~ 4 county, and if the weather is favourable we can 
mon salt is found to py his operation may be performed by the | scarcely doubt panga very satisfactory — 
to large s an application is aoi hand-hoe, taking care » allow the strongest and | and tho seed is depositi ier sbeotiincs stants! Hm = A 
al results, as appears from | healthiest plant to remain. ‘The ce apart at | the frost has made a fine tilth, and the rain of the last few days 
ng the present cog t are to ee left is determined by the < aen ar moisture, _ rend a Paea 
the of | size they dto attain. Where the soil is rich | that cou esired, STO DONE SONTI eee E 
crop, in both large Aae andeverything favourable to their growth, im atest oo phere The olay one pated panie A aoa Ae 
table is qnie e spaceis allowed. When the seed sown or | work admirably. We expressed our opinion of the value of 
mM 3 iea hand must eesse — be used in thinning, aes in ‘our last Tepo a fn ond 
the ance determin e of sowing; fro cessfully. Most of Fen farmers are now in 
to 16 in ae thinning, the paring their fallow lands for Mangels, other 
plants must not be H A oagal out at the first | spring crops. been able to AEA 2 of is 
| A A is better to allow two of the miat work since the new year set in. Both lean EE riha 
luce per | and Y heen as good to anllan 6 E the best ts makin; 
Staite Ae or en strongest to remain together, and at the final ne. Sheep ure not plentiful in the fens, and we loo 
Bulbs. thinning, which takes place in about a month afterwards, for a tony seen for m There is more “ap mr pork 
| the more promising plant should be left. This plan is | at slightly Faena has the 
trade 
least gaty ia inp d the past. month that iti it re done 
Oe) 
oe epplying the salt i is 
6 
31 17 
to scatter it 
uring the w season. Thi sent activi 
aro likely to happen, ‘by many of the plants Se can eet ee inevitably tend to Sector moray g asik 
x — Reporier. 
core and which is materially cheeked by 
havi which presents symptoms of seeding 
pale and the! left to we? 
The essay further goes into the details of the after 
| West Sk 24.—We have got fairly into spring 
pira crt ig oa rough ve 5 but seon 
hiena to sinea prai comparative mildness, though 
_ now the weather is not so well adapted for growing as aginda 
