106 THE GARDENERS CHRONICLE AND AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. [Jawvamv 31, 1868, 
To this must be added 4 hired horses neariy | that every flockmaster may be properly prepared for it STEAM CULTIVATION, 
constantly employed in cartage, but we believe that we so frequently call attention to this particular PARK, NEAR GUILDFOR 
that -— this into account, and remembering | department of business. The ewe flock at the precise ' т 
е ; | 
that nearly all the produee and all the manure period of lambing ought to be in one uniform state or ihe d di Аа miro s Weald of whi na lying just м. 
is earted to and. fro, most agricultural rea ders wil] | condition—not too fresh, not too poor—but in a docile, е dieisieó of ihe Wenid which occupies in оп ш 
ondas st un As alic of th hesiihy, thriving, or improving state. The difficulty |5 
The 10-һогзе tiis а working. joe WLER'S аан 
4-furrow plough turned over 645 acres between |p 
a 861 d 
ov verlapping Surrey, too, at its southern ext rei 
is given, not especially for а Successful steam WE 
he 
: vation of which it has been the subject, зы 
ашай 1001 and абе 10d. Thren hw»dred [С icq) Ael Ee pa MS on the M " several other interesting гаа 2 тоноу 
and 15 acres were turned over in 62} days during | common Turuips, with hay or chaff in а dition, In|because of the general agricultural improvements 
autumn, and 335 acres were moved in 674 days|the former case nearly all depends upon the state of effected on w кек. ue eteen years ago, petes 
een Janua nd Jul The wages, oil the pastures ge they r^ i laid on in the autumn, | jr M i амт, Fegi who will on 
and coal, paid for, amounted to 1107. 5s weather throughout the res d Pa id wi Che е We p аз Chairman of the 
which is 3s. 50. per aere. This is the whole cost | wint | Face фарза. чөе UU ели e lr. 
of immediate outgoings to be put against the work i the pastures abound in Grass during the autumn, 
| x tment of capital realised i in commereial 
3 { | leaving а good winter supply, and the weather con- inves pur ranite, 
— е аар to pus for wear of rope, nne tinues mild and tolerably ide Ron КЕ ғ which alone would be enough to upset all those predi: 
the pen peditum: Ва t 3s, 54. per aere over the Std i 
work accomplished with the ded is the whole | weather cold, story, T way ungenial, then | "99% of the many jet einn circumstances аф w 
el А 
пу үа; 
еүе ion isite t ва r i 
Mr. T has this year had the figure-of-eight | and favourably through the winter, во that they arrive г. Bradshaw, an English merchant, purchased 
Bisnes of dra демен, и under the engine | at «lambing time" in that healthy condition, without | R^owle Park, near Cranley, Surrey, some sixteen 
displaced by the new clip drum ; he has also n 3 | having nndetyone any violent hinges so hin —— M увага ago formerly e property of tho MES 
> У б О тїп ас 
: t 
ta Nov, 28, | but keep to a `similar ki È | station and Guildford; and I d | 
3 o a similar kind, as nearly а pia n an uildford ; an o not know a mo 
ne has been at work 214 days ploughing, sible, giving other «бе in Жыз Tunis instruetive geological excursion for an agriculturist Fo. 
lishing the time; 21 days angels, сога, or ca animals that mx that MN E е па miles from Reading —-taki 
x MEER п ZI м, Е р 
scarifying, aeoomplishing 167 acres; and 9 days | found too fat or too bighi in pisi w must a" him 
reshing, turning out 417 quartersof grain, Some | allowed to shrink, buta little blood might be taken plastio Pos the stil p poorer sands of the Bagshot dis. 
of the ploughing was done for a neighbour, and paid | from them. Generally à puncture of the vein in each rict, the narro а im inm 
for at 14s. an aere, the rest done at home is charged | nostril would be sufici ient for one bleeding. Allow Rear Gaildfo rd, the fertile sands of the be 
12s. an acre. Тһе séarifying, all at home, is |tb JE REA Shonld this upon ie watchful diately below the chalk at Shalford and "осонй into 
charged бз. an aere, The threshing is charged |2ess be thought in suflicient for their safety, a moderat ue bich ba aratively poor clay-sands of the Weald, all of. 
1s. 3d. to 2s, a quarter. And the actual earnings bleeding from the neck vein must be resorted to. AN hic traverses in his journey from Reading viá d 
of the apparatus thus amount during autumn to | that із wanted is to defend them from attacks of fever Shalford to м дь. of Cranley. Hardly any. 
133. D 10 d. Тре actual eost o wages, coals, oil after lambing. Ti is customary with many breeders to | Where, in so time, will so many agricultural - 
568, plishing |" mark the ewes м wid h the ram—a very excellent dif oed e entras be А o >й... ШЫ. 
à g course, as it enables the shepherd to шаке better and |9"ulé of geological variations. For a mile or twọ 
alt his work сасе 897. Os. İd., not much more | Som owhat earlier preparation 4; 9 ега afterleaving Shalford, їп а walk southward ion > 
thanone half the earnings; an ndtakin кча *lamb" first, The way is one mark for the | Cranley, you traverse e i E 
eoals, an of the days at work БА the steam | first week, two for ihe d, and three fi die third, fertile district, whose extremely hilly surface i$. 
plough alone, we have а sum of 66l. 9s. 9d. spent un which they аге counted as “going over again,” -thereabouts cut into by deep lanes fringed with. 
against 1884, 9s. 10d. earned in ploughing at 12s,|should such be the case; and are then let an the | luxuriant s уркек, i" etel: small irregular feli 
and 14s. per aere, and scarifying at 6s. an acre, | last lot are Боск богу ward. ''Fhis plan of mark.|being now covered үг and luxurian 
There is certainly ample room here for interest of ае permits а partial separation as е or dms d Wheat a d kyo 9 уе thohi hills a aro topped 
eapital and tear and v and oost of rop ing season recien ые is desirable 1% | by La d Fir. Very soon however this is eh 
йсй ye look at iko А work. aeom. | Preve ents wding the flock and frais тарау Шу soie Ao b 
plished їп rent: биа y the engine and consequent Sieb mfort, an. e of course a slight Mine the во gi 
apparatus, an на the expense ineurred in a given ree vedere i thingo ole n d А dan: ы" p паса Чий тау ош 
ace or consider the whole cost per Е ildi 
annum of horse labour and engine, combined in Bent too s them 
айтан, nE rei ашыу har very КШ та ss abortion 1 bi " Aborti уто poo rie miles fb 
s in the lambing season. rtion is one | 8! sg es о 
and eeonomical w of the great things to be guarded against in a flock of | light fawn colour of the 
And it is not «1 in the work of cultivation, | ewes; should any cases occur, by all means remove the | generally  inferio e 
bu іп har vest wor rk as well, that pentes affected ewes and all external causes which p he excite | ап example of the 
management is seen T. ARNOT'S experismoe is the sympathies of the remaining—otherwise some are ү whole, is frequent—and you have all t 
as good a testimonial to мен. Bunerss & К mush inferioe to tag disi лая lv Ey d 
ача Ms. Болынга; ап оа je an gaining т and b bee loss, | fest Е agriculture, and in the ap of forc 3 
out being a prophe may judge from the р 
Race m ЧИ И ЫЕ кату ГЫ шуа INIT 
p un Ps s gel called ergot, that it is е кыру e gne may oecur | Knowle Puk e «мів of Mr. Bradshaw would lt ti 
The foll years rend 3 | in different parts of the country this season, Iam not |just such an ression as one now gathers on th : 
owing are ex з for the acquainted wi reme аста А beyond | to it from pira: of the land between it and Won 
re when B & Kev ану that : ^ 
jou озат. * en твейзд EY's reaper has | what I have. stated, particularly that they be undis- | Since that date, ride. it has been in the 
n e кү uu shepherd himself is freque ч the un- of an uet and wealthy man, wh 
A "c Acreage cut, | Кыт j "E" willin tor cause of these affections— по cause is tastes have led him to join the London Farmers' 
; N | = "X e E Pie d he лм NE been. ода st Мед que 
Food cpm Aa The PERNS President. Шш eeh pa 
Я е ов} з in unison, 
А КҮК spring up from the eir a „аге Lam country i КОШ У Some of f ihe З 
Атту PIS 
EN practi * ату р Much of it, especially on the summit of Mei round 
se f { е 
: уле; a place pe pri m ir dis теч d | undulations of th uf afi 
and ng the crop. inelude | n @ $ n: e ce, is a free an 
the whole cost of oil and repairs, but they do t should Ар petet own an angry or pasty tempered “ош at brashy or grav elly soil, which is 
istance ; 
fertili 
nel. уйш not a ltivat while the rest із а 7 
en im, The. P iE ра patchwork. $E that extremely fine an 
pabla Ku me places mo 
dueted. 
like "EC S ‚ате учошайейу ала ho igual eon- Ese 
as his 
eultural p s "e do T" M M а doses of Epsom salts should be used. Another 
upils mech ae | sic 
g tations arises бет po ы 
young men are more likel ely to acquire a praetical i * gintmenting ” 
knowledge of the business and the art of farming. lambin yn a чор slippery, and ck close and adhesive to 
—— if done when the. g is near, is also vi ed. 
ous. Nothing of the sort pa to be айар вап 
r the ewe is sup а ve 
tting” with сеа 
of the ewe flock г ihis season of the year, and it e place till aie Ren not - Timer it теп T: 
un i POS a "M моги оу. Eco 
n ch being done—her t h | of its до б 
ges put off till too late, | to y dera her in iral podio vage. dde oy particles hong eq ually min form 
аз the result. “The | Аз е uos senson но more closel ly approaches, d osa o drips Suo а substance IU as hard 
and i H in order | ша; g j . О.Е, From Ње rout oxpende р. а дус 
