Juxz 20, 1868.] 
THE GARDENERS' SONT: M MIU Са 539 
тор 
1, дау high a:d; 2, gravelly high land; 3, skirt 
and ; 4, vel fen land. Мо. of acres pier j 
ter 
as ouble Piu абы ч How. arai Culti- 
Ld nera the "og enit i oil is various—clay, , marl, and gravel. I 
I believe the true 
) 
hesame pieces as the first, 6 08 о e E 
ist in na f full cinco hs TO оре 
The num mber of days at work was s about 
есо! 
m third time 130 ! acres, e i to 10 inches dein 
25 days, h al Ifatw ork NUN 
for special | purposes that cannot be here explained “з т ат 
рег т ton without cartage, about $ ton per дау consumed: 
ge 
Cost of oil not known 
1s. uni pe day each, 2 'at 25. 4 åd., 
ld. t 8d. No repairs have been Teq red t 
M "rhe rope wears w well, only ig rage d 
only had my s 
last November, and was deep ploughing 
oniy cultivated a w^ fields this spring 
rs I can give are there fore 
маг i autumn; it veceole qi quite beyond expectation. much more 
b 
been most satisfactory, the 
condition for workin ng, nei ither too wet nor 
find 1 
the use of Ж e. narrow 
po wey time over, viz., 2» eye wide; worked 
it ich 
h the cost 
e | ploughman, 2s. 2d. ; water-cart man, 1s. 10d.; d 
Зз. 6d. ; 2 porter boys, rn 84. ; > coals, delivered, 145. 64.; 
ой, 1 s. Ad. ; 11, 10s. a day. The р 
апу. "7. Bomfred, diens Evesham, а 
ly 
we om 
ger of horses| Remarks on Wear of Rope.—The long rope, 500 
ays the | yards, has been in wear nearly two years, andi is still 
fand up xXx die viter i in тегу, fne йош In the good, only a few single yet are broken; 200 yards 
orked ac ross—either | bought last year, nearly а Sg as new; 150 yards 
AR | 
ту 10-horse үт кА pum eulüivating apparatus as | 
е t m 
or v e original 800 yards 
"Ot course vds work will require which came with the ta Ale in 1860; this is nearly 
es clean—but this is| worn out. We rex a rmm ri eg о 1200 
d grubber than e res. Edward Roberts, , Berdon l, Bishop 
e to my оп d ortford, Essex (Fowler. Jj. 
nuu y 
the. cultivator unless the land is moderat 
spring cultiv: ation answers here much 54 iban 
autumn, 
dry and hard that no impleme 
soaked with rain, and then ien senson is too 
The 
for the weeds to die, 
da; ayi is a about КЫ acres, but ame h de 
гч n 
the 
E) 
have done 8 а 
h 
we [^e cde this spri 
gi н. 
the information you requi ire, for the m$ eem that | 
vi ith us o 
operations c of the | farm, we k 
y of the other 
und you 
ай гө она s least a foot among the plan 
mere matter of 
jm have psa 
fly "tied it long ud md found it answer. ` Alt thoug 
nable 
жог may [e tha > we G BAVE found e 
n; 
5 to 9 acres а day (o "E 
t of f 
к M 
ing 
s. to 7s. p ordin ng to 
the depth of the work, dá ау s the ЖЫЙ, and the | 
nd the 
sizes of the ficlds. In "fact, 
two fields alike. Our soit is very va ab 
i 225. 
saved on a porter ixpence lost 
o keep the rope i mp 
ground on our hilly land is one 
ficulties. n Kay, Lower Beeding, Hor. sham. 
team enge edin 
not worth your —Aal 
w oti 1 my 
that for н pe Lotion had its stea 
the mituno) being un ridon 
I could do un ya ke 
this I “ grubbed? 
аы нн s aes worked i it zr 
yegras 
grow some. bury, 
(See No. З Smith's i —You will Ta my мн 
Mu у 1 о 
п grea 
but you will see e i 
worked very long Ан tier ru goni 
I give you | — Clubs. 
s I can EET ER to them. | [The following, taken from e Journal of the London Farmers" 
Clu "^ is n report of теала by Dr. Voeleker, Мг. Drin 
an oi ng the recent discussion of this subject. 
the team Cultivation.—Professor VoELC nea 
(Crenceta) sd this а pas of ipa са al su 
© jects upon ich all must consult their individual 
experience. "n ere were, however, some ро 
which he wished to few rema t "> а "| 
1 im that a sufficient distinction had not been made 
Y between the very wo ript d, upon 
ipei they must put everything in order to get crops, 
land from whi -— үз iey might take — every- 
uw а if that w e possible, and where, according 
to Baro 
“ 
Pint of the. » "Кеша we КЕ ТҮ БА s Now; ie "maintained that. the ке kind of land соп- 
dix n to в * of o 
i u 
п land I expect as Alderman Mechi said it did, but of thousands of 
difficu 
e beantifully pre- years. 
The lty, however, was to t 
treasures e question was not, as Baron Liebig 
uch |JU8 ly observed, wh s the amount of nutriment in 
Адош o our с fields the soil г ut, what was th s of nutriment i 
o get e they worked 
| good Jand like that to bili hs ded the bet eve it 
to | became. They need not be very c 1, he Men 
r, about restoring to such land ev "oie that 
-taken from it. On that үйр) һе differed from idet 
| man ке He believ Pn oue. if n were possible to 
any | incor porate 8 cwt, of gua Minn дуо! with 
[the ўл to! 
land wi — n comparison with Е 
erat ted i in 6 o reg But the Bre 
| different w ith г rere to very light lands. In 
и 
very li 
,| they must p» almost everything on the A bes] 
f great utility, for on 
| Notwithstanding Baron аан opinion that the 
des "xx = is rei soon as they ca contact with the soil, 16 was plain 
1 for 
| lf ce inda 
be. engine, Nave, Mun 
soluble дшдар n were rendered insoluble as 
the 
that they онц до out, Where did the manures 
go? Why did er want manures for light lands? 
id nured 
n 
during the sum months 
small cultivator Uber ihe Vetch 
of with sheep. You will thus 
о room for the use of the cultivator. The 
t I ех 
except in a very extr aordinary se season 
а couple of colts i я all that 
222 acres 
this farm bef 
the kennels, абет "m time, I һап paie Jur S | th 
something like 707. of M. эш 
Ij i ыз 
опг . W. Bignall, 
Howards Cultivator.—l 
have 
experience with my steam-cult ivating tackle, 
5оо5о95%9 t 
оско о оо ote? 
ooocoocooR 
My 
arable me the ve ao The custom оп | a 
е тр used to 
cla 
of ва gh the it was 
Cost "n Working | Smiths Gaitie on Lon — impossible to get a proper vehicle to hold the prepared 
man 
ad bad cn experience in the matter; but 
speaking from what he had seen, if they would not be 
too h we] upon nile —he was here rather expressing his 
feeling than an opinion—he а remark that he was - 
inelined to beleve that on lands, where they - 
done as as it would be by steam. If he could do 
| quick-stepping horses, he 
t 
harvest 1 t would in te, 
ума this be omi eme if а wet pring happened to follow, 
г 4s.| the. twitch could not be e out. The im of the 
n ou twitch might > that the Mind € ould get a quarter 
acres don 
of Barley per acre less, and alsoa дев of Wheat after 
