Jor 18, 1863.] 
THE GARDENERS CHRONICLE AND AGRIOULTURAL GAZETTE, 
688 
draught-li ine takes off а u portion of the pressure | 
from the furrow bottom, di emet to some 
extent the friction and cohesion of the under- 
a 
oda: "inda * ак pressure 
n the Pug MU, But upward ten- 
t as in 
d too meb 
wedge-shaped shares is possible,—the tines being 
set pointing downwards like anchor-flukes *' tearing 
i nd;” and the tendency of imple- 
| CHESHIRE 
eclally after steam cultivation. It never told so well 
esp 
before. The same may be said of Barley ai and Oats, Who 
n 
and the pastures more fallow: p^ ay, lik 
gold, very good but little Wi n 2 ke. 
BERKS : руке Ак Wallingford, July 9. —The eat in our 
ru digg tr dy yog reg р than it ins et for some 
years; owing nt of dry weather we had in May 
i "i 67 as we often get, but I think аге 
ield. The early sown Barley looks 
show want of rain. 
ohn B. Spearing. 
ant, 
t half а crop; well got. Grass: good, but 
in. Роба 
т ап average ; Barley, full a 
угы Mangels, yr мей bu Dui very 
; Potatoes, good; hay, half 
Ё 
Beans, and Pons 
late; p ge good plant 
average. JW. 
Слмвашов: Siret Най, West Wickham. ih в рЫ ce of 
е Whoat сгорз is on the differe: soils, 
Ma MOT on the heavy lands ; the не ^ Же heavy 
land is good, but on T lw pa it is mE light стор, 
re sown lat doubtless be bad. Some of 
are ^ pos а g Beins are not so iret 
hort; there is but little Rye 
r thin soils 
P promising, 
the time of "fole wering has been very "favourable; there isa 
little unevenness 1n some of arley Benin косий lu 
the dry weather about the time of sowing, but he whole, 
he appearance is good ; Oats too are very ge y good, 
nd an early Mrs and full average crops vx A а 2 огум 
Beans appear t be ап excellent crop, and lh t yet 
stage received a check from е eflects ts of dry weather, and a 
e attack of t S dip duda fy wi lini been 
Ter n it is, hersi fo fast recovering, a may yet 
jw Бира e from fly, and so fa 
Lee: e. "i торв tly improved since the 
ate тае апа js has menced E „А fin 
lden M. 
of d T e he fo art havi 
the country, the former p: aving a very large per 
centage of black o r blighted ears, whilst the latter is entirely 
tis atthe wheels of the implement MS fee. 
be made to sustain the whole of the downward мовти Devon: Tawstock.—Wheat : Occasional thin fields, but 
thrust oceasioned by the cleavage and Lond g of erop generally “rood, promi pong FAC des at 
, m 
the ground, й Nw e. Koh might travel трой | full crop on the whole бо: p еб» ығ, 
ooth ed rail with a pos лур чырр мш, Р, е 
to а ы: in ран. -— the 
1 f 4h 
bridge- platform as well, would involve a 
waste of motive-power than (as we have aen) e» 
unt your 
behind Ayumi езше d "shi sn in whi oh | 
Res P ite down - m MR gr 
а hea My! ri over 
more cibi -power (Кай fi p^ in 
а шй дү" partial ru ШЕ, of shares and Lies on 
ppt AE rid НЕ Mr. RoMAINE'S 
ne never даман. avelling (at, its oir 
Ut pace xh ym 109, Зы n abont 10 15 lbs. $e DAMEN 
о 
4 
8 
n 
ut 1 t. of the motive power w: 
engaged in e digging cylinder about 
the land to its = And, of course, t 
d, 
vy scheme falls: e ground, when it is once 
shown how а loomctivee engine injures the texture 
of the land by press 
Analyse the [Aeris and реак: аб work in any 
e the essential 
n 
ly extraneous and a ; compare the 
power asserted by theory to be requisite fo r- 
coming the force by which earth cleaves to ear 
added to r 
engine, and yo LP lea: з. that. no very vast an 
urprisin 
bs 
laints of dis: e gardens rally flourishing. 
ay short, but unproved of late. Clover, first crop a failure 
on many lands. od pane of Turnips. Mangels good 
ut late on spring-ploughed hi 
e гр soils, 
land. vest will be 
ears 
th 
М — Sow 
well- known à coller or black insec appear 
Beans aceumulating daily, i бов tting their usual 
b plant T Dia. he fre raptos ec — 
— n 
perceptible h plant, Теле pod allowing duy i 
Sì exists 
еу, the Чао thoro required. motive-power 
TAN са т and that percentage of of the 
stotive- posit uim made effective 
, Let not those po йе! could d powerfully 
generation, linger on without sharing in its 
sharing 
benefits, from some vague idea that incomparabl 
r 
s 
wonderful ingenuity and patient working out of 
tails b 
details by first-class mechanicians have ever yet 
achieved. Т, А. C. 
THE APPEARANCE OF THE б 
BEDFORD : m —I the Wheat d this neigh- 
Å nises above an average yield, the Barley an 
average, Oats an а s and t 
1 am afraid if the present very dry and hot er con- 
tinues it will injure the quality JL both W Wheat and Barley 
upon all dry soils. Wiliam La Stevington.— pe 
prospect for Wheat in my orien 
жар wart to ai at least кү Ad en у y to not less 
00 and 1 m progressively and pro- 
bortionall е beco! 
with the 
whole 
may be p vnd 
assiduity on 
recently attacked m 
fes! 
> у Peta are yet 
be lousy. а ptem t 
and hail have at least partly destro: 
be observed 
btning ; 
as it does other objects " 
Oats and Barle 4 Potatoes aro decidediy diseased 
again to a great extent, the most in distriota m by the 
thunder-storm raged ; to be оссо ® sod 
drenching cold fam ihe plants at 
atan untimely Pom of the year, when the i 
—and not by e ed to us or the lightnin rience has 
Lora proved writer that а a e atmosphere 
and a ам ys em pee D Me and fine sunny 
wi ер es them fi t; th 
tter 5 с др ОЧРА, asit w e 
d th le plant contaminated. ui ever the Potato is 
renovated or resuscitated, his idea is that it must be by 
growing them on the soils, thinly, haking choice 
of the v earliest and dwarfest varieties extant, 
d t rt must grow them from 
tbe best selected, earliest, and soundest stocks, which 
be labelled, ` indexed, noted. Recourse should also 
be to grow them from imported earliest varieties, 
coming from Ahy 
- 
m 
= 
B 
© 
5? 
p 
B 
в 
- 
я 
south. They cem also be grown jm 
нн without manui » ug them 
may not gro Агу atan абед of foliage, 
AY means should be devised to disinherit the m 
m the constitution of the tuber or plant, osi it 
о have become so chronic and deep seated, 
cuitural би, Отця, —Th 
Wheat ioo ost promising. Stra ab даре and 
iu filling well; iu Pic instances slight. Ti Адай at the 
ower tof the ear, but ength of ear z good, Early Barley 
ils promi уз never worse, Dry 
weather and want of titm in the soil may accom account for this. 
Oats variable: early sown good ; late sown 
unusually good, LUN Straw not ену оло, 
Anl 14 us. NU districts much injured by frost. 
wi в pes 
well and will want rain directly. 
complaints of a йейсїепсу in the Bean 
blossoms have set, and tbat there will 
is а good deal of straw to th 
but I think the: late 
a fair erop ; there 
ipe o suffered 
р, ине crops of Wheat, Barley, 
appearance. The Wheat, 
n full стор; and had the 
end. Qats a 3» all above 
ceed an average yield ^i good. m. 
CER IX RO IES zd 
have been unusual v po ф attack of green 
— aphis — 10 days m ув however, к. pere 
e Potatoes well, eqs 
S of MAE, 
Mangi 
arrots, 
еза ге 
Nen crop 096. well as 
Ve pe BA ы Whe 
На 
няе à оное 
be eut in July. J. 
since then, has given us the ап abundant yield. 
The same may be said of the spring planted Wheate, of 
which there is а great b: h grown in this county, except 
the late planted, and this i: егу sm. portion, as the 
season was во very propitious that nothing was behind when 
eland was cleared of roots by the sheep. The ns and 
Peas were never more h ore luxriantly in m, 
Barley thin, 
L'arerge Я 
M чао айу on шу беш som: wi; Turnips are very 
ME; Potatoes are likely to | very good. the - 
Toe well, and some rime те beso ———— 
