948 
THE GARDENERS CHRONICLE AND ATURA GAZETTE. 
(Ocronzm 3, 1863, 
wake of course would ылд this defect. Were it to 
orked with six h „I should find some other 
f£ and|h 
eight, the Croyd 
Out, even in cases s vero no Profit e rip arise from 
using ће һове 
2 = оаг а were to make the irrigation ву stem a apart 
r dra in 
y use at all, these are > not 
ing. "ra un не А that Mr. Bro of 
Denver, near pic i, has tried one of the diris 
rope, and that he is o 
or 
No implement requiri six horsepower can 
advantageous! ke ithout. steam; the loss of 
power when six horses are linked to pull is immen 
As I i 
stronger motor, I need 
tle company that assembled at lunch, 
im. | ings 
e disadvantage. 
Build. 
ве. 
{һе first instance, they 
Ei ao on rape 
of 41, 
egal proceed- 
I will тщ э by stating, confidently, that if the 
0 
tatisties of the  Registrar-Gener 
га d the answer to be a 
and you 
nds sterlin 
we d millions of poun 
It by 
e of th 
hope to be successfu 
increased and increasing deman: 
r | England. ЕС ачар еч during time of peace ЕС 
the great corn-producing countries it may in any 
ee say was a great 
James Fenton, Civil Mor, in the 
SH AGRICULTURE. 
instances be more profitable to to us to purchase Viet 
and 2 pec Corn for th 
e always bettet 
and АШ stock-fe eding 
use of the labo auring classes, it will 
pol ы cattle 
.Your correspondent, ° “В. M." concludes Ыз 1 
IRI 
Ir is a great pity Led those who write on Irish 
гы е with the view of removing both Trish and 
often. ail to m others under- 
e lit 
cluding Lord Sondes and d Ager, and who were 
hospitably entertained by astings, seemed to 
think highly ka the уйно, especially as being 
adapted to 3 with п stubble in autumn. І had the 
opportunity ot h ign good deal abont, i» past 
harvest ; reports were very glowing 
а corn crop. А y ог — Leges рэр басо | 
6 and 7 qrs. ieri of fine Barley. 
The root crop, ertt, isa rots e. R. 
THE CROYDON SEWAGE IRRIGATION. 
I HavE received so many letters respecting the 
Pe fields at E 9а that а few nage 
arks will be interesting to your 
* But I think that | e А 
of the British isles will soon see the necessi ot 
mde adn pproaching that character 
wh ut as best suited 
and. country” 
| g d report from | 
| the EE Show. The nri depu "e 
in his ассо of the cattle show, 
and £n well suite 
Melo 
ei parts of. England." 
в not say so, оос! 
eeking t 
h cultivation! 1 
ua pen а few 
€: 
enst of DN "o the Pin of I 
of Wheat, and splendid en oropa o of 
irrigat ion Taš todd thi 3 severe test of several | injunc- 
Te: 
Oats. p 
> | by all a 
and will be the r resu altt- 
ee and a 
nd eve 
place within our reach. Let us evade this by ig 
down our s ii leaving them 2 Naturo, id ke 
2 — decrease 
what I o 
(Jd 
aval officer describe Inch beef when on. ab sen— 
tions in Chancery ; but w e have for nearly 
The water runs s clem "from 
our outfal which several fine trout have en 
блай; апа the offensive matter, instead of fouling 
the river, is now man uring the land, and ойк 
In order to а letter, I propose to classify 
my remarks | under different heads. 
Firstly 
he intended to say, “ Aliough bw [ua ДҮ: їп ireland 
as good a climate for wy as we hav e nane 
aid south-east of M the od "far of 
ЭО. 
тее 
soiling a soldiers  knapsack. 
our 
= English manufacturers 
7$ Lom 
ldier's beef," 
idiers реет, 
from any kin 
mu tton к (>: во desirable 
with the consume! 
— = EET pesa ein and of excisabl 
articles hen y that t as t the income-tax woul 
wil be seen in 
economically applied to land? E 
1 35 
4 Y + 
water ре most 
being carried out by gravitati on. 
The: water i isled into a „channel 'along the Highest 
ik vi n € rearing " Agi 
I cannot agree with him 
nd should 
its rate 
Жан һе е ваув * the renring requires less cipit th an dry 
Irel 5 
іп return to prod ; the 
uplands to pro oduce | Trish Furze, Broom, and 
ШШЕ 
к on to th 
bo and А ЗЫ "Perha aps it 
| should, but evi or other it seldom if ever is the 
e fields at regular distances. Another | less 
кары. is formed along the lower езү st the fields е 
diri 
the land. Fro 
vi 5 land at the lower 
repeated ; and it 
eic oap in 
pps pud canne the 
ducted in 
end e here the process is 
is then carried into the river Wandle. 
è I/'need not com гө this with the hose ag et рене oliey for Trish farmers e dm t, as alread pi 
‚ which p" atleast ten times mo mpm Lo be of liom know to their b and ts Tm М оёшишу Me базны — nt roll EDERA the poot 
the Croydon system. йн се 1^ regain the унон they аА lost v n Mis гас nu 
Secondly.— x What quantity of water will the land |a procedure. ,1t às true we -— in Ireland, round, not p fos ds rearing but for the n: 
and crops extent in Fuel: БР soldiers and dem to 
зерейанаѓе eaning, 
"аша таео tilla npe: and ics 
sel 
=> in Ireland, though she “stands alled " 
в! rearing. If i understand 
the entire country 
o stock rearing. That would certainly be the worst 
This bee on the nature of the land and the 
quality of the sewage water. At Rugby, I find that | gra 
ing in 
lands which, г баст indiferendy id down for 
zing purposes, риле ет as such till 
h 
they 
18,000 tons per, acre. The e Rugby sewage i is, however, 
twice the kun gth о of the > Croydon e. M 4 
plied. 
th regard to growing crops, it is, with Ds paeem 
Ps only pint ox to geeks of bee oue or Italian 
Rye-grass Тһе ter has so stimulated 
the 
pee of the last named Grass, that from 30 tons 
ve ака land in each 
Voy that when laid down even "indifferently will 
the spring, summ 
from 18s. o 35s. pér bo 
~ There is no - doubt, if the | Sewage нд аай on to 
autumn months, and sold at 
ог perha aps not 
e rent, taxes, ad м4 rut ббс till broken up | 
and manured aga And if эх renewed breaking 
Flax; the 
to the production 
Abandon tillage ша уоп 
е 
| еа impotent pau 
the 
improve as pasture for several years, when they will are b faced orit p, of En Holes whose policy if 
degenerate ев, and require to be broken up | mis к dd de У» e pTi very opposi ! 
again, and when laid down again give | implied, i по fully expressed, in the p of 
good Grass, even without any very costly uring, | «B, M, n.” Edward Carroll, 6, College Street, 
during a table course of till Dublin wo стэ 
о | ОЁ the rotation when the ee is foulest. 
half I low and deep bog will 
f the —— ул. 
rther reduce the Irish 
poor rai 
ith the , aged and 
se p will further 
fur! 
тош: rol, whilst you increase the 
filled the poor houses w: 
pers, b 
drive into what may ree 
аа — will drive away 
ies, and you 
PARING AND BURNING. 
Тнк operation is usually performed at - e 
g Grass not S t b | 
| m бой at all of ES сми ш | facts well known | plough, or spade, slices off turns over tout ne 
РЕТТИК ractical man conversant ` with Ire land, а nor inches of the surface, w Grass or stubble, | 
x which state it remains till dry enough for burning: 
зовоо theo slices are e — A E э burnt, { 
| and the ash evenly 9 di 
xi inui urs - - mei a hent or - in. In the und clay land districts of Ea | 
| still there are certain soils in in parts о а |аге usually abou heaps to the acre, each vont | 
eapable of as heavy an acreable produce, ing three о. yards of ashes Те ове vill | 
and as a er bushel of both Barley and | © of artificial furnace Ty 
Wheat as part of ei England some of the larger slices, leaving it open to | 
or Scotland ; and as to the of Oats, Ireland, аз side; on the top of this he places some ЧҮ 
сормай. whole, is far superior to either England or Scot. | Stubble, and "wobd or thorns, and у oo ied, et | 
hydrants, hose and jets, pumping the water to get a land, оса а > means be always d - | some of the driest pieces ; the fire is kae вй. eni i 
head, would cost at least 30s. to 40s. per acre рег | their produ There are шап 0 as it pro more slices are put oni through the 
num;and the labour, if a sufficient quantity of c the growth rof which strangers to Treland 1 believe taken Thot to allow ће fire to burn 1 
water is put on, would be enorm e climate to be u а E — situations. This|9X xternal i without PPM xt — -— 
Fifthly.—W hat is its value as a тойа be а a great I mean аге | Шеш” We seen thi 
"This of course depends on the е УМЕ Веапв апа Жага] | Out at a cost of. и. 1.10. epica: E 
sewage. bien asked E eese рако тые Com db = The saving of De ed amid pec too, | ОЁ ashes obtained being about 80 уар» сс 
mittee on the Sewage of as been successfull; tised, even in seasons as gives 444. per cubic yard. rto of de ground js 
ble for s as were those of 1861 | skinni за а ала ЧС if necessary 
is not worth one dd BRIT. Dok r ton; uk ieri ш а 1862 in Ireland. Тһе seeds І mean are those of | Sometimes р! and harrowed, A56 s nre then 
€" report of the commiesioners on the Rugby fields, | Turnips of all kinds, Clover Red and White, Rape, cross-ploughed before the harrow. Tt а дой” 
t is not worth there one у per The | Mangels, Carrots, Parsnips, Flax, Onions, Lettuce, collected and bi This ata ЛТ 
value put upon the sewage water by воше,, Of all these things I could give in | burning; and if the clods are ilis country, 6086 
arises from not allowing for and tion. abundance. But supposing I во, how, throughout the field it need not, in coll ected into 
om ata applied to the outfall of рането E — say nothing at much more than 25s, per acre. When — 
town all of fattening t profi conducted if tillage i 
I think that there are few places where the system | be abandoned! This 1 d to à | о Eng ize essay on Paring end Burning, ie uen А 
cannot be ача Me ers А cure rie gront алш within e last fer enm more capell е сіз the cost of the practice, as described in tbe 48 
inland towns. case, by pumping a moderate ' an d what were the consequences? Look to from 4d. to 8d. per cubic yard. 2 
