58 
THE AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. 
i AN? 25, 
But 
Suppose a throng 
t | subject to the the waves from 
| North or German Ocean. 
The embankment is kon | 
ing matter from which the plan rive: carbon, 
oxygen, “and iiyrogen, ees lone ae ‘present in Be 
sup- 
a} gg ir 
t “Tihipaciane assembled i in a maei hall to hear 
sting tria 
unques' tionably derives benefit fro 
ch a 
towards the 
5 
3 l$ f 
well eman Se a on 4 sea- nde and 
suey 
tisk nitrogen ; but in all these cases, should he vail 
oie so, his negligence will in a measure be remedied 
the availability, at Tatai food, of the stores of all 
pom ubst: the osphere ; whereas, if 
supply “the Bossa matter which pla 
e be none in the soil, they must die,— 
ants 
ing and groaning and | perspiring would ensue! How rea BY i foundation of it, where it is 8 feet highs: is 
would some endeavour to rise above the rest, for a pu uff | 44 feet p 
of fresh air ! path b whole len Ast "Of 
to make ro r the increasing mass ! “Here would b li L Da feet, geccvice at 
one fainting; there another black in the face; a little over EH per chain. The extent 
with his ribs staved in, a fourt rx aris off ‘his legt of land Taolased 1e is 160 acres. | The „work Pign on 
altogether, and carried ab mei anyw une, Ist Octob 
throng. os ` nld be exec: ina ‘bis neig hbour | the e year the old creeks and water-courses we 
for gro , if ourcrops of Wheat ~~ eae filled nm ond under drains put in them, as well as 
k, the 
Now 
5| ould te e doing just the same. It might 
oer uti rehear: 
two 
but 
A ka 
pea 
very well while there was only the single blade rearing 
when it had ‘tillered forth its 
other w 
n Sir Rober 
re | at Tamworth called their gs tion to guano, 
mig! 
‘ty ‘armers 
he did so 
e a means for in. 
t Peel, in his address to thi 
under the i impressio. on that i ht be 
AANA ped ow eas to subdivide it. The land w 
tive Braga “when Greek meets ewer then comes 
7 th 
the tu 
of war; 
then gnell plo ughed, and about two-thirds of it sown 
’s White Wheat in autumn; the remainder 
was sown in spring 
with three or four different varieties, | 
. The appe: 
e fall in prices in conse- 
d by 
quence of the new tariff ai a new Corn Laws. Since 
hich any be traced to pers ons 
intereste di in the sile, or to those who have limited their 
and that a 
nee the last sown as late as the mi ingle of April. T ear- 
of the crop on KA es ne promised a yiel of | 
he dew falls they d d than ro g bushels per a 
fte th 1 P | A + Hod 
me sweat bre ke yig as only once “aie À rolled, and well har 
all day, fo 
so thick together that an unwh 
all y vS rany t “ys erat o% all kinds 
urn o e pre 
am not going to. „deny that as an assistant to stari 
h 
tored, ar nif seg drilled at ne rate of 10 pe echt 
per rop, bly fro e dryness of the 
tr 
of Gitlin, all d pr roba 
urely ri 
p red Pai app ‘to the farmer, wh of the Whe 
h fi p But re e | nom, ae relh six row 
ought to af cmd to see phani f ill-feedi orn was, ripe a. strong 
than 22 Las about to “put before Sees very strongly the faci 
os the dressing of guano supplies to Jy eia nly = 
i is to prevent farmers placing too much reliance on it 
ht d r the growth of corn, thai 
aci 
and “tas g? 
wind ana over ih 
and 
_ Ath rvest 
shook out from 4 to 6 bus! hels per. acre. 
away between 1000 and 5000 tbs 
re s. of the sam 
| materiale, and that its use therefore must, 
unless othe 
b How it re going off!” What He g te it is! 
cau 
stack (75 
rapid exhaustion of the 
very common n impression prevails, tha! con 
no matter how produced: ist cer= 
The straw was 
tain means of enriching the soil; but as heer 
aotlataly starved, or each will be fasted to the 
xtent of 4-5ths of kis due quantity of aH! and will i 
ke. &c. We propose to him to bie ys these | was carted home and threshed gs a portable steam 
wo questions—If a country has just bread e e: to | threshi Mk- napkin? instead of putting it in a 
feed two millions of people, what need be there r of ga were threshed in one. day). 
the inteoduction ofe eight'm million s more to share i e | stacke q and thatched for fo dder. _ The a eh of t 
— will either d ill 
€ 
to ‘* the sha mo of his 
for self.” Yet this is exactly the way w 
ine away 
eE between our seed- corn, an d the land it ‘is grown 
upon. Again 
the | them the lan 
the atin having prepared the entire alike, rind found n 
d 
d on portions “of fields, ad? nol a oi 
till they shall be relieved, at 1b. of bread and 1 lb. of 
ouble qu antity ? 
= 
the paride and also | difference afterwards in the‘corn in the parts where the — 
wing, ime for the partial failure a the crop | shee og and where not, the mere returning the crop — 
ed to stand, and wher the de epo- thro animals, without “oe cake or per aia bs 
sit of salt was so great as as to mane hi food, has little or no effect. This; is s 
etation took = there— engs but I have fr ovate proved it, ken ji = cie 
this must b id Though for- confirmed. by. others : py course tbis sppjes only to wher e 
fthis ] ith ie. a 
h 
j , before it way ogoro, 
is ort 
issuing Th 
or be Anl amh before ad arrives? pre o nrust o —— 
We conclude from the cones observatione that n 
ught to be upon an acre than the 
Sloni 3 and that 
least 30s. per acre 
After harvest the stubbles were ploughed ; and in 
poms ° Pe rts of the autumn-sown Wheat of the previous | 
of psig is conse af 
dr ressing Rion an acre a ground; ; this com 
400 Ibs. of garbon, ay drog 
ashe es, the rem estat 
ion as few or many 
eut off, and in pr vont ion to the tength of time which 
these maga goa occupy the ground.—H. W., 
are premat se 
Tetbu: 
N INCLOSURE 7 FROM TI 
PIRTTI 
Cae sae 5 a)i is Ari in 
Wheat 
‘i is lapaa — poia and R ss was ss 
wn, 
anghed,'a dali has pe thinned by the ho 
af the other, as by the shaking, 
and after a reg and „prior to another application 
o ha! 
pri 
p 
Th 
E nes Hoty Om I 
ploughing thie pees is Apap y thin m pessiionent 
“THE SEA. 
the ate of North Sommercotes, lying 
tere tt “Seltfeet a aa ‘etney Haven, on the north-east 
coast of Lincolnshire, ab. purchased in 184 43 by W. 
had 
is p 
the mi for by 
t yea 
double th e depth, so that the arron. tiea 
g corn ‘without r resuscitation with i mal 
d +} 
5 
fed 
this y 
cut oy half the i of last year, and 
There hav 
Thimbleb J, Esq.—an inclosure 
te 
ving bin 80 
at once shows that. the ee portion of P. lants ( 
had Te- ré [yer very great: "Nest year, Me “Thi 
ti e) taken from st! 
the sea- TR oat ae Faris. or E Witte 
mained in and most neg ut 
men “able era a 
drainage was found for the lands, and they are now td 
perfectly dry. Two © cen nturies having pet since 
s and left a An 
Saat tH abe to be flooded arn during spring or high 
ti 
mbleby i 
than it was pide ughed the first year, 
to so of it again mith Wheat.— W. B. 
Wingate, Hantty, Fabrin ja Jan. 13,1 1845 
[FICIAL MANURES. 
An of land cropped with Turnips, Oats,'s 
e Wh a rain the ibe te to: have been fed on 
iania and only one cutting of hay taken, affords, e. 
eit water, the following elements of vegetation. 
p 
WEIGHT. 
ART 
[Tar follawing amended cı copy of a letter which lately 
+ 3 3 
p een sent us he 
s Author. 
gullies “or water-courses ; places, 
i We do not agree with him i in the inferences | 
ome 
= deep in the 
owing to their more frequently being Jg e with th 
sea Wired the soil is more thoroughly impregnated with w 
sea- 
The sea oe pacagonge te much on that part of the coast 
from Tetne en to Gr ee poponu 3 Seong Pe tabs 
muc 
are an eae removed from the soil. Al the matters o 
i unquestionably be pre 
or thoy will fail; 
Fittar not by whom. 
=> gece oxygen, hydro- 
ente 
Waf t, if this b at all, it m 
— "perhaps nearly all; of the 
the sigonl-houwe near Cleathorpes has hati Aicel in- 
beste three times ee 
outh o mber, near Gri rims by, howev ver, east- 
which 
fo 
the memory of man; from the 
oil on fo yea rë by the ao 
stress, is apni ied by ż ane 
Snie] to the plants through eiri iik or, dis- | 
d h 
Sai to Douna-t nook 
Je left A 
width every receding mie 
and at Hadia it vidani ns out a air e 
solved in water, “ota their roots.: The farmer has 
thus little ‘more than the ash—the mineral ingredie nts 
f 
of plants 
Dried. 
Ibs.} lbs. Ios toe 
2240: 1900) RE of 963 
3888| 2750 [13 978 
3024| 2400) 137 
1890) 1600 
3240) 2400) 
. | 14,282! 11,050) |5374 
ithe of cropping by mai any conceived tol 
most Paneer and pratitable, is that of the a 
four-course, nam mely, Turnips M eeds, and Whi 
r 
Tha 
poy: its course southward, which is a grea 
‘otecti 
to the f > z5 hee 
t pro 
it renders the 
e 
Clover « or Grass, sufficient eno atha is T 
mine a man ure, to 
oses Mr. Davis 
agr 
beet, howe edo nota 
h 
ee with | the 
uapik and that “sho ald be 
ung is liria ad ape ‘etriment 
adily snaps A. fact 
rnating 
alluvial soil, thin sandy o or direy lay lt 
each to the nature of the tide, When a 
other, according 
ite ieit ; lars rage for these mineral 
there 
peor the tide d eae capt } N 
t J 
along the L 
most soils derive from othe 
ulk 
, 
e pre 
is a hability yen ee the agit ae 
ofa t 
shire ail Oe 6 dipositi is eh and thus migh 
cted, the ry much in its quality, 
re about 100 acre: 
of a soil; its value as a fer: iliser son PTE 
on the quantity and quality of the food it pene 
plants. y effect in the soil, 
as a vehicle for this food to their roots 
es 
ment, 
elem 
these oneentrnted 
_ Besides, sap 
» is one in which none of 
mineral manures participate. 
only | ba 
to | in 
than the an Bret 
ars 
to suppose, yet the manure of "the fi farm pe l 
4 either 
appointment, That guano can ‘afford ma teria als for’ 
iff and retentive, with le 
ai pa ařt of it., 
vegetable matter, as well as in its mineral "ingrediente. 
I very much fear great mischief is being done by the hi h 
terms in which it is spoken of and recom moni 
5 
an the marsh 
ool Sta maeh » prin 
result ts, in fact, of vegetable decomposition—are, doubt- 
taken up by the roots of plants, and ae as food. 
is quarter, and less 
| The farmer may, doubtless, benefit his crop: 
: fssoning the estimation for 
k; u 
stoc 
per ca AAT p 
mgs 
J th 
s by supply 
ti y ; and the consé 
in, Eter gradual dotetioration | 
