- 
138 
f ‘THE AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. 
-entering the mole 
plan; but it has Napa 
wet a ana cold, In the best ‘year, I (grew at the „Tate , oF coulter, which lifts up the sod, 3} inches thick, without | hereby challenges Mr. Parkes to piers that : 
40 bushels Eol acre Kiiite mole-coulter then comes, pe aache has, in the yard of any ti a » tool 
sa, hg a the crop in| the ‘man or - boy at the plough-tail treads down the sod | month together (24 days) caged a diem (360,000 per 
th ugh Ii yit as be follows. I have drained between 200 and Lye He thinks it likely yah Squire 
|! IC, C4 a rd. d with mole-plough, and con: | have made as many as 4000 a an ay "ot 2 nch pipes ig a 
ya hed, fe ng of Shep. approver of Mr. sider it excellent in comparison -to its cost, ewe I esti- *| Tong, but he v entures to a hat this. is the, outside of 
Child plan of keeping sep wane sheds ‘Faring the | mate (but I rgd speak pek accu rs eg r 20s. gul y Still, big r, ie ang 
wil ir beads season, when fattin ing, a and in bad weather gene- Ee sero, elie e main dra sti, one, a nd nee! 
rally. I observe you note in your Gazette, of the Sth could get ole E p di who, in his official report, should s 
inst., that the best mode of littering sheep in and running 30 inches under | those ‘ i 
sheds or houses is a matter ersi s of inquiry. I beg to | the surface, k eaaet effect a very great improtont ent | ral bration, ae tds zeal in the cause of pipes bè e pere 
t my gd whatever | upon any system I am aware of.—I. E. G. P.S. My Es n his own opinion, ever so well deserved. 
shed. s. -dra 
and 
d 
mole-drains, made Seven or eight years ago, were work- 
h t 
garðs eer to be jointed, cemented, SaR fo 
of ha alf ani ach per r foo ot, frora the walls towards 
__Perman ent Pastures —In the list of Gras sses moy 
Vi 
Farmers’ 
"Baap “Cropping. —At a meeting of the Hadlej 
? Club our subject for discussion 
t a little pre 
amson, given in reply to the es ts of 
À which all the urine would then readily drain, and 
into which all em vie ung could be easily swe He very 
as are tw three ee I think _chietione— 
Ma cespitosa Intescens BM he 
F per 
various "attioles 
morning or eve vane eae T shou mu th Mac en the last four years, on the treatin nt 
and dry as possible, “daa t here wo tee t be any | elsewhere tha my p Poa nemoralis is a | of Pot ee y ive so 
“moisture to occasion hay D give you "hares weak spiry Gai sording vty ae herbage as the | sort + at's summary of w Aad as been rep tat in your 
ch of my plan for a 200-sheep shed, and also for leaves „are much u upon Iks over, a | pages, and fe propose certain experiments, for the pura 
a 400-sheep she a, which I hope you will bly soon die aw “He ha d pose of deciding dispu uted questions. It really seems 
if not, I will haye much pleasure to rii more fully much better take Poa trivialis instead, which is a far g an inquiry should be system 
my aning. consider the wool on their lly and determin ne it sige Pp: i re imagined 
quite sufficient to keep th re 3 the Lusor. that Mr. Knight's dena imen nts, som athera d 
use of any litter very deteriorating to the quality ” Chronicle a ER 8, p. 91, | satisfactorily settled certain ted 
and conditio: he wool when for sale, to the wool- I pe been tie it is” stot lap to ugh or clay | with the c en iat this most mx aac gies 
stapler or turer. The dung being mixed, and ai i seen | find that form nelusions have lately been flatly 0 
dissolved in the tanks with the urine a a Ps ea tried, and found that it has destroyed the Grass. | tradicted ore recent expe: 8. A 
water, and the ammonia properly fixe trate also seen both the fallowiag plans Aa pr the | particularly the rejection of an opinion prevalent 
will make the finest liquid mongers appli Moss without injury to the Grass, viz. arrow- | many quarters, that pulling off the flowers tends n 
cable to pasture land, or indeed t g I have seen it Taréstod until | rially to increase the weight of the tubers. Mr, Ki 
even to the seed, to cause a quick g if the hay was much injured ; the result yi ga is rather mo. rhs ee al en I had ve 
leaf. If the expense be objected te, T sa, Who» has been, the Mos s kille ; ands ecent experiments bare 
not be glad to effect such a desideratum as the presere The b and is moist. | to inte that the erop i a diminished by as much Be 
ing of their flock from foot-rot? and nothing near per a d have observed t ie mel destroyed b by ought to have been i 
ion tained without pues W. H. J., | folding anoa it either hen 9 it pl 
n-terrace, Barnstaple. [The of which a trodden J. C., ondhan am l 
Mai 
B shed 
“Plana were sen nt, consist of a paved or s tone-platforin, 100 
Tis. E by 20 wide, sloping 10. fog in the width of 
f attempting 
to grow N Maize ; I will give you mine, o wach w was tried 
whilst ¢ were were doing “Oh? ? 
would necessarily check the return of the prep: be 
Aa nh ary ate 
1 scale. The year ba a gs 
by a es and the other by iron pillars 10 feet 
asunder. This ne is along the side a a 
Hotie hat basin-sh aped yard, in the centre of whichis 
tank to So the dining fro ‘om it. 
‘ardiro 
‘on 
ig for 24 hours, and ore a) 
$: 
= 
s 2 feet wide. The plani 
es manured with diluted haaa ‘fom “the utik; ; and 
in Sane een er the ey were fro m9t o 10 fe et high, large in | bı 
the process? 
e true enough, a yet it 
inex diener. ot the 
—The called Hardirons is Centau 
astu 
t extirpal tion on > per- 
hiss, be as hopeless a task as Thei datruetson of ‘iibaaon 
-Buttercups, w as been so earnestly i puai EA 
ere three fine pods | each, some weighing nearly a pound in |r 
ight. 
nval meeting of th 
Shoma, be 
gentlem 
vainly tea pte by many [a his admirers.— MJ. j 
“ Derbyshire Farmer" 
eed 
IREA at aed in hotbed s, and thus save a fottnight in 
fruit wil necessarily 
hay 
pe 
ender it worth w 
Hardirons.—In answer t on|the young gr rowth.— Te „Dyke, Cro, oft -y- -Bulla, near | the flow sha ll 2 be een „abs stra 
proven i a (Contau urea ge iy which is s very | Monmouth. 
e fie elds, the use? Newb shine H efficient contrivance | a course eea be Acc Tea in EERE THIN 
rimi ane nay, fi ing the adhesi il, of which you see the that sir eoan s yas! than in a reversed retin F 
is field taktik 1 Pelir Bar, Artificial Egg-hatching ; 196 41 utilat you w will Ka up your 
E pave seen ground overrun with Hardirons, treated i y info í this wat Hits t 
years after. Ifi it is inconvenient to depasture the Beld 
manner mir TRE the requisite ant w 
a wool, ke ; 
the basket orb 
who 
some of them 
eee: to awake 
He Hi 
will willingly co- oper 
‘Cotatalge the Tibet of pe 
en the nee of all practical 
ng the durin: art of May, 
an early plant, and fea. Les prefer it be a 
other, and would eat the es of the 
aes and so YU A o lesir. 
destroy many plants. 
A to Pint 
Effete Lime.—In breaking up a piece of hill pasture- | 
land, of e soil, several eN ai of a were dug | 
up ieee Nao lain there for n nearl ry, pemg. co- 
vered ov ote Hime will, 
te 
il. an 
The oder of the oven 
commencement 
ranges fr fro m 55° to 60°, which is soutindea for a o 
ti 
alana readers give mea hint or two as to ca 
‘mall Fa ew aie of your well-inform 
of ji 
two; 
it rises ee 110° n r 15i A 
as the y 
and ly 
pend iqmetimės higher 3 n on 
s 
s broken the shell, it is take 
r | be tter be done under the Slows Her 
e bo: 
am thankful 
and this 
about 30 acres, situate rather 
Darter z be ery ‘anon still os ‘to eg des espised, 
1 that I have got it, t, for I am now an old 
my pri. endence. 
intended 4 to be nied therein, Ith 
ommon practice, to hatch ‘eggs by 
I 1, &e. ; 
B. S. Maem is no 
` Wii Plough nit sits ine that “M.S ” who 
wool, 
Jone, gies along the of o 
baskets are then suspended in a stove heated by 
n pagi 
that implement himself ; 4 or; it he iad, that bd has 
an o opportunity of applying steam-power to to whi ch mS 
1,’ 
p 
e 124, Li's Horer used |, 
ad 
: the eggs ar ar turned every aer as above. 
m inform 
tosh 
fP. 
of t 
, which ultimately “falls into the aout il : 
celebrated Plym difficulty is this; and} 
i maik advice his one strip of meadow land, hithe 
sheet- -anc chor of my lit tle farm, is claimed i 
Brunel 
I obtained permission ot my riandlord to convert sen 
eiaa of Tiss for, i in the exercise n an imp 
judg! ment, 
I do not ‘thout its 
have 
nr t eight pF ten years, on strong “Middlesex yellow c 
Tine ay x i accord ingly broke up about half the same sun: 3|can 1? The entire residue of my little estate is 
€ ve worke r id spring sowed it to White Oats, na ika an otha else, with a little encouragement 
vit: t. One horse and a windla ass, which I con- had a pony s n be, 
sider a ely bad plan. I have worked it—20. ith aeeti rh d afaik Lapa piers ble in Rab aad va Haige ape Seen : Ci "I 
Ay er ( K to 13), drawing straight ahead ; greater portion of the plants in the spring, and the | without a patch of meadow ground ? and 
mat s ay pr a hand-windlass dike a aaa te er Te nearly a D menage harvest. In| any of your readers tell me where to 
arb). ag y four nage oa hi es not A ag September I sowed the same portion of the field to pce thei r. [A system 
X ao. A hove on i ef a e t alts: This last plan I Tares, and they are also suffering from | the wire-worm. I ur correspondent to ote use of a ve 
the horse- sehi fraid : i myt ited 
id f it if, land suited to it, wo! 
by windlass, than a e pet movement of a ten, 30 re) Areg autumn, p avig ton may ne Dun oe the Stes of vega oe iae 
a 34 fitch betes h | 'by feedin g the Tar res and Turnips that follow. The goo od meadow. A sufficiency may be 
: agale in the pagel hag it ma 
e draught is so severe upon 111 
to 
é longh, ing is pee i “tery ais od 
n, that it is difficult to hark 
xact line. I have what I 
the mi sider & Yate 
az, a share attached to the 
(to s say nothing ed the way in which 11 hoses a hard T would wish to know the opinion. of those who pave had Gace the season. An acre of R Ae 
ould the an art of the rota ga land 
ote no need to attach a’ string of pipe-tiles to oe heel of | be advisabl to ae 
mole, even if it be practicable to put them in—| sowing x i, oF a ay = buto int “rmsd sad half of it aa 
; which I humbly think itis not. Beside ce ad level o worm.—A “ Dorsetshire Youn. ng, bed; ar para Bags 4 ith tl 
fetes mole Cx Sal" dis eta payi, p: burn; we q n spint ke ‘pastas ates expe ro land with good ctiltivption, ri fies the sf 
eh n aul’s” plan, the mole rience on this as the best mode of breaking up Grass | acres of age land. ğ 
ie à: roken ah and the ends of the pipes stout vie be land. With re, rega ard te pou other eee vt nable lowing Sands.—Your correspondent ‘Q. Z. 
sd s e Ti o 8 pen ep a ges as it "M Saul” Sits Ma Synth eshte dag 5 qui res for 1 the best method of prum his 
x k i of the drifting sa f the coast on 
maa riok with the swing-plo ugh, previou SN not seem piki rd on the | Along the coast “t Sansen D Bay the 
engineer of py lope Arian Society of 
ikore Ao ee of being e the “ falles slani en 
hich is bei tied er day, and found to 
of no phn: 
ities rahe so | 
ier, plani just in front of the mole- 
authoritatively proome The Writer of iis lines | 
is), the custom on that estate, for the tenants to 
