tr mrt a r om NN ae nena aaa nena 
 $7.—1845.] THE AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. 629 
RMING anp GRAZ- | Octob When, owing to t ant ka in, it is) 
ORTHAMPTONSHIRE FA > Tain, it is} question what quantity of seed should be u 
; N f Pgs pecan be 1846: ars Pr Siete to plough the Clover vag that even, | acre—all involved in the Norfolk prac 
The Most Te OF TI IMPLEMENTS will take pine shallow, and unbro en flag (furrow- alia or sward), |r regards the cultivation of cia are well wesley 
J iag t. 24; the PLOUGHING and EXHIBITION of TNE- which is considered desirable, it is sometimes lat —E. W. 
a S, on THURSDAY oes Sere SST pora than this. The ollands (old lands or two-year old oe aera renee 
gee, are the fir: mai and their preparation nee ee oF THE CROPS. 
s e only e year. They ie first DWARD oTe OWE, orrivonaa) HOUSE, NEAR 
iit ie r wrest- baulked> ri ribbed as it is sometim 
called or very thin furrow ger less than 2 ahe 
s | deep d having a breadth of 12 inches, being 
letely 
eps m yp 
: North i Bvighton, W etherby. —I omit- 
crop in the notice of central Yorkshire. 
no dry rot this season, and I am 
YORKSHIRE : 
ted the Potato 
— send Raat 
4 d the over 
m the gro 
aa IMPLE MEN ‘TS. 
br roken gro ound. ly ing some little pe in 
happy’ to say that I can find no symptoms of the newer, 
the Maker or Patentee of se best oe a (workand£ s d 
sideration) a piece of 
5 5 0 
After 
“To r% state the land is d 
draught nA aks taken into 
Couch 
the operation of baulking is the destruction ‘of parvest has 
s destroying the Potato produce of the south. The 
_ ee —J. Hannam. 
af the Ex Eni of the bes i Turn-wrest Plough (to be 
peat vik ate value, or . 
“To the Mak er ys Patentee of any Im mplem nt or Machine 
ap} ogek Mi nrg a (other than ose above spe- 
hed) w ts utility in saving labour or ex- 
ase, iae be cheapness of construction, or stri 
eal circumstances should be cg rs by the Judges nite soil Hare $e 
of public notice, a piece i state ; because 
ust e gro 
Be immen the aioe ne whick ‘day the T will dred place, ai = 
ation of a crumb or small portion 
mould, = which the erpi tei the young 
ee m bie: me Sie: the 
ce ne and broken a 
eiti is ree y that Wheat likes a 
As s far a as the attainment of the first 
yo 
The Wolds.—Wheats upon light 
| sels ax are ve ey ‘much mildewed and broken down ; ia 
fai aper not an average in point of quality, as it w as all 
thrown down byi the rain epis the e season. The Barley 
“ill, be very bad. cr ‘op T consider good a 
rT, 
T and for which horses will be provided by the Society, if ne i I 
mplet 3] 
t giv 
‘yr em Pen ns Wolds on Castro. 
ear fact, 
$: Tarnips a Sia „given over growin 
—_ = s intending to exhibit for these Pri: gi 
to the Rearetary on or hefois Saturday the 1th. of September, 
‘and must coe e whether they wish their Implements to be t 
H. B. Wuirworru, Honorary Secretary, George Row, North 
arded a 
a a he Id in ahia the Whea ing up, and 
— had been yore sales! finding that but a 
mall portion only of the Cou uch w actual ally de- 
ie ti 
ne young a angie 
rop, as the la: nd is stl uch out of condition pet 
Po ast In the neighbourhood ot ot ier per too, the 
Turnip crop appears just the rds the 
wherever 3 the red to 
royed, while a a 
| stn v w jithered to appear tea oe was beginning |! 
‘ain to re and t tuggle with 
mb 
become 
“The Agric Agricultural Grasette. 
SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 13, 1845. 
the pe 
j the Loggins sib aran in r aae set very i 
> 
t fen 
pa, it aa pe 
os to be very good, as far as wpe is “concerned, although 
ill } deficiency in the corn, 
Wil 
„—Hary ye: on west 
10 days d the re 
MEETINGS FOR THE FOLLOWING WEEK, 
| very po seers both as “ne quantity and also quality, 
E 
Taurspar, Sept. 17—Agricultural Imp. Soc. of Ireland. 
FARMERS’ CLUBS. 
Sept. 15—W. Market, Ne wee | 
I 
net aah re 
Sept. 16—Blofield and Walsh Sep 
19—Halesworth 
| generally throughout the county. The east fen suffered 
w 
Tue results of experiments in ELECTRO-CULTURE | Y keep the ‘soil 
very much by the ravages of th 
spring, w which caused a great br breadth to be ploughed up, 
were allowed to stand make now 
“are by this time geuerally ascertained: our own 
ae others of which we have heard show that n 
uence is exerte d on the growth of plants s by an 
scarifier (se 93) w ould be atone to 
n tha t of the plough, “ander these circumstances ; 
f Nor folk, = ya the 
cover 
© 
5 
© 
d 
ti hahit ftha N, 
a wretched appearance, and are ripening very we 
and appear to be age meet with mildew. Altogeth 
from what I have seen, the Wheat cannot be an oun 
ra in this county; the Save ey is very various, though 
uried wires, arranged either as Dr. For 
“h | five acres a day ; and if 
other, Jati be found necessary, 
es wor ould be scarified i int the same ti 
two turns, one crossing the | 
more than tw 
ime. Or the 
` 
me 
nerally too sce bare and “ through-grown ” to be a 
yielding er TOP; it m coarse in spe Je pä ~ bering 
before was 
wea oo 
misnomer, 
BS 
c disturbance 
be made out of an ola ke eet a this 
a half in 
pearance in it, will make it very bad to ree we 
shall require much fine wea ather for it, and have had 
with, 
7| would broadshare tw 
Pre eit ither 
> 
I trust, a prospect of pert continuing. he Oat terop 
ads 
o sci te the depth of 
; y tote would be josecned: wakit any of it bee 
he |t 
w Oats selling paths in Bos- 
ton Market at ats per a "q2 x T bag). “The = 
undan e sea! 
to pein tit ne Se ld dha 
urned over, and the a rrowing, which ou 
immediately to succeed, would bring the Cou 
bodily to the Sartai, without a particle of ea at 
apa 
oe 
influe 
plants i, oe aie our “ignorance of any 
seotrold ich this influence can 1 be increased or 
nd 
yen: My tbe 
pe of ithe a ené reeds this year ss subjected "pes ‘te better | 
There it mig ht be left to die, and in this | yay 
all consumed ; so that, ‘oon. ha yet on the se 
we shall be better off than last season. People gene- 
were more fortunate with their Se pei mieh 
CEH 
a generally secured before the v 
he Turnip crop must be very indifforent, although 
within „these last few days much improv ved 5 =a 
fall "t ey 
aay it 
cart it off 
th 
Has all ee tong ur bee 
ose who 
“Dhaka s some, believing. i0 the evi- 
t, have 
PERA = 
p +h he f+h 
having gree them many yellow and copper-coloured 
-e in some districts they look woefully. Cole 
nerally in the f fens partake of the Turnip appearance, 
some 
5 
5 
Sao 
+ 
e. se eed furrow, in ea 
i rade sown with he hea ach 
n depth, witha width 
e to what 
s no eed 4 inches 
of 12, oer a rolling follows closely on the ploughing. | — 
th ma Clover-layer ane and 
Wingate, Hareby, 
merchants here to-day do not iiin pastaren of the 
Wh 
sown 
nately he 3 
oadeast. The drill ing i is performed with the 
not much), i is very inferior. Last year our Lincolnshire 
18 st. . net. 
contrary to the practice to which 
we. ey os poems of uae across them, 
ular in their 
| ost c common t distance RIAR the drills 
r7 Saches ; though some, who imagine their iad 
obvious- otto have sufficient strength for ar ster sow 
success of an ex une 
pon the character, but u upon 
Tesults, nig 
This year 17 st. . will top them ; if, indeed, y reach 
that—a matter of some doubt to my mind. * Boston 
—The 
ih agers. 
late has been we 
never looked m 
Beer s rich of 
as four or five inch w hav 
| year tried nine-inch intervals with ey success sh 
ewe al lude to hay 
been most une: Aae, , and 
rdingly a wha | A 
padonied them’ ought to be 
por- 
s of their farms, though they contend for "the 
af 
ect} 
The 
in some early places, an 
grain; if the wei ana p s s up “I have no doubt we 
shall have a splendid and abundant harvest, -Some 
+ corn being 
atey of the pees which has d 
prevail e 
ices Sarii the past year is very sariz 
te gly exhibits the illesstices of far 
os e suggestions of scientific men—a 
which greatly in 
o 
On the ol- 
+h 
aka: 
ils. laid, but T do not- hear that i it has suffered to any great 
extent. Turnips do everywhere here.—J. Wil- 
liams. 
SHROPSHIRE : T paiana tas near Oswestry aan 
creases the responsibility of 
set _thenselve up as per co o agri-| 1 
ria e 
Norrork rarel y follows any 
er, lig or st usual deviation | 
toyuna sometimes jaen pe de seed furrow, | 
August, when it lies exposed 
ks to the elie: cts of the at ry 
ed alone, is 
Hh 
1 
rains oh = the Wheat in 
ha moit oE 
wee 
reateielit; where 
ant, | beneficial ; bu 
ry year. had 
inches of rain since a Sth of July, and a3 
ce of leaving it it 
th exposed ca 
The We publish of pee any go strongly re 
ublish this statement in the ce 
la ee on some of the subjects that it Sicha | 
upon. The se y of applying mar st directly to 
| grain crops—the propriety 
serve a firm subsoil on w 
crop will pr Aara operate to 
the 
takes place generally i in the month of! 
ouring to pre- 
e Wiest G 
day. Tuesday, the 5th, was the worst of all.—C. A. A 
i 
WORCESTERSHIRE : The Firs, near Bromsgrove 
| The hay crop, owing to the sol = aas s yE 
spring pastures for mowing, were grazed late, 
hich has retarded the hay, but the showery weather 
has nevertheless brought forward pretty good mt of 
rass, about one-third of which remains to be cut; one- 
