neces) by the s 
as 
hey are ‘note atid's 
a 
100. parts of. the sea-weed, ) ti 
aitis] THE ANIC TETTEN GAZETTE. 
a s ars jarticalanly where too much seed | n 
be the ly rare Lang re? where too'much seed | drained, and the water = D mains in the most | Results in- 10 partsof Ash, ded: rb p Sand, 
5 Yas plant ed, as , advantageous situations e iei ing the land below zl oe and Charcot. sis 
owas laid early Phat got b sighted and mildewed ; the thin will not only apply ra Wales but England also, | i eae 
ng ted Wheat stooled out won nderfully, and the straw | wiere irrigation is too much neglected. bah pes gi | i ee oe 
4 pante stiffer, was n ot laid, a , in many situations. f th | $ 4 i Ey =f Zs 
| the consequence ; But tome n these there is this year a inéd, to throw over the lower levels (whic ich ‘should | FER a2 a | 28 
deficiency i sof the corns, sate © whole le ‘the permanent pasture), cal § repay the outlay of | 24 BEE $ 22 
will tell badly in the foal Chicken’s meat and- bran | effectually ige Aa ox uplands, in bree ger to the in- | $3 pare E sz 
will therefore be abundant this winter, and I think |icreased value which would be eos ted on the arable |, oe ee £2 
very fair average o bread corn wi be found too. .|/lands, whatever the abit of the soi it Be, eee BE e 
ers are generally luxuriant. Peas heavy crop, a The corn harvest in Hecetordshine was nearly as for- | Potassa | 24.768! 17,6791 16,017] 7.312 
considerable quantity not carried. Beans a‘good oP, ward a: oreestershire, the spring-planted Wheats mali | Lesa) 5.77@)' eode) 21.576 
retaining thé leaf and looking very green. |'and Beans being the principal cr ‘ops od: the Hops | Ma: gnesia Si zi "S133 ba a aE 
the game will allow nan = = s grown were rather small and late 3 it was | not e cted. te Chlori ide cree E A Pgs i $8. reg 
he Barley crops w eavy, the crop, Todide of sodhim. .. | 4.695| 0.130] 0.267) trace 
r small ; it was generily hove in — not a full one, was likely t pone o phori fate of iron. 0.753)" 0.356)" 0.042)" 01306 
ndit ruit of all kinds i 5 plentiful and chea; e.. Apples and Pears plentiful, but not so fine as | Sul hurfe. acid. otis E Fen ao 41.300 
w cyder made here to | usual. ‘Silica a a Va oar 0.337 
th A chile were never _ The y intesa (abe or yards SF aay are'called Heré), i ee 
fuller of Grass than t oe ag agree 
in 
request and selling rather hi ne 
ops ang agra 
iet at 212° Fahr., eHh 
D 
7 
q rs of Ho 
i what Pb “calieation has beer 
e growing; 
4 of this county within the last 20 y 
L, 
which they 
surf: 
increase: 
{o now isdi spreading over ‘the emie, ri its 
; a 
j fhe hilly parts; of which there are large tr 
quantity of bo oth was uncut, and much “of it “appeared 
ment which it requires. to bring. it to maturity. 
| clod in a clean Hop-yard 
fine overarchin ng and embowered ge ards are: as |iof the latter with carbonic acid—th ing bit 
éffects are app arent. Pipe or an as the best pr aran gardens, and are at oer ‘combinations—that we possess the chlorides, sulphates, 
_ gaining favour in some districts. There i is a vast quan- period of ra one of the finest sights a lover of | and carbonates with n bases, e two. latter 
tity of iind, the greate: e 3 scenes could „possibly wish for. On combinatio ons are ae t important service in th 
i ost that i i an dka aes gor here ef ulphates i 
unpri urnips, w ucus vesiculosus, and i ti fi 
ag ka a of ae the greater part of the | bing his. rootlets and lc of the Hop of pa epi 2 | erispus, would be at efi cial : pe al ahera 
nd Wheat was safely stacked or oe In Tf a} carbonates ; and ne sh = more in d.: The 
be tu rneđl over, the. soil 
f 
oy aema f p in com- 
> pne whi te = a scape o 
every direction in “mol 
Known, 
stem in peeling ‘its see 
must be expect ae and although he straw 
an 
supply the 
worse Ay =a useless to appropri e the pan manure 
copa 
an mi pe of it i eecred 
ae Clov: 
eather meres 
prin from es ich they. have not vit 
he effect 
in good condition 
_very promising, but the cold Tet 
come on 
with judgment, is “not. used to pr 
fruotilying ores in psi ig ess. p 
s.—R. Smith, (EASA Sept. 1845. 
a 
| men 
by t e power ys tai its sulphur will com: 
organic ents that. form’ albumine, 
substances r ire a cer- 
Et 
pn rn’ the o: 
fibrine, and caseine. 
ANALYSIS OF FOUR COMMON SEA-WEEDS, 
_ The e mia aE discharges ppa 
neinera- 
an operation that 
i a 
ding itself more enrio nt ‘on the ror — _ 
this year; where the hoe has been freel: 
often the ap Seer well the: "spaces with hea 
ungs; -lab our 
ime oon 
leaves — thei _ but been 
has 
and vi 
ingly 
spari suc- 
tally in some eases, for rote thie soil, 
rni 
WITH REMARKS ON THEIR APPLICABILITY 
ce Da 
lal } but wer 
AS MANURE, 
{Tue following paper, w which originally pin in the 
Br i re ‘on emt has been forwarded to us by its 
auth iy e fo reed, by want of room, considerably 
to abridge i 
A plant, Shien m destroyed, either by the yt ree! pro 
year uring 
ER 
ya 
the wA “ ay S. It pleta in many insta 
pi 
cess | of decomposition (Py putierieñon mbus: 
of lime am), = cay ire, 
of this: count: yn 
+ 
atmospheric air “(by ignition a y, aidobarges months acid 
may vie in beauty with most da i 
y pe Wales or 
op n not seem to uch e arried 
not uch as in W 
aol Dale isa ‘Sigh cultivated and, fruitful valley, | fo 
and ammonia, and leaves a residue in the 
rm of ash, called The former nd 
y requ 
or ia would be xed. 
im the pein bu 
phosphates are cob in prec 
= “manure, their quantit 
mixed with some farm-y: 
mitt 
rived from the atmospheric air, contain the elemen 
which constitute the organs of the plant ; but these 
oe prove most. beneficial 
The se: manure 
t; Turnips, and Po: Parsee i in 
| the asad wth vot Beet-roo 
alkalies:necessarily 
axe omore porous: prame = plouglis 
mplem andry are to be seen im my 
which} lial indiesie progression in cultivation 
performed, unless there should enter into the co 
tion of the a moa nt certain intorganic substances, derive 
from 
a 
ea | 
ed 
the Sou 3 Gi 
oe 
ies of s urveyors 
5 
‘J 
R 
f the plant. 
s desirable, in > 
eat 
what 
ping do owi and levelling. lines for railways aeross 
become: 
o ascertain t inorganic substances a 
plan 
to the a sediaide; with branches north and south in necessary { for the existence of the ant. An anal 
les. the benefit t Bam ing pos- 
a communication with the populous t towns of Eng- sessed of this information, it becomes mi cê, in 
for th I uld be in such 
| Mealculable. Surveyors were also engaged on the hills 
; aon ms neighbourhood of Clun, for the purpose of in- 
a ggo Sven y hu undreds of al eres of fine deep table land, 
fact, would e useful whenever the 
mon ae a m of 
Skets ie of the German Spa, 
somes 1845; 
me Correspondence. 
Prize Ri of the the English Agricultural ay oped 
a 
servations on t 
called attentio n to the amount and eric 
a soil as ‘at supply it t with those 
soli 
For this s pd an examination of the soil will þe 
fortunate owners of the over-fed | eattte s exliibited a the 
eattl 
neces 
sot in all such ponte tig or if only in 
Crops of Oa 
by 
ts, sheng and Turnips, asl was informed 
in 
| first 
- Sands 
aoe ‘Proportions, pe will supply the deficiency by the 
ect ‘ts been far from 
y; I believe our "Raval A 
mu 
cultural Societies have do he much good, and that they 
Paper r that my 0 
friendly one to ae Societ 
an inhabitant —e on the hills: Am in: sng proe 
Dot relat ech me by a ctable farmer; o Thes iese ga > thie the simple facts, substantiated b by 
eae his: g purchased some hillland in rs many analytic rehes of i chemi sts, by | those who w 
and neighbo stood for 52. per acre; which: he pared | which agriculture is gs elevated to a science, and by | although I cr v 
planted with A per pe e bushels per acre the | which th p ractical farmer ought to be gu ied, with the f 
e Ther n Wa les many thou- view, eo uring success ; an i this the 80, since, zere by emineén 
uld connect science with a agriculture ; b 
ve of those noblemen and other gen’ entle- 
beg directed in their 
t men s Dr: Playfair, whose 
fencing, 
ays 
bed + 
es sI ~ nire. i shall 1 nee look in silence on what 
aste 
would means Seine and food for 
i H 
A stat 
f the funds of e Mt being 
rch sums 
ae poneis; why, then, 
eign lands ? 
shee at Kni 
be. roda etive o! pfs acer 
effects 
e for tegeng E must be obvious that a fertile | 
e distributed enei them 
for ae je Fh take a 
pride i in pontine A par be turne better pur- 
if placed reach of 
hton,, I was not sur- | to a 
din fields of 2 iat a mes tae ‘de, 3 possessi ing all the condi mig Prag to for the f pose i i sitial fa 
i the hills; Top, mus a n proce’ ce become ex- | whose energies w vill a used into competition, 
ied in one but hausted ; be use PE RE, Pike im crop must at in the end, the n dhe bahi wer “now pocket the 30. 
Steat on arriving at the of Radnor to find very | last carry off all those mineral. sub prizes, criber to the So— 
ani kind was wh enter into the organi isation ò of the plant. Since, ciety,” i = i — letter, iey open t a ereng 
d open. ai: pas Turni land, The | how œ proper application of mineral manure will one Iho ie pat re “en Aged 
Deine and Wheat. were henry ia the cana sts former ma t becomes necessary that |and T age PAren gA in nate 1 Bia observa 
the ears were thin and light f from causes we should be acquain d with the constituent parts of | tions, e, and in this attempt I 
before ;. many of the fields of W is show Iness, nay ne- shal! as a spate Fold farmer =n do s6 without 
cut under a fortni f t prone 8 of the I, the plant, and the | è n the first place he s says urge th E revision 
et or cold would be of littl pat The of the P ibution, on 
and Wey aa ; = sere liter, from its o iG oe ster us importance, engaged many dn ihe groun dilatas at piko ent an cenit i sum of 1000, in 
being ent it a berg “for fodder, alytical chemists. The results obtained will r hrewsbury, disappears, without. a chance 
Sse oa h. sth a two-fold purpose first, it will inform the inquirer fe working farmer to benefit ry it aad without, in fact, 
ae here | tely, and have aer well | what solid ingredients ar e required for the growth of a | effecting anything buta rem fron one land- 
a bi eer cultivation has made little pro- | parti icular plant ; and secondly, eal mineral m manure | owner 3 another ; he i is rate es cdr: a state- 
Cap Pattini rly on the hil-farms ; but irri vil such a one affords, in ease it is to andlor he ats 
p ted. practised in the valleys wherever a refuse. With ihe latter view I have undertaken the | repor e then sa, says, “ If this ere literally 
ee hills can be made a lysis fet _ the most comm ds (fuci) | correct dia “proceedings 6 of the set w would amount to 
tes pórtance ro- | fount sea-coast, = have been applied as/|a mere farce.” Now, I am subs Satay correct in my 
y and aftermath in sitoadione catcher with 4 variable Eer nstituent p prenisde taken from the Society’ s reports, and I agree 
turage would grow. a dients, gh ia which I ha’ from a a with rs as this goes, the: farce like 
E rod emg Much analysis, wi i guide the pasa ngirer in decid onii eonferred on Pa ciety’s ma- 
nau ii greater r | the C of the same to nt Pfs finds. T slowed in phi Sgure 
Properties, if the hill oat panha were effectually | purposes. _ | tine 1000 0007, had changed hands niant doing a sing! 
