LTURAL GAZETTE. 
846 T HE AIN [Dec. is. 
wS, “at in- | 12 pieces of arable land which I would crop ‘nearly | time, the float will begin to ) ike, ahd with it the » oe 
L hope to | after Mr. Parki soon s Manner :— which i thus assist in ‘restricting the ofl of water 
à 
nine 
neeessary, by running ‘others up up the ner new furro' 
tervals of 16 16 or 32 yards. By this. means 
Ca es, Moog ene ag 7 Swedes, manured withdung | from the well, and a 
give the old _— quicker vent and tore at eee A wore pmenured P pen we et valve. “It wil be teen, ure the epee nT a 
oe yy aie a yat ay on perio laid | 3. E erik r White Clover: and |: 9. Clover or cow Grass. once properly adjusted, is strictly self-acting, moran, 
prese S t frst:m whenever it| Ray Grass). 10, Wheat. requiring human’ care and attendance, In a 
in those furrows Seeman A er now suppose the | £ Ditto frod ana ditto). ur ae or Peas, dunged. —_| jt will remain nearly stationary, itl tlie any weather 
t 12. } 3 i 5 . P 
pa d drained and ised as sound and dry as eich | 45 Winter Tares. | ed or atin aheadoti Sill bewi der a Tai 1 
made. We will also suppose | the land to Thus one-sixth a of the whole arable Jand would | | gree, and regular in crag oriee hegar in de. 
erop. If little d the — 3 * i raim- ; 
En net ree ran on nvm | eatit toi eid ho dand oN get denin darn woss ilo oad MTE 
and full of Couch, a naked fallow on this kind of aml dra ned as it user’ to be, and the ground Bani bly: ho Rea tens, howeveruihiar iiia o waste pipe: in i 
must of course be resort din d, and s zabsoiled on the plan I have proposed. | | well, which lowers its level, the float Serine eee 
will be'thus; I shall in the first place. have the ground | I ‘vil now leave the subject in your hands. The culti- and dey, alve is slightl ritil! anal 4, to descend, D 
very carefully looked over, a and with three-grained it ws a thas i nda fresh influx of | 
forks dig up every blade of Couch and every Dock that has pna little — and less understood, but isah ata Contiriew H. LE TThis onas long as the | 
ean pua $ a aing ay maer Veber easy OA ma o Ew ould by | an apparatus Pi esa line rateat which "yo a E 
yW. The land intended for ‘oot erop is then | jand has been properly furrow drained. And observe we m. tank. Supp + Spotl iets janaan oie Wale [ 
to be ploughed, in in a direction ‘onally to o the run of the | that your roots and Turnips must be planted early, so | ón the e yard equal +010 gallons xe minute; y ng f 
furrows, into single'bouts of 27 or 28 inches ; or into two | that they be ripe and ready for stacking away before | minute, from the very dommencetnibel of t the, pits oj E 
bout ridges whereCab Cabbages areintended tobegrown. The | the had or wet season sets in in the — ” tor you | saion will be sav d and 9 wa ted. Bat pend wer, one 9 
appearance ce of the field will then be like garden gro a must not attempt to feed them off w re they grow, RESNE > Wwe wanit or th £ the rain ta 
laid I shoul urro ou will be, as I was some years naar set S tas : 4 
oa p cable, ex posing a large surfa ea for U the winter Ges ake’ Pi Ad trons hie ls foe A prefira iyn nes ert ono into the tank, because’ all this! is pe ed ie 
frosts to mellow and sweeten. After the get out without serious the Ath pet = the assumption that by That time the d ij 
come sufficiently pulverised and the trenches are ina Jini st& store eg? dbi.. b p ecoction os 
state, with 4 parira mould-board plough, I purpose Papert g Cee CO ding T eai ea eak, nev to previous he yi EEE: is not 
thoroughly to open out and considerably deepen them, Ho ome e Corr rrespondence Orit Meritt vant) the whois 
directly following aes per menus tene ers 4 satan Soa a Mar —Having seen in some Inte Num- Ca pair and &c.—I am ‘surprised to 
furrow’ taken off, TAARE y ber of abe! excellent saa some discussio n the | little _agrieu ultural matter Sri Deron or Cornwall i t 
harnessed at length, subsoil or stir the hitherto unmoved 1 of so e, Ta è Etat extent, an àfrom their j 
soil inthe bottom of every furrow trench, as deeply as | Y% UC Nae her, RNG | genta at on arge situation 
f . : . r, ultivation 
— raptai wry — — bena use about 15 ewt. of soap liiy to Tilisi the gum | good farming. ‘The lack of time, not of ini 
es gee A yw diere oe e 9 aan . hái j q | and oily matter from the silk before dyeing. I also | hitherto prevented me from se: esate if 
u Hight erai ented will ale ge ay Nei s ps p about 1 cwt. of soda to 3 cwt. of soap, whic hI P formation. I now send an àccount-o 
ad one oee vi va AES iam ° be | sume oe an with the oily matter ve he silk, ry abbages ; there is no doi r of its 
prere ae oF on T eA = Matchs a os en xa iE o of soap. The result is, that I p roduee from |“ A few a cet “ate a wagerwas decided 
suit i ing yi apes eee iim to work, and havi 4000 to 6000 gad =! seer soa wide Fa week itty weight Cabbages grown at Saltash, whi 
a orët fegins aV arc ty in kabotan 464 vf Dija g I farm “Jatterly ap plied the whole speaks well for the cultivation of vegetables 7 aer 
ai ~ 7 ~ | of this tom land, 2 + extraord inary. place. ix Cal ages coul: 
tretiches, with a pair © neces Sap a om a -e fae i | My pakota An in its use has been only | one season, = be produced by any grower in n Saltash that would 
up, by splitting or at et ‘ill es ani S a I, cannot, therefore, give 300 lbs. The requisite number were exhibited lasijali 
pig gested eters an ilt rie el. Ate a a ~ | I consider it more powerful than a any manure ia tT week; they. were of sge ve ge kind, and cut from di$ 
See ae ae SA Th “tr ae the am acquainted with. If any of your readers will d ging to Mr. William Toms, of the New Ing 
se tebe S poe . us then er | ine the honour to come att see my la nd n ext spring, Saltash tenes — weight being 337 Ibs.—viz., 61,9 
of ponte an ba the whe and aki sufi ent ith when vegetation begins to move, they 57 bs. when pes a k e 
paid thal Woo at nose evidence of the value of soap as a manure; and i he to ae "Baden x they roa 54 lbs., fro 
ie only Tihi mardi a er oes Soe sa as mers were allowed the drawback of the duty o the RA res 
Cab ‘and Beet) sm che ate aiiiar Seote sed as a manure, in the same way that us imamnfae: them.” —(Taken r the Devonport Teepe 
i aiceive Soon ss turers are allowed’ “it ye the government, there is no day; 1 Nov. nial 1845.) int P 
working t deaply and frequent stan: OnE BH tty m supersede the | snes, “nage nS Re 
growth of the erop ; and because rae oe use of guano. P.S. The very large consumption | girt th fade Te arnip« 3 feet 3 inches ditto. The 
Sine of sing F N ail of soap by the e A ae cloth, inen. silk, and | pole ica bbage is same "n the t 
t ` pe goods, and the duty is re emitted to su ch con- kind § the — ee St. Budeaux, and # 
Sor a pl origi the ea eppen: ~ swel) sum med Western Peverelly have long 
Ps sate 8 oe roots, and shall ie to ahow | the aicun of food, and they o of raimer nt. a famed for prowiy this: sort, which -is’ chiefly. 
ane oar am abou Ga We of dh PPY oap which I use P my land is be ree, because T | miléh cows. Mr. W.'Toms, the grower, isa nati 
oe nae th h ctaptby at t first manufacture — Thomas DER lieve, of St: oat aa has lately emg 
vie Ho may think it worth their while to PAY] Coventry, Dec Saltash. expect he took the art of 5 
got K on Management of Liquid Manure.—The principle of | bages of this size with him. ` I suppose, also, | 
ne ap vane a very be irra one, by ie h y &ænsi siderable distance apart; but 
year, I was suggesting the ode whieh I have now | correspondent, “Ve. Liddell, of Hull, Proposes to solve if the interval vores fti; a very large'produce wo 
adopted of Preparing my land for roots, by trenching | your mechanical pro laa ‘esecing th The strange disease ph bee 
and subsoiling, to one of our members, when he ob- | fold yard, but in a part o of ti practical details, | hie wks y r: Tt 
ver eee mist wi ith t Té Hala saxallytt hout th pea 
to D in a Gloucester sal of I proceed to point out. Yor ond kes hi gee re remarking. I grows 
mber has sent X P I ft F an acre, pbs fie th family use use and for 
per, whi which I have now lying before me. F com- | the fluid i in the Are tn kimik ih de- | T site abont 20 land vards with a kind ¢ 
by aes ra ap weiter in principle, but not exactly ou a dry su pereema of slate 
e first place, I do not well under- height of the fluid contained Merci his ah as for the last 10 years been 
rs $ ed i iene: lft ie 6f!¥arious kinds, and I haven ver 
a ne tea aid der á swing plough | Ist. Either a constant and pe aes attention ieh be | any manure'to them. ct ‘last spring the g 
re two h se better calculated for the | | given toa adjus usting or regula ting the fioa on its stem la eared and planted with the above kind, 00 
A W Tt, all goo at 
Oe niskog 1 fields un 2d, if this he not done, and the fluid get low in the | wi ly Frames, the same culture, 
Toot crop; as I k iow by peasteat" experience, | tank, liabl efore | portion of my crop was plan 
es surface which has been exposed to the e action of the float is in’a condition to act upon the stopper or | kind of clay, well man d with 
eather through the big valve. When the rain-water and fluid manure | the’ top; those of a kind named Sp 
alone be worked by the | combined have risen to. such a height in the tank as to pac all good; but of the twe 
y arrows 2 in puting = Bori lent grain. | cause the valve to be closed, the latter must remain in | a a Red Jaton: the hee ral be rem 
d doente puniohied ‘thine Nines this will | from the tank, o made, ‘and ‘unless | linte'was'd uantity: 
enable the farmer (provided his land has been properly one or other of these Peotins be o “complied with, the mass 1, 5 miles ian ‘of P. apia 
drained) to. get through bo artes work in y b bons in, and e 20 Seed Wheat.—Monsieur Gi 
that would surprise any one who has E k k kr pelle o flow over into the é pi bas A sufficient the French Academy pon, the 
an a trial. Our otenn clays by engi for all these- ‘sabi vould will be fo und by | result of some newe pda are : i 
rendered so friable oe in spring. he? Ny "e Fo waited Eray e Are to rest upon fluid a n ap dre 
quite as readily as the lighter s ut turn ate small dimensions, with a graduated and | has sonietimes been supposed t vs ea in 
stiff and clung bottom after win i, and you wil rife iiet “apie enough to td whatever manure | arises ‘from the skimming © off. i n 
recover that you have lost—namely a fine bate may enter the drains to flow off in e manure-tank | that itis is quite à matter of i indifferent o 
surface ; but instead you will be plague ed ich elods as | without ma materially a affe ctin g the fost, but also disor it béof suffiel 
hard as brickbats, which you may beat and hammer t sensible to any dài- all diseased grains floatin 
Ri piny without producing the desired effect, and | tion from an i ane ¢ in-water. In att accompanying | ever, äs decidedly ag 
avast expense. I am happy to find that| drawing I hav tr: a ‘this well, ester. are Pinen, use 
hbours are at length beginning to open | on the ba dre ‘with the drain from the yard, after 
Matthieu 
following the lead I have given them. | on the omicaly 
rus to you in the best manner I am leading to Sehe manure-tank, capable of bein ott rind others, as simple, econ s 
able my opinion of the practicability of raising root | contracted by means of a sliding oi at is fixed to | la oh and the publies ge 
crops upon heavy soils, with k and ann è to} the font by a projecting arm, and hs and down 
for to dee lare to | lo ne it és, form 
Ciao ains to you to | loosely, and withou ut friction, in rais ed 
a Papers sent me Sig friend out of rthe ean ty | ordin inary s of the apparatus, when era id Paden] m 
sham, wherein Mr, Richard Parkinson, an eeir horing s B oy get the upper edge of this (fethe 
farmer of that county, has stated that | plate is on a lin the b ttom of the outlet : but 
y years past pursued a | when a fall of rain wen rings mtot rec 
a rotation o T O ity Fai than aur Rey è ff by the outlet in the same |1 
authority may be relied upon, Dr sed á 
g bes If am holding | compost £ AHN We: i de ncn Pabedan ef aoe sain rere 
