THE GARDENERS CHRONICLE AND AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. 
[ЁЕВЕСАВҮУ 22, 1869. 
172 
The Prince Consort | dad for many ears been a assist them, farmers dier id been trust tl Ti 
15 fat at and, as always happen so doing, pee often vba ie Шоке, mee and. Ж Dm 
о behind in their аганда animal, when at last, in 
Herefords, and peres his herd has been maintained 
Here ford herd in the country з ш of descent and | m: 
of | 
e 
L 
however, t the employment of Fowler's 12- bes e power 
Los sagh, the number required has been much ее ш 
ork сап easily be done by 8. eol and is 
extremely stiff clay and was lying in p ry 
well tilled condition—turned over by e steam plough 
in the pets It is arranged in larg е he fields, fo | 
which үе: is ready access by mar 
SER 
"NL h 
т, 
r 
various kinds of figna during eran 
ritte 
5 
giving the improved p 
day, and ——— of the latest ameka upon 
the adop 
the Agricultural 
of 
just been rewri and exte ded з we John 
blished, 
med in v 
broad day: — she falls by the o: hammer 
man from ÓÀ 
be made 
case is as int 
£A 
iio те fea! is the 
statistics, 
ch the profit of farming so much 
Fees cb Te 
ing О 
s 
Agricultural Seeds from C. —] read in No. 7 of 
l Gazette an recount of the distributing 
the north 
agricultural seeds from of China to the 
al 1 
November 
А4ЖК 
rebner's account, 
159 
members 
e Council 
o repairs. incurre ed а nted о |і 
| рап 
of the flowing: seeds, 
of A 
‚ in the early spring of 1860, 
Meg the memorandum 
n the be egin 
"t 
s would 
41. 10s. 3 plough ing, 
and wear of I or the interest of b or the 
maintenance of value, was 6s. 1d. for acre for the work | 
the 
succeed better yon ros 
planted in 
loea аг. he pert wer 
a rich sandy soil, a quarter of an acre; the 
accomplished. "The "liquid manure соё d 
and cow.stalls in the farmery are at these buildings 
colle cte d ina tank and used by hose and f toi irri- 
I udi the y young oap did E suce 
I tra 
ey 
, but ies eason being so very unsuitable 
eed. Aecordin ngly 
and removed d them t 
Il, but did e 
satisfactory results. 
THE gore Si ww 
The Norfolk farm, lying miles off, 
and for ihe most part beyond t ie limits m the учу is 
а tract of about 700 a of which аге t arable. 
ft 
a 
the d p 
similar to Gooseberry Бак ап 
for bloom 
veu MM Tisspointment : е" 
,th 
eir 
t evils 
ril i in mig no Pe and Ya 
eed 
© | Fo 
suh ofti e s that animals etin 1 a selling а 
ced absolutely v unfit for апу exertio: n 
| Memoranda. 
other Fen farmers our 
of Fen farming. It is difficult to get a large 
Lag uen all lying together, where supervision can 
efficient, and where урса M рй economis 
n farming а gre 
master's eye can comm 
regulate the operations upon the farm, work is 
pera er and more che а sustai 
nual 1 
o get a foreman wlio 
e wh 2 can or will use his 
It is generally a lighter sei than that o! 
Farm, cultivated however like it for the most part on 
the MM «pun of cropping with occasional 
stol of Trifolium, Vetches, Rape, &c. 
Probably one-Afth о of the land at each farm may bei 
an t Mangels and. Swedes form one of the regular 
green crops. The cultivation has hitherto been done 
I^ 12 Hes 18 ond ac it but, like the Flemish Farm, |“ 
vate 
ived in th of the steam plough. 
he buildings at the Norfolk Farm are of the old 
fashioned kind, wooden and eed ec stables, 
sheds, and other houses nged eos arge 
quadrangle, of which Mr. 
dence and its offices occupy one side. 
е herd of the pure bred Devon bided is a E 
bred 1 
the farm. Among the Fes was Fancy, bought of 
W. Farthing—the orci oftheherd. Her first 
after taking a fi 
prize 
shown аша highly comme ended a 
ST "DT 
К 
season 
“Soy Bean? 
oxi dn Soy Bean," еу also * Јара! 
? ex 
ith about eight now that pot 
= ре 
| ance, Five new members elected. No 
d 
y emos Veterinary 
was Eu РЫ 
" pere ms tection at nigh 
is want of 
to 
см diffieul 
“ Gram," dd eee. - compress 
n be rfi 
o estim ith accuracy the 
of ойнап: under rre: pens 
uld c compact 
Jabour, than the 
Fen Jands, i in small "detached ls: 
we ery [e t management 
ыык жер rus, peus 
e, Snelsmore, Newbury, 
Sorietieg. 
TY or ExG 
оле "Challoner in 
other business, 
Review. Jan. 1862. Т. С. Jack, 
92, 2, Princes Brent 
begins a series of articles on 
ich MAE to be useful It 
e use of accessory 
g other 
а good number of the Journal, 
during seve years from the por of. peser 
of 
pos- 
sessing, as much "тешти and agricultural as strictly 
int ма саа ote 
ral 
Turner, and is now 
a passage 
terest. 
d d the H 
these farms under his 
management, and his includes the deo mee of | 
f from 14007. to ask 
use of a very large farm capital ud "e disset oli of 
two first-class herds. „He adds to all thi s n thel 
rt Dise: 
“IF one of ees erii frateraily who » delight i ina deal 
- ti 
n | under fhan 
AL SOCIE GLAND: Feb. 19.— 
the chair. A very scanty attend- | 
a great incr ease a DS and when you 
the з ор additional jet eec from ii 
was io will be found that tbe 
we meli all exe 
nam 0; зд. 
n farm 
p ds w 
we with a T subsoil, but, below. ‘heso 
oes * buttery." 
ion is necessarily as varied as the 
require to be trod and cons 
the fen 
"day, Bie 
he cultiva 
iiL ^ po h lands 
nsolidated as little 8$. 
require all tbe. 
that can ie obtained. 
a greater 
variety of е Wiroworm f 
wind, frost, bight, mildew, an injure crops on fen 
far more seriously than they do those upon strong? 
lands. 
We strive to manage 
five-course system, viz., fallow, 
eans or ee &c., and 
indeed upon gels ean 
E We set apart three small fields n 
homestead, where we ee Mangels, Oats, an 
The ainder oi e farm $ 
both high and fen жи uà 
in ES on 
as ju 
Мн d wish to ee 
safe in Stores for his ill-gotten bine he 
E 
ure 
ould ce 
tainly | няга) а tp S spi sound i in limb, 
w loo! which 
| mie sci 
n 
s blacksmith, pr "proved rdi be 
Y an animal has been d over many and 
any a time \ within „е last three weeks in „ог near 
Edinburgh, 
a [fen lands we sow our Таоа t oae 
off mei вену Pius during the winter months. 
Шеке these re the 
grav vel 
n 
eart-disease in which three cases were sp 1 
"y 
, 
them * 
eR — looki apparently fit 
due "en Саш. for а cold bya 
suffering from dilatation of 
ains lim other men 
rem ош e a soil. We pom ploughs speci 
. Howard of 
owa! 
intere: = bya A did of students, who hoped to 
see further into matters, and proposed to bu uy і the mare 
ents. We alw 
тетте and ru on 
phate of lim ve the w 
t lan 
zd bei But, as we are inform 
ed, a friend, seeing the 
— with swelled legs. only, thought he could | cure 
а 
sow en жау crop пиш the px 
is ien by treading and grows m 
fall 
case, and urged 
оте h 
"mm 
vould put her to the carmi In | opposition to 
, Our operations just now arenot Ev i 
engaged i Р 
t 
was веб upon і. No work on арт һай во pointed a their legitimate y da Horses.—Our horses are икта ү 
large a circulation, it ran through 20 20 editions [a liie dieti bero de Muere DIR Ta Ref саны) n | paring the land M spring. crops, in deep ploughing а 
more than 30 years, but аа time came when its ый зс се | А, ing task in MM g to n: the swelled legs. a е UU whilst in the pe ео bes h 
obsolete — improvements s in shillings ere realised f ki 
agriculture, of the ast 20 — сну: т this likely loo ing ure from he yards. Our 1 an eres тө 
ео its bein; and they have been | luc ае. сы the tricke commenced, and a | last E. Lr ] loughed about 
ong left without any such рше afforded, e simplo countryman llah bargain, which | of 58 for DR "Besides eie: we have р 
мечет ерте ей, st the oldest ваг ardeners | е — the smith by 87. 10s. sterling. The animals | acres for Barley, and about 100 io Oats. 18 
res ec the necessity ciini red of | ав, however, wrong, and eart work odd not | ploughed 40 acres of fallow land. from 16 to 
he season, and have had their абма to] suit het, s0 that, in despair, an бегай effected | deep, with 8 horses, doing 1 acre per дау; also 
