1016 
THE GARDENERS' CHRONICLE AND AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. 
p 16, 16 10 
dec 0 think that. the opening “of the wool in pouring | 
other Жайы M far 
size e of a pin? s uw They eat their way in till th ley bary | 
thei Pis JW. and there к will remai s Mr. Scott supposes. „16| her o mns. л 
бх rs for weeks, suckin ше ve ie Turni our сак system, the rid 
blood ^ot е дз till they grow кайа iei en ei Чат а еннен Ње о quality э the ees id not | drili m ei the SEE de 
to about the size o a large Paa, when at "it mes fall | obje ection t tom s that i in Я n Mee g on Ue pad А 
off. TE Tes of them after I am not naturalist | keep out the w leve h u sep Бо саз, апа Ше $ 
enough p ll } b a tract | that if they D EE ‚ vegetable poisons, su : vibe че 
[n TOO wou 
of f qe dad i in n this dn district infested with that nas ty as the infusion With qus composition ho Pairs m on воше farms the e latest adaptations of mach 
und, the sheep were much | to, uir , between And 
out the pear or E Mee i "tried ee e pla фонны па Upon the whole he did “not see any | and 1 bridge This property is divided 
with good eft but. now si s0 83 of the out- dad: Ý in x diy pre pouring, and would rather ны а fide: one held by an LN 
field land has been broken in, and the sheep mostly all| prefer the latter method. folium е5 armer, who leans to the вуз 
on the arable land in that part of the season, they are| Мг. ScorT xh he would from his experience e sidere in that county. In some parts tereira 
never annoyed with it at И Penor seems to be | demn all mineral baths w. — "pe he sonde asl si erable portion · of coppice: though many 
fatal to its existence, ther none on the arable| those farmers present to compar he l of their en re red, heir p lione] 
land. It will thus be seen yd bathing is of little — that had - thus dipped, with туей that had | be distingui. hed by the isolated Oak trees still 
avail at all for preventing its attack on the s еер. , No t otherwise treated. They would observe the wool | ing; the publie roads which intersect the 
g rue lir int the PR case i was close, bounded by well ordered quic 
éffectual for freeing the sheep of ti der matted, and adhering to the sides. Instead of | pleasing feature. The land of th 
thing else. This is simply Жее. ог tl he would be inclined to жи: of arable and Grass, t ter m 
both. When sm mearing began n to be lai AQ короз е шы that the Club suggest to the Highland Society |and naturally of an inferior quality, tho 
was the nex process, The the best dip or | proved by the care bestowed upon it. 
on 
со ато апа 
n the 
ted E 
bath. He had tried all baths and was satisfied with |i 
none. Abridged from Border Advertiser. 
Farm Memoranda. 
бари mparat ively slow proce 
i: y у opening up the aein cit exposed the sheep wid 
the winter cold, while, unlike smearing, it 
dei At tle or nothing to protect them from its 
severity ; and then, by | and by, too, when these articles | 
"123 | Var 
into several classes. 
meadow, those with either one or the other, and those 
with neither of the two. At one time it was deemed 
an essential requisite to a first- rate Hampshire sheep 
Those with down land and water |t 
is farmed the four-course syste 
style, ro ridged, the ii all daie, T 
remarked that Clover is little affected by a ke 
succession. The farm buildin rapid 
space 180 feet. by 114 feet, 
quc. liquid nure 
which there is access with 
yard, from the retten stalls for e "ps e 
eigi 
iggeries, is рет 
tank, whence ii is carted to the land. : Int the үч. w 
very much adulterated— just Jike some sorts of 
— that many 
d 
meadow at the other. Now, the farms that stand € 
are tne those which have "neither to rely upon. 
machinery, grinding and sa "mi lls, and | pumps the 
water from a well which, about 100 feet deep, sunk ini; 
"s 
e, for 
obvious, both give a facility in maintaining a eero 
flock throngh the summer mon nths, both are means 
plies the cottages, of which there 
c D: and a eun at a hi 
This 
the shee ep- -fold, 
a 
but modern improvements, artificial 
manures, the general outlay of capital, and „the enter- 
iik yt 
requiri "d on from frost. This "res 
below 
о Б 
talogue of 
i some of 
"Xnow. Eve s arsenie, and other o gy 
poisons, I think i t has Бос, sufficient „ fro 
their extensive use, that with proper “ч ым id ihn 
— not very mu 'à That isnotso muc the 
ral poison: 
bath for Vie If any one has reason to be е pleased with 
ән апа reaction adva pro 
scarcely sd exce pti on, the. peor dita of the | 
with any such additions to the е-и of their arable | S 
arms, and even on these farms to maintain a heavier 
| stock -— where these apparent advantages exist. 
Mar dr pue the improvements in agriculture of 
system whic 5 € found 
rovement 
than the sheep farmin СЕ which, step by 
TTE 3 roved condition of the agi and. 
— pmi: 
Wit 
wes бе limb of the € reis may N included | 
| under the һе M of sheep fi ing, The manage 
has md ence to the larges 
t eer 
ater lies so far 
surface gives a great value to the machinery 
it is commanded. The comfort € —— well be 
the labourers in well ordered cottazes is here sp 
cared for. J. C. C. 
3Ácbíctos. 
y. T 
ac and p Book ru Pr 
By J Ат c. Morton. 
Illustrated Farmers? peer: 
ey. 
w Farm 
cu 1862. 
be bred and US during the year. To do 
eedin 
effect of rendering the wool whiter if anything. But 
even this is a doubtful matter, for they will not. доме 
h ha 
le 
and they 
iy k 
ng а very much pota V 
this, by | They 
are all necessarily he present а pach 
as possible pictures of the pre 
жапар, а — judgment is required, The growth 
of corn is apparently pm ultimate object in Pied ge yet 
this is made subservient to the ce of food to "s 
e 
med 
allowed. 
matter wi 
scattered abo ut in 
f, |of winter and spring сопзптр tion, t 
tis ge rnip erop, 
must be seeured ; if the land is low in condition, super- 
phospate, guano, bone-dust, or some such addition to 
the usual supply of manure must be applied, this is 
he bes all. 
iti toin full e under the first анн" 
named above, of what has been doing in the agi 
tural world du Жен ^w past ec And steam el 
y Turnips: 
3 Md is then considered to be кабы Уу “stout” 
Vetches, followed by Rape or earl 
that 
to obe free at v Ihave Seti it at different 
is not the 
way for 
it won't do. il cannot hel 
greatest itn 
way injure the w wool, and it important to | 
any class that tig sif gessit t thathas the effect 
of lessening the supply ‹ of mutton ; and if thro! ough their 
stains 
p ылышы k 
his 
Wheat it postpones the Оо ог or Barley Жор Te P» been 
nown that Wheat, Ваг nd Oats have bee: 
ед to which натан 
standing the condemnation that журе А 
it by n old-fashioned leases of the county. 
^E the rotation CI crops the key 
away over all the stọck ө. pene i dy are applied i in 
Brilain, the matter assum roport in this 
view d E Ars one. А wo ог, | Duo, erii ЕЧ 
want 
is 
f any soil or bep er would 
supply it here, As the e of the winter food is 
found in Ap Swede and T 
bread: lth o 
1 
l 
pli | ha crop is in Sainfoin, varying from one-sixth of 
The n, Mr. W. PATERSON, said he had d always | whole farm joa much smaller on. This, which 
found Lr dipping богун и ion very good, which had | is someti two years but gene- 
one good quality, that it did not put back a erac x тшу much "longer; 9 ploughed up and brought nto | ша 
condition. у "ot preferred a ltivation gen ve by pressing, sowing with Oats, 
turpentine, кш of tar, ts ihe Fal soap, - i wo fallows wi green crops, an then corn; th 
which y n as + 1, 262. two ds 
In his experienco попа” was better than these two 
ik pim 
ves ways used what Was called | 
—— he beli 
which Rye, Winter 
Barley, or Oats, Trefoil a" in other Grasses, 
Italian PON Rape, &c., unbrok. 
of food, and it is in scouring these „crops that the old 
here А: ка MONA 
Mene биже Holylee bath. In t 
of Miror Gur o ah tends to 
and an лань infusion of 
Loquere gos! Occasional ero p also 
do of Se MNT the | 
l 
n followed fal 
to the farm- | PY 
be impossible to : 
ew | Who writes for Mr. Thorley. ~ 
tion, articular, has occupied the attention of 
ies e 
mical wor rli, 
the viae ot the Di Derby, eA a 
There are 
he Baker 
res effect of йы: isa NS eni of farming 
and produce een crops, root crops, and | entries 
eorn. die Кою, "е 
ль. Goss. , KLA 
=- 38 a a о ом ng | 
09 ч рО 0 co с" 
мю њи co Emu» y кено ы соо и wodd u 
