letra 
a ee ee 
ae ee 
Jaxvany 21, 1860.] 
ee 
Iways dusty and fine enough but | 
te too light, and find it diffe ult to get the 
y 
a Wie ie itwishi to oie ‘Fen Repor- 
« Without wishing to read 
vee ; e physiology I venture to te . 
i ipag 
THE GARDENERS’ CHRONICLE AND AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE, 
57 
only w a its severity lasts. Abraham Hardy & 
5 
Maldon re 
Farmers’ Clu dbi: 
Farm akiak re obedience 
ing that a report shou 
Iartinmas niring he the a 
for hiring Far ants, he 
maintain i in high condition a farm of 300 acres Lier 
en Potat 
$ alf of the - green crop, pry tae made into hay ¢ 
are 
e giving a 
eer ly to the ti 
w phs psi that the pant habs 2: thua pat, T 
ly, a 
course of croppi 
t 
í one mi anuring also. | 
brings ti it 
1 
u 
ach 
other that ye Red Clov ver, the suecenaful growth, af 
a which 15, if not indispensable, at any rate 
highly con 
continu ally failing fi irom ES seedir 1g 
rops be r t be mated as 
re 
aurey testimony 
rded as ee 
Foe as CO ved or 
onounced as Grong. t I am not 
this yet. Iam not above terning, 
Mr. Mitchell must ther 
ifI aei manifest a a p desire to follow jo 
“Seeing is 
Ee rticnlar 
o 
by late sowing when the weather is dry. 
y 
meantime suffice, itt | to say t the wa ater drill, is a very | reat 
great majority of 
a | Penrith. Of the fa 
“ges be |S 
master 
S 
ad but small chance of succeeding, Nor oreover, the 
two cereals, Whe pa pe Oats, will not, manure and 
cultivate as we » give their ara! produce when 
revolving in sich) 4 e oso and narrow round. e 
course of cropping poi Soult appear as if 
r 
ants have e 
re fay ve used the "Repiatry. at 
ng oo 11 were a and 39 
renales ants in 
es 
The goes aed observe th 
females who have en 
the 
tered t their r names on the re gisters 
C 
out 
he case of close proximity toa town 
readil i 
a city, where town manure ca ily be obta 
hi 
take 
Reg egist ry 8 self-support 
Pane bas 4 situations as house servants, as 
P 
pny 4} e 
is att viei I wou ald pes e iy das erving ieee 
‘the statements I have made with reference to Mangel 
culture apply solely to the Fen lands a the Isle of 4 
$ am emphatically your Fen Re epay and offer n 
To adopted elso- 
s 
kerek having long ago le: that a uniform cours 
of action, regardless of M and other influential ii 
sage T niform act of folly. Your 
nuary 1 i. 
The ate os ‘he Fate Wurzel.—Now that the 
frost is subsided, and i 
most 
Sand announce- 
corisequences . are 
rah: — ~~ 
a thao “our remonstran 
é them under 
t re a: ice Æ our 
circular shed 
on account of the mera of building it with be cut 
i do n 
Mr. 
r 
|1859, a 
of m 
vest e of. ‘the ira Ae of the Regi pey. They 
t think, however, that ther oe is an nA causé for dis. 
ote 
Sireh ment; there is every reaso hat, as the 
well as | 
needing such se see nit oi s ‘anal fee 
n mes The 
s Or, 
A the disposal of dairy, pregue a of gnc; inbert 
ned to make six- 
eat. 4. Clove 
wing “the “facilities in such a district 
would be 
Italian ye-grass an 
first r "3 pikinga 
institution becomes better known, an 
e of seeds for seco 
Sd oijection is the distance of time 
h t , whic 
more appreciated, it 
both by masters and servants, pe that petedy the 
aa A year, be on con rk of names in the r ps Sola will 
ete cu by 
the Committe in R Dravida 53 s and forms To on 
everal Registry offices, and in advertising, amoun 
1 p ae 
—From the annual report of the Suffol. 
Agri ieultural Society, just prepared by the corer 
- Bond, it 
e Association, agumi 
8. Last year qhe Society paid aw ay 
5771. in premi ums and prizes, against 485l: in 
The balange, in hand at tthe end of 1859 was 5847., as 
t £1858. Th 
the position of the aedety i in 1858 a ead 
and its strengt h in 1856 and 1857, it appears 
een 5 increase in the number for 
eaving an inter val 
ful but, as ae two green crops ae in sucrations 
oroug, 
d be made on this e by 
ok Base a ater the Wheat preparatory k “lying 
down with G Tt would then stand a en-cours' 
shift ; “th Rs Turnips and Mangel. 2 Pee. 
> vd we 4. sarleys 5. 5 ete for cutting. 
Pas te 
Lad Faloving out, however, the insien ations ees me, 
take the case of a farm of 300 ac: “course 
g Ay 
showers are falling, 1 cwt. nitrate o 
and a heavy cut of Grass for home consumption by 
ti mber, ke. (let those laugh that will), ther members of AT per cent, an increase of 78 per cent. in 
sugges e receipts, 
Hiag onses skeleton-fashioned, tode locked only | ® =i prizes awarded, an increase | of 70 per “cent, in the | 
and soiling cattle, and for ree iat hay, 
would _thus be obtai ned. | _ Thus treated, I would 
clamp abutti Tar cent: in the stock exhibited. Sir E.C. Kerrison, M.P., ed bes Sr ae for Bags) up to 
ca uting the entte or stacked over the straw, tö be | tas offered a premium of 10l. to be distributed among Christies "it weleakee bese seen ha Oats, with 
only as fast as the Mange +t | the best tile-drainers; Lord Henniker, M.P., has given | the prospect oe -ban crop, without any further 
ipm mistake smi be te if the | 107. for the best ss m the improvement of the fac? 
ee an secured by al ee aT Ol. Lo be awarded to the best di ried id eet oe ae te Polato ani e fom them et the eat 
sli Nees rese: 62. to dehy vers o! so as to have a full a e 
eh hi ae = cpm s thom ‘cai alin steam-engines has promised iota | à | ready, without farther manurii or the autumn 
may require, and this precaution is necessary: at Teast a | CUP for the best elding, not ceeding s six sours old OF | Wheat COE sanity PD -> re ay set NONE 
month before they’are finally entombed within the said t v ; and the Rev. |ber. I believe that if a erate portion òf oilcake or 
— w stack, — a had _ been sufi ly ir J. D. Money 57. for ain _ Mr. J. | other feeding along with the Turnip and 
nd their wounds -calloused “i in. te SNOT Ap IERRA Ai iin a crop | Mangel, &e. prod feeding cattle, the Oat-straw 
the field before t carted ES t [of eye upon part of 1e at one À erie the com- | may be consumed, and the Wheat stra den into 
appointment fre they mare ca low, as S SEAE has tanghi t e trial of steam cultivators and reaping- | manure; t thus sufficient “muck ” farmer's 
us, and no ae other people, in the t | machines at t the next annual aa a wiek will = surest friend after all) will have been igi at home 
of o thus treated without this dae re place at that town on Wednesday, July 4. to give 20 loads per acre to all the reak. 
caution we yii aa share poh fate of aar others Sz “I would give the Potatoes at punting 2 2 ewt. super- 
this pes aaa vapora be it remembered y z phosphate and x cwt. Peruvian guano`per acre, and top- 
ourselves, and Ty. ey Hiie weim Gin this communi- | Rebiews, dress them with 2 ewt. Peruvian guano at the first 
poems a all those ae have stored carefully within hand- -hoeing. "This practice I have fogod ee by gmet 
J #2 mi, of the To t rnips, Cc. 
winter, notwithstanding that they were frozen Highland Esha of ek land. te se A I would give 2 o; -gupperphoephates and 3 cwt. Peruvian 
before being cart carted, and also subjected to the late| The current number of this quarterly periodical con- | guano per acre at sowing, adding arseron 
thong frost ; are in excellent condition now | tains a long account of Iris ish Agriculture, another on | Ot © 
ht hg ae tered fermented, f the discussion | 
all deca, ota at and to store those tha’ in 
the way we have before described, and to as out their 
dry eut mstances = oo 
the jes afl; hay and straw mixed to 
y ree pulped with mpgs it ba rs st pulping 
. Machine y recommended), 
cuwer the purpose better for the health an 
fattening animals than an immoderate 
| cfr ey of of the quarter 7 
ye from Mr. Simpson, of Teawig, 
of 
before a Belgian Agri Farmers’ Club a G 
-j on 
lots agricultural meetings}; the 
e | book, * which eran A contains a collection 
Page’s geo! 
ces, farmers’ clubs and See wae 
‘Ta the Highland Socie s Transactions, a separately 
il | paged á scotion of the coe Po bats a vilite taper 
‘Toe—a discussion 
a total use of s 
575 owt. Pertvian gugno, at 
near Inverness, on Farm | 30 , 
