104 
s, grains, and h ay, | | 
And of this one or 
e giv Mr. Pigott, of | 
Agriculinral Gazette of 
d olly mene 
g w 
r3 7 
and st rp messes os we a winter, 
pose additional instances may 
speaks in the 
of 
sin sg that grain willbe ina No rem 
made of the sad loss of Borata. abhi fro 
late frosts, which we now truthfully affirm is ten times 
greater in Essex ant Saik than from disease, and as 
this visitation of early frost was universal, no doubt in 
ctive reque: 
which ou be remedied. The rent-charoe joe 
arge to Te 
mut 
time er bike is ne at from 
bushel, s 9 pe above 
high 7 o fr, th g 
ther localities the oe is equally as great. In 
owe know of ye Sram who has 70 bushels 
1 bu: 
urzel, Sogeth er with 2 bushe 
t ha ay 
and aur —s mixed 
rnips, a a considerable quantity | 
of water, and ahou 12 Tos, of straw cut into chaff, an 
hen given to 
° That w sr A left in the Boiler 
d if w red ppt still 
e 
op 
of ¢ 
and steamed, bese whieh they | |i 
r an hour 
mp. her friend from 
farmer there had 500 bushels ‘all 
“If the failur a gor: Aat on 
ici- 
frozen in one clam 
must be the result pole 
= 
T 
a 
| Effects of frost, that being universal, and 
only very pari rtial? Abraham Hardy & -o “Maldon, 
E. 
e 
e disease | beco) 
aa L 
case. Let any nod ek TENI the tables giving the 
annual avera since t 
atio 
averages bein ng struck upon so long a period ag sep. 
tennial one. ogee nce gy that high p ro prices 
altern: of t 
sser, 
TEN rp ya and bes 
nion is — 
in IA 
fter 
| strong magn glove S pall them SGA 
requir esa little care 
ied Y with t 
o the cows at break | 
um m vaffa et their | 
buitean 
the Pea or 
straight up. Ifina held of, adhe let the la r begin 
oe n the Set ads land; as he pulls up the Thistle with 
la ft a 
quant: 
bout 64 lbs. 
veekl ly 
a place aon under his til he 
well ca nage ae end o 
no taste of Turnips, and the a vidi T with which the| 
rry t 
ihe kela; if laid ci in ones they will oth soon rot, 0 
| they y might be laid i in the furrows in small qua antities. 
of tie ngs. This often cause S s'te “hn rmer to bay i 
1 | eenkahargs arad ingly. Ion spoke to a 
farmer on the subject Filugos heating a com nt 
wo u 
Ap enine to ky shortening the sete into a 
trienni al period, inasmuch ı as the period being so much 
When given t 
a2.) For small prey cows, ag following: i “been 
oy om corn. By deep ploughing for root crops and 
Thistles cannot a C. A. 
Adie A to 40 T 
6 Tan of cut it straw, an 
bs. of boiled Tur rnips, with 
d3 I 
in them ; straw ad lib. bein 
Beanmeal mashed u 
li , but he receives his return in the fattening 
of his cows at the time they are giving The | © 
followin ng is the report to the English Agricultural | } 
Soe ate of his management:—He ha rs 
giv n his dairy cow pe-cake, of the ki ed 
pe ” cake, which imparted to a — a mar a 
our ther kind of ca r to 
Hom the 
= Mr. Arbuthnot’s promt in = to contrast- 
ke ; 
eat it, he blended it thà one “quarter a 
Climate of Scotland.—Let m — tie attention = 
nd. 
returns JEn meteo 
of Mr. Milne ection 
g the rain nfall of different parts of the country, he 
ight 
E-F t 
cuges w bich could mx no injury to anybody, and 
s | would tent 
P 
prices would mateni oe = 
Anges It may a gn that ean rent- cot 
charge on land, and does not ¢ n the occupier; cee 
the ado really pays ‘this with pe fies charge 
many cases, an any rate I feel quite sure] 
owner, tenet; on clergyman would be lad” of a 
among agriculturists 
C. Lay 5 27. 
Early Sowing Mangel Wurzel.—I should not have 
troubled you again on the _ Subject in question were I 
their observers in various parts of t the | i 
sacle ai which exhibited the results of ‘thei ir ob- 
pee a Mr. Milne Home proceeded to explain the 
th hantity jagrams ut 30 in number), h were arranged | m 
ane ty oe maldas, Ei eanan "e Ps oy the at according to the tiada of the saD to plongh and many other inno vations, the agricul pe 
„straw, Oat-straw, and Oat-sh ; ich they referred—Elgin, the most northerly, being | w is on the eve of a revolution. seeing is 
: [ew perp and ti aellas jalil par a the top, with — g: Ay a and Wanloch- ERR, but the eye must be sharpened and the vision 
food had y fragrant odour, and was much ai in Dumfriesshire, al He pointed | e nded ; indeed, we must look with the eye of faith 
by the sittin it was give en warm three times | Out the remarkable Shala “of ee ‘markings and a to keep near to the m mark; the advance of 
aa the rate of about 7 Ibs. to each cow (or: 21 Ibs, | fluctuati indicative of the range of the baro- | science of late has far outstripped the t teaching of ex 
daily.) Bean-m eal \ scattered dry over the| meter ometer, the pressure of the wind, | perience. Entertaining these views, as I o, your Fen 
milk getting 2 lbs. per day, and the t the different stations, eporter” will not be surprised when I fanciek = 
‘Abe othair but Title, = ‘had found this substance to nowiny the care with which the observations | natural law which oper rated in other places mi 
aor keeping up the ition of | P had some Savenc i in the Isle of Ely. The only on 
coms while giv 
up steamed 
sled = with 28 | to 3 
to December, 
0. 
observed, his cows have giv 
dey, and gained flesh at the sie of about 4 ewt. 
ecpegerdc the summer feeding of t 
Hors darama eeding o poe — —— 
si Grads evening;| 
for ne aight, when they are 
of t aned mixture and a 
in 
givent tas s instead Tot hay and 
o them i “3 hay, 
feeds of stea main 
prier ill 
4 quarts -i 
ad been oe 8 Sec the dependence which might 
be placed gee It was noticeable that the mean 
Selene 
temperature those stations which were 
near the sea, ess u completed pe Phage 
of | begun by h redec rett, show 
n temperaturo = all ‘their Gierent alias’ for the 
last three y cil thought that it 
be sll n werk 
g the | intended for Man 
«Fen Report at pea no one 
is more i inj prea with the poly: 
ton than I am. os “ate 
studied the ealtivation bs! ae sett will dmit ti tiat bat 
ind a What 
take in Mangel is i 
in ne and autumn cultiva 
rS Si g, and t f year's 
tivat ator, , harrowe d, all refuse collected pee baratja about 
er compiled tables 
nge of temperature at all the 
ons had been made for t 
London dung was put on and immediatel ly pl 
with a. double furrow, the first effectually ti 
La A 
ir 
| year, as follows : 
Deg. 
— ory oP ee 
Pees 
March = 
April 
May. 
une 
The extrem 
pu 
rom distant 
Deg. De 
+.” 16.7 | Sandwick ei 8.6 
E AEG + Ete 
ist | Greene 
tin calf, and intended to be dried | 
and sold fat. Morton’ s Handbook of Dairy Husbandry, 
Home Correspon 
shen agrionltnral report in aå hà y 
Magazine” t has been i F e on 
ilie hay icon to 
progress of disease ; | 
that R one-half of the 
xs p 
. = ton must rule 
‘quotations for Wheat, 
oe 
o the sea 
as to a ay this remarka 
equ: a of temporaire, Sak he w 
to the vast mass of bui are 
| stantly kept in a Jarga 
collected and r fate. 
of the Soci 
bei 
heir 
town e G 
he city), o on the = that 
did give the true temperature of that 
y: of ine. country. os gn og however, that 
to ascertain the effect o 
hed 
e best ees in winter, for invalids requir- 
ing ality of temperature. 
he Averages.—A glance at the ti re Arenan for | 
dhe eet ota a and at the —_— 
to be p year on the sapien 
Se avr 31, 1889, will illustrat 
| it will remain gers eed-time, when I intend ts sowa 
t before the harrow, which is the 
tempera-| A M 
was not so | Feb. iC Lord 
THE GARDENERS’ CHRONICLE AND AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE., [Fennvanr 4, 1860, | 
halt bh a i 
E 
sprin: klings, have nee 
rouse them into a Your “Fe 
n the humour, Še tel me eae to my 
he need not be afraid of offending: a hard Jesson Wi 
not hurt me. P. Mitchell. 
Societtes. 
perenne 
ROYAL AGRICULTURAL 7 pag 
ONTHLY COUN: Wednesday 
Walsingham, presiden, in “tbe chair. 
ANCES.—The Hon. Colonel Nelson Wood mresell 
ka gie which it 
whieh w: 
EETING.— Lord Leigh, Vice- 
of the General C: 
h had been offered bye. 
ali r Committee at Canterbury, and which Ww? 
ed with thanks e — red to be appended 
gg Sheets of the Soci 
