HAY BACKS, ETC. 



231 



back on its hinges as when grain or roots are being put in the 

 trough (c,) or the trough is being cleaned out. 



The advantages of this rack are, 1, That it prevents 

 crowding as well as the slatted box-rack ; 2, That it prevents 

 sheep from thrusting their; heads and necks into the hay, as 

 they can do to some extent in the slatted box-rack, thereby 



END VIEW OP WALL BACK. 



getting dust, hay-seeds and chaff into their wool ; 3, That it 

 almost entirely prevents the hay which is puUed from the 

 inside rack from being dropped under foot and wasted ; * 4, 

 That it combines the advantages of a good stationary feeding- 

 trough with the rack; 5, That the trough, apart from its 

 ordinary uses, is found very convenient to keep hay-seed out 

 of the manure when it is ie desirable to do so, and to catch 

 and save hay-seed for use. 



Water eob Sheep nsr "Winter. — Sheep, and particu- 

 larly sheep fed with roots, wiU do very well in wiuter without 

 Water if they have a constant supply of clean snow ; but that 

 supply can never be relied on. And when watered at a pump 

 or stream a portion of the time, they (particularly pregnant 



* A considerable quantity is wasted from all slanting racks with small, close 

 rounds (like the inside rack/, in the cnt :) and some is thus wasted even from the 

 slatted box rack. A shee^ on being jostled by another, steps back from the rack 

 frequently dragging ont quite a lock of hay, which is immediately trodden under foot 

 and hardly ever picked np. 



