97 
Ringbarking and its Effects. 
By W. E. Axssort, Esq., J.P., Glengarry. 
[Read before the Royal Society of N.S. W., 7 July, 1880.] 
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nao Rr by arguments and opinions drawn from all parts of the 
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_ The two principal objections urged against the new method of 
improving the land were: First, that the creeks and rivers would 
reply, will give my own experience, and 
summary of the effects that have followed from ringbarking in the 
In 1869, after having seen the very increase in the grazing 
capacity of Messrs. White’s runs which followed from ringbarking, 
