1849.] 



Circar of Warungul. 



229 



20. Kalierekalloo — an dhee rice, dearest of all— a small quanti- 

 ty sown in this Circar — husk darkish. 



21. Ckamakooraloo — a flavourless rice — large, cheapest of ali„ 



22. Chundramunkaloo — husk silvery — a good rice. 



23. Kongagoorloo-Am.^ vi^hitish. 



24. Patee moolkaloo — small white not common, 



25. Adengaloo — a coarse rice used by the poorer classes — growa 

 in land much flooded. 



26. Boorawedloo — coarse. 



27. Beddy sawmee hat ^i/Zoo— antimony rice, small, sweet- 

 scented. 



28. Donrasenkeuloo—o^owAQ's,^^ large and coarse, 



29. Mylasamaloo — a small coarse grain, 



30. Dodasamaloo — large whitish. 



31. Gareederoudloo — reddish husk, and even when unhusked 

 the grain retains the colour — used by the poor. 



32. Boonjaloo — also coarse, chiefly so^n in the dry bed of the 

 Pakhall lake by the Surmooneewar. 



Most of these varieties remain in the ground from three to four 

 months ; the transplanted kinds require a few weeks more to 

 ripen, but transplanting amply repays the additional trouble and 

 expense. The fifth variety the Soopuardynaloo, an dhee crop which 

 is transplanted, requires five months and a half to ripen— and the 

 19th Tateepelloo, and the 20th Kaherehulloo, both fine varieties, 

 five and six months respectively. 



Andropoqon Sorahum- — three varieties, the 

 Dry Grains Cultivated. ^ j r-. r t /m r \ 



yellow red and white — Jonaloo (ienngee). 



Andropogon hicolor — black Jowaree. 



Zea Mays — Indian Corn — Muchkae. 



Panicum Spicatum — Bajree — Sudgaloo (T.) 



Panicum It a licum — Ku n ghne — Koora lo o . 



Panicum hispidulum — Boora sajna. 



Another variety — Pota sama, 



Panicum frumentacemn — Shama. 



Panicum miliaceum — Worgloo, 



Paspalum scrohiculatum — Aruga. 



Triticum oestimm — Wheat. — Of these the yellow, white, and red 

 jowarees are in common cultivation, and also the shmna. The cul- 



