Ciods) 
better order and proporllon ; And tfiis very ilrong tying it m 
the Plough , fo that it may not Wrcft -ny way , will a fo make 
it fow with the fame order and equality over Hills^ as alfoovcT 
tough uneven grounds 5 asover the fmootheft. 
3, The Ears of the Plough are to be made larger , than hi- 
therto-, whence two advantages will arife : i. It will better 
cover the furrows vvh^n fdwn v'^ndrnake wider furrows to re- 
ceive the feed 5 wheh they do foW. 2. Thofe larger Ears will 
prevent the blows, the great Glods an4 Stones will give the 
Sembrador (if the Clods be not broken^ and the Stones piek't 
out. ) But when there are fuch great Stones in the Lanff3 as 
the Plough cannot penetrate ^ then the Plough- man by lifting 
up his plough i>uft pafs overit V 'tintirhe^meets vviih modd a- 
gain 5 and fo muft the Se3^hr4dorz\(oht\\ktdu^^ the weight 
thereof being but very little , a^d no confiderable trouble to 
tihe Plcllglvaa-^ly■ 
4, When the C4<^d^^nd Stones cannot be mafler'd with 
only one pair of Ears , you muft add another pair of them to 
the Plough , four or fiv^ Inches higher than the firfl; ( chufiiig a 
fit place in the beam to plice them in ^ ) although behind the 
others a little ^ fdr fo the Sembmd&r ^ be perfedly faved and 
defended . And the fecond Ears are -to be of the fame bignefs 
withthrfirft.And this is found by Experience to be the beft re- 
medy againft the Stones and Clodds. 
5, The Time of Sowing^ according to the moft experienced 
Farmers, is, when the mould of the Land is dry , or but a lit- 
tle iticlining to moifture r In either of which conditions of the 
Land , this new ^m^r^^/^rworks without c ogging the wheels, 
or flopping up with dirt thofe holes , through which the grain 
istoiffiie forth. And to fow land, when 'tis dirty and full of 
water> is very hurtful to the Farmer, who then loofts his Seed, 
and the pains of tilling, and the Crop. And this SembrAddr 
may ferve for a means to try> w^^^^» the Land is in good tem- 
per to be fown , viz, when the wheels of the Inftrument will 
move equally , and without hindrance or clogging with dirt. 
And when the wheels will not turn round becaufe of the clay 
and over-much moifture, it is a figne , that 'tis not ^ t for culti- 
vatian,)until it ungire and be dry. 
M 6. When 
