328 
APPENDIX. 
ton; Cleeve Prior, and back to Evesham.~Lamma§ 
wheat cut or cutting, the blue cone wheat from seven 
to fourteen days later, crops good, the former generally 
four, the latter five, quarters per acre; barley cutting, 
the crop various, good on sound deep loams, four to 
five quarters per acre; on wet clays starved, produce 
about half the above; some orchards here, with corn 
crops between the trees; under stratum sometimes gra¬ 
vel, but oftener calcareous clay, totally unfit for brick 
making from that quality. Aldington common field.—- 
Fallow, barley, pulse, (i. e.) beans, pease, or vetches, or 
clover, then sometimes Avheat, or sometimes fallow. Bad- 
sey to South Littleton.—Fruit trees in hedges, moist 
whitish loam, wild plants as before, with the addition 
of felecampane, wild teasel, and a large bell flower 
(campanula latifolia); under stratum, calcareous flag¬ 
stone, very hard in texture, about three inches thick, 
may be got of large superficies, to four or five yards 
over; horses tied to vetches almost smothered with 
weeds (convolvulus, centaurea scabiosa, scabiosa ar- 
vensis, com sow thistle, and crepis tectorum) and 
wheat to succeed; country here enclosed; in hedges,bry¬ 
ony, lady’s seal, dogwood, maple, apple, and pear trees, 
hemlock, and other weeds ; good crops of cone wheat: 
at South Littleton, some fruit trees; reaping Aug. 7; 
lime burning with coal, at 20s. per ton, or more; 
quarries for grave stones and floors in various places. 
To North Littleton, across the common field.—In 
which are both barley and wheat drilled, the latter foul 
with convolvulus, and much mildewed, both the white 
and red lammas ; cone wheat less mildewed ; chicory, a 
common corn weed. 
Bent of common field land in the Yale of Evesham, 
to 
