APPENDIX. 
329 
to 20s. per acre; of enclosed farms, 30s. to 50s.; of 
water meadow, 2l- to 5l. per acre: about Middle Little¬ 
ton, more quarries of flag stone ; price at the quarry, 
5d. per foot superficial: pass another common field, 
barley drilled at seven inches and clovered down, crop 
poor, starved in the hollows, two to three quarters per 
acre: some of the hollows grass mown, which answers 
much better than sowing barley ; the cultivated trefoil 
sown here in some places, and the trifolium agrarium 
spontaneous; some swells of land in these fields light 
enough for turnips : to Cleeve Prior; the wild carrot, 
ditto parsnip, melilot, chicory, and convolvulus, very 
common weeds. 
Cleeve Prior to Evesham.—Landscape enchanting, 
a beautiful view of the river and Vale of the Avon; 
rich and verdant meadows with sheep and cattle gra¬ 
zing them, and fertile corn fields at a distance on the 
gently-rising acclivity beyond the river; the road is 
traced along a high ridge almost overhanging the 
Avon ; landscape to the right a perfect picture, the 
country seen as a map, with the various and beautiful 
windings of the Avon up and down for many miles, 
Bredon appearing on the back ground with great ma¬ 
jesty, and the Cotteswolds closing the perspective. 
Barley good above this ridge, five quarters per acre, 
below it a dingle, with the wayfaring (viburnum lan- 
tana), and the great wild climber (clematis vitalba) 
abounding. 
Uppenham.—Good loam ; turnips and barley good, 
beans and flax grown : return through Aldington com¬ 
mon field ; wheat drilled at eight inches, barley and 
clover. Evesham to Worcester.—Great crops of cone 
wheat. At Fladbury.—- Pease and barley carried. 
* Moor field, 
