British Farmer's Magazine, Issue 45James Ridgway, 1863 - Agriculture |
From inside the book
Results 1-5 of 100
Page 2
... plants to overpower and occupy the place of the inferior grasses . There is the weed couch or twitch , whose appearance and vigorous growth on some sandy soils has puzzled many an intelligent cultivator . This may well be denominated an ...
... plants to overpower and occupy the place of the inferior grasses . There is the weed couch or twitch , whose appearance and vigorous growth on some sandy soils has puzzled many an intelligent cultivator . This may well be denominated an ...
Page 3
... plants examined were grown in separate beds on the same ground . The leaves of swedes , turnips , and man- golds were analysed in November , the cabbage and cauli . flowers in October , the other plants in August and Sep- tember , when ...
... plants examined were grown in separate beds on the same ground . The leaves of swedes , turnips , and man- golds were analysed in November , the cabbage and cauli . flowers in October , the other plants in August and Sep- tember , when ...
Page 4
... plants , Trifolium , Lathy- rus , and Lotus . The description of the graminaceous herbage was not very much altered from that of the un- manured land ; there was no striking predominance of in- dividual species , but , compared with the ...
... plants , Trifolium , Lathy- rus , and Lotus . The description of the graminaceous herbage was not very much altered from that of the un- manured land ; there was no striking predominance of in- dividual species , but , compared with the ...
Page 22
... plants clay containing stones and fragments transported from im- mense distances upon icebergs , still bearing the scratches and grated marks of the ice ; beds of gravel washed and rolled by floods ; river - valleys eroded ; terraces ...
... plants clay containing stones and fragments transported from im- mense distances upon icebergs , still bearing the scratches and grated marks of the ice ; beds of gravel washed and rolled by floods ; river - valleys eroded ; terraces ...
Page 26
... plant , together with the effect of sewage to raise the temperature of the soil , and thus promote the growth of the plant . For details I refer the reader back to Mr. Mechi's evidence under section 1. He said he had never had ...
... plant , together with the effect of sewage to raise the temperature of the soil , and thus promote the growth of the plant . For details I refer the reader back to Mr. Mechi's evidence under section 1. He said he had never had ...
Other editions - View all
Common terms and phrases
acres Agricultural Society agriculturists ammonia amongst animals average awarded barley Battersea bred breed bull calf calved cattle clay Clayton and Shuttleworth corn Cotswold crop ditto drains draught drill Duke ewes exhibited farm farmers favour field filly Fowler's furrow gelding grain grubs guano harrows harvest heifer Highly commended horse Howard implement improved inches irrigation judges labour lambs Leicester Lincolnshire London long-woolled Lord mangling machines manure mare matter MECHI Messrs months oats oilcake patent phosphoric acid pigs plants plough portable prize produce quantity rain rope Royal salt season seed seed drill sewage shearling sheep Shorthorn Silver Medal soil sold Southdown sovs stallion steam cultivation steam engine steam plough straw Suffolk supply tenant thrashing machine tion tons turnips wheat wool Worcester yard yearling
Popular passages
Page 350 - LORD of the harvest ! once again We thank Thee for the ripened grain ; For crops safe carried, sent to cheer Thy servants through another year ; For all sweet holy thoughts supplied By seed-time, and by harvest-tide.
Page 252 - Butler's famous tautology that " . . . . the value of a thing Is just as much as it will bring...
Page 234 - Bridport (chairman) presented the report, from which it appeared that the Secretary's receipts during the past mouth had been duly examined by the committee, and by Messrs.
Page 136 - Indeed this hath been a very glorious mercy ; — and as stiff a contest, for four or five hours, as ever I have seen.
Page 136 - But it avails not. Through Sudbury Gate, on Cromwell's side, through St. John's Suburb, and over Severn Bridge on Fleetwood's, the Scots are driven-in again to Worcester Streets ; desperately struggling and recoiling, are driven through Worcester Streets, to the North end of the City, — and terminate there. A distracted mass of ruin : the foot all killed or taken ; the horse all scattered on flight, and their place of refuge very far ! His sacred Majesty escaped, by royal oaks and other miraculous...
Page 4 - Considerable increase of produce was only obtained by means of farmyard-manure, or artificial manures containing both mineral constituents and ammonia-salts or nitrates. The crops so obtained were much more Graminaceous, and consisted in much greater proportion of but a few species of plants. The grasses developed were chiefly of the more bulky and...
Page 75 - To get up the hay to a high stack when building, use a scaffold placed on four upright posts, resting below on a fourwheeled platform, and elevate or depress the scaffolding by means of pulleys to any height that may be required. Lay some loose straw on the extreme top of the rick till thatched.
Page 317 - Act, 1851," shall extend and apply to this Act and to all proceedings in relation thereto ; and it shall not in any such proceedings be necessary to allege or prove the ground or other place where an offence is committed to be the property of or occupied by any person : Provided always, that the convicting justices or...
Page 203 - The woollen manufactures of Maryland exhibit an increase of 86 per cent. In Ohio, which produced in 1850 a greater value of woollens than all the other western States, there was a decrease on the product of 1850, owing, probably, to the shipments of wool to Europe, which, in 1857, was found to be the most profitable disposition of the rapidly increasing wool crops of that State. In Kentucky, now the largest manufacturer of wool in the west, the product was $1,128,882, and the increase in ten years...
Page 117 - Some permanent buildings are now erected at Toronto, Hamilton, London, and Kingston, respectively, for the express purpose of holding annual exhibitions. In 1862, the annual meeting was held at Toronto, and permanent provision made for stabling 198 horses and 435 head of cattle. The amount of prizes offered exceeded 1,600 dollars. Such is the progress which has been made during fifteen years, in bringing together the different industries...