The Book of the Farm: Detailing the Labors of the Farmer, Farm-steward, Ploughman, Shepherd, Hedger, Cattle-man, Field-worker, and Dairymaid, Том 2Blackwood, 1844 - 679 страници |
Между кориците на книгата
Резултати 1 - 5 от 100.
Страница 2
... practice , without remarking whether it is a good or bad one , as the whole subject of the treatment of cattle will very soon engage our attention . ( 1221. ) By the time the cattle are ready to occupy the steading , tur- nips should be ...
... practice , without remarking whether it is a good or bad one , as the whole subject of the treatment of cattle will very soon engage our attention . ( 1221. ) By the time the cattle are ready to occupy the steading , tur- nips should be ...
Страница 10
... practice ! The excuses usually made for pursuing the ordinary prac- tice are , that there is no time to store turnips when the potato - land should be ploughed up and sown with wheat ; that the beasts are yet doing well enough upon the ...
... practice ! The excuses usually made for pursuing the ordinary prac- tice are , that there is no time to store turnips when the potato - land should be ploughed up and sown with wheat ; that the beasts are yet doing well enough upon the ...
Страница 48
... practice , was first tried by Mr Hunter of Tynefield , in East Lothian , in 1809 , by littering the break occupied by the sheep in the field with straw , and sup- plying them with turnips upon it . In this way he littered 300 sheep upon ...
... practice , was first tried by Mr Hunter of Tynefield , in East Lothian , in 1809 , by littering the break occupied by the sheep in the field with straw , and sup- plying them with turnips upon it . In this way he littered 300 sheep upon ...
Страница 50
... practice and suggestions on the subject by English sheep - feeders possess at least no novelty . The results of Mr Webster's experiments , I believe , were not very encouraging . Mr Chil- ders , M.P. for Malton , fed 40 Leicester wether ...
... practice and suggestions on the subject by English sheep - feeders possess at least no novelty . The results of Mr Webster's experiments , I believe , were not very encouraging . Mr Chil- ders , M.P. for Malton , fed 40 Leicester wether ...
Страница 62
... practice of many hill - farmers to take either turnips or a rough graz- ing for their stock in the lower part of the country , as nearly adjacent to their homes as food can be procured ; and many lowland - farmers , who possess hill ...
... practice of many hill - farmers to take either turnips or a rough graz- ing for their stock in the lower part of the country , as nearly adjacent to their homes as food can be procured ; and many lowland - farmers , who possess hill ...
Други издания - Преглед на всички
Често срещани думи и фрази
acre amongst animal axle barley beans become Berwickshire boiled boiler bottom breadth bushel byre calf calves cattle clean compost corn covered crop cultivated cylinder diameter disease drachm drills dung dunghill easily East Lothian effect eggs employed ewes farm farmer fatten fecula feeding feering feet field fowls furrow give given gluten grain grass ground hammels hand harrows heap hedge horses inches James Slight labour lamb lambing ground land length lever litter machine manner manure milk mode mucilage oats offal passing pigs placed plants Plate plough ploughman potatoes produce purpose quantity revolutions per minute ridges roller sack Scotland season seed seen shaft sheep shepherd shew side soil sowing sown spring steam stones straw supply surface teat thrashing tines tion turnips usually weather weight wheat wheel winter young
Популярни откъси
Страница 31 - Now, shepherds, to your helpless charge be kind, Baffle the raging year, and fill their pens With food at will; lodge them below the storm, And watch them strict : for from the bellowing east, In this dire season, oft the whirlwind's wing Sweeps up the...
Страница 706 - The careful hen Calls all her chirping family around, Fed and defended by the fearless cock; Whose breast with ardour flames, as on he walks, Graceful, and crows defiance.
Страница 220 - Those who have both, seldom have a horse that requires clipping, but, when clipped, he must not want either. A long coat takes up a deal of moisture, and is difficult to dry ; but whether wet or dry, it affords some defence to the skin, which is laid bare to every breath of air when deprived of its natural covering. Every one must know from himself whether wet clothing and a wet skin, or no clothing and a wet skin, is the most disagreeable and dangerous. It is true that clipping saves the groom a...
Страница 591 - ... drought, and destitute of all vegetation, except that of a few thistles. A square foot of the dead turf being dug up...
Страница 599 - The' innumerous ills that rush around his life ; Mark the quick kite, with beak and talons prone, Circling the skies to snatch him from the plain...
Страница 651 - ... applied when chopped small by a proper machine, and kept dry till it is ploughed in for the use of a crop. In this case, though it would decompose much more slowly and produce less effect at first, yet its influence would be much more lasting.
Страница 428 - Fled now the sullen murmurs of the North, The splendid raiment of the SPRING peeps forth ; Her universal green, and the clear sky, Delight still more and more the gazing eye.
Страница 388 - ... contrast this with the condition of many young men employed as farmservants in the southern counties, who, being paid board-wages, club together to have their comfortless meal cooked in a neighbouring cottage, with no house to call their home, left to sleep in an outhouse or hay-loft, subject to the contamination of idle companions, with no parent's eye to watch their actions and no parent's voice to warn them of their errors ; and say which situation is best calculated to promote domestic comfort,...
Страница 706 - Gives out his snowy plumage to the gale ; And, arching proud his neck, with oary feet Bears forward fierce, and guards his osier-isle, Protective of his young.
Страница 652 - A slight incipient fermentation is undoubtedly of use in the dunghill ; for by means of it a disposition is brought on in the woody fibre to decay and dissolve, when it is carried to the land, or ploughed into the soil ; and woody fibre is always in great excess in the refuse of the farm.