British Farmer's Magazine, Volum 1James Ridgway, 1837 |
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Side 16
... cows , sheep , and calves : pigs ' blood is always rejected as bad . Before applying the blood it should be mixed with about two parts of water . 3. Milk . The milk employed for clarification should be skimmed . This agent is certainly ...
... cows , sheep , and calves : pigs ' blood is always rejected as bad . Before applying the blood it should be mixed with about two parts of water . 3. Milk . The milk employed for clarification should be skimmed . This agent is certainly ...
Side 29
... cows in milk . An ox consumes daily about 25 kilogrammes ( 55 lbs . ) of pulp , and a sheep 5 k . ( 11 lbs . ) It is advisable to add to this about 2 lbs . of linseed cake per day . A ton of pulp will thus last 40 days , during which ...
... cows in milk . An ox consumes daily about 25 kilogrammes ( 55 lbs . ) of pulp , and a sheep 5 k . ( 11 lbs . ) It is advisable to add to this about 2 lbs . of linseed cake per day . A ton of pulp will thus last 40 days , during which ...
Side 44
... cows , and working stock . The crop is seldom left to ripen its seeds , but when seeds are wanted , the only use made of them being for sowing , or feeding pigeons . " - Encyclopedia of Plants . Tares thrive well on rich and strong loam ...
... cows , and working stock . The crop is seldom left to ripen its seeds , but when seeds are wanted , the only use made of them being for sowing , or feeding pigeons . " - Encyclopedia of Plants . Tares thrive well on rich and strong loam ...
Side 46
... cows ; but the greater part of the grass was poor , wiry , and worthless for hay . Some of the trees were , from ... cow could not consume the grass of the second cutting ; and nearly half of it was made into hay . The extent of the ...
... cows ; but the greater part of the grass was poor , wiry , and worthless for hay . Some of the trees were , from ... cow could not consume the grass of the second cutting ; and nearly half of it was made into hay . The extent of the ...
Side 73
... cow thistle 196 99 beans 200 " " دو vetches 275 " " 99 " " wormwood 99 730 * وو fumitory " " 790 * Hence , potash was formerly called " salt of wormwood . " PEAT ASHES . Peat ashes are made in many parts 1837. ] 73 Mr. Johnson on Manures .
... cow thistle 196 99 beans 200 " " دو vetches 275 " " 99 " " wormwood 99 730 * وو fumitory " " 790 * Hence , potash was formerly called " salt of wormwood . " PEAT ASHES . Peat ashes are made in many parts 1837. ] 73 Mr. Johnson on Manures .
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Populære avsnitt
Side 242 - Ill fares the land, to hastening ills a prey, Where wealth accumulates, and men decay : Princes and lords may flourish, or may fade ; A breath can make them as a breath has made ; But a bold peasantry, their country's pride, When once destroyed, can never be supplied.
Side 118 - Great source of day! best image here below Of thy Creator, ever pouring wide, From world to world, the vital ocean round, On Nature write with every beam His praise.
Side 353 - Tender-handed stroke a nettle, And it stings you for your pains ; Grasp it like a man of mettle, And it soft as silk remains.
Side 210 - The improvement depends on this principle, that the power of the female to supply her offspring with nourishment is in proportion to her size, and to the power of nourishing herself from the excellence of her constitution. The size of the foetus...
Side 269 - ... skill in the cultivation of the soil ; the almost certainty that those fiscal regulations which have hitherto depressed the growth of sugar in Bengal, and prevented the large increase of its imports into this country, will soon be repealed ; the prospect of an early removal of the other restrictions which still fetter the commerce of our Eastern possessions ; the rapidly increasing population and prosperity of Hayti; the official statements of Mr. Ward, as to the profitable culture of sugar by...
Side 326 - ... to be applied per acre, since soil, situation, and climate, must all be taken into the farmer's consideration. The following facts however have been ascertained by numerous experiments, at some of which I have personally assisted. I. That crushed bones remain in the soil, for a length of time proportionate to the size of the pieces ; the dust producing the most immediate effect, the larger pieces continuing to shew the longest advantage.
Side 210 - The proper method of improving the form of animals consists in selecting a well formed female, proportionately larger than the male. The improvement depends on this principle, that the power of the female to supply her offspring with nourishment, is in proportion to her size, and to the power of nourishing herself from the excellence of her constitution.
Side 74 - I found that they afforded considerable quantities of gypsum, and probably this substance is intimately combined as a necessary part of their woody fibre ; if this be allowed, it is easy to explain the reason why it operates in such small quantities ; for the whole of a clover, or sainfoin crop on an acre, according to my estimation, would afford by incineration, only three or four bushels of gypsum.
Side 366 - The sun shines brighter, and the storms rage more furiously than in the valleys ! The very sterility pleases : and to him who has been brought thither by the rapid means of travelling now adopted, from some bustling mart of trade, or vortex of fashion, the novelty of lonesomeness is agreeably exciting ! The stillness that reigns around is as wonderful to him as the solidity of land to the stranded sailor ! Scarcely is there a change of scene ; silence and...
Side 209 - It has generally been supposed that the breed of animals is improved by the largest males. This opinion has done considerable mischief, and would have done more injury if it had not been counteracted by the desire of selecting...