The American Farmer's Instructor, Or Practical Agriculturist: Comprehending the Cultivation of Plants, the Husbandry of the Domestic Animals, and the Economy of the Farm; Together with a Variety of Information which Will be Found Important to the FarmerOrrin Rogers, 1840 - 504 Seiten |
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Seite 29
... cattle to stray away from his stall , or his swine from their sty , without a possibility of reclaiming them , as permit the principles of fertility expelled by fermentation or putrefaction to escape into the atmosphere for the purpose ...
... cattle to stray away from his stall , or his swine from their sty , without a possibility of reclaiming them , as permit the principles of fertility expelled by fermentation or putrefaction to escape into the atmosphere for the purpose ...
Seite 31
... cattle , and attention has been paid to the quality as well as the increase of their dung , the manure thus produced becomes of inestimable value . No husbandman can carry on his busi- ness , successfully , without it . The manure heap ...
... cattle , and attention has been paid to the quality as well as the increase of their dung , the manure thus produced becomes of inestimable value . No husbandman can carry on his busi- ness , successfully , without it . The manure heap ...
Seite 32
... cattle also soon ferments when it is collected into a heap , and is only moistened by its own humidity ; but this process is slower than in the dung of horses , because it is not so much exposed to the same internal heat , in ...
... cattle also soon ferments when it is collected into a heap , and is only moistened by its own humidity ; but this process is slower than in the dung of horses , because it is not so much exposed to the same internal heat , in ...
Seite 58
... cattle thrive very speedily ; besides which , it not only im- proves and increases the herbage , but also sweetens sour pas- tures , while it destroys weeds and noxious vermin . " That celebrated chemist , SAMUEL PARKS , in his great ...
... cattle thrive very speedily ; besides which , it not only im- proves and increases the herbage , but also sweetens sour pas- tures , while it destroys weeds and noxious vermin . " That celebrated chemist , SAMUEL PARKS , in his great ...
Seite 62
... cattle , the tallest should be put foremost , if he be in every other respect equal to the other . When at work , they should be kept at as regular and good a pace as the nature of the work may permit ; for they are then more manageable ...
... cattle , the tallest should be put foremost , if he be in every other respect equal to the other . When at work , they should be kept at as regular and good a pace as the nature of the work may permit ; for they are then more manageable ...
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The American Farmer's Instructor, Or Practical Agriculturist: Comprehending ... Tbd Keine Leseprobe verfügbar - 2020 |
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acre agriculture animals barley bees Berkshire better boiled bones breed breeder bushels cattle cheese colour common corn covered cows cream crop cultivated culture disease Dishley drains drills early earth eight ewes farm farmer fatten favourable feeding feet fence fertility fibres fiorin flax fleece four grain green ground grow growth half harrow hemp herbage hive hops horse hundred important improved inches injury kind labour land lime loam lucern manner manure meadows milk mixed native oats pasture plants plough potatoes pounds practice produce proper purpose quantity reared rennet require rich roots rows rye grass salt says season seed sheep sheep husbandry soil sowing sown species spring stalks straw substances sufficient sugar surface tillage tion trees turnips variety vegetable weeds wheat whey winter winter tares wool yield young
Beliebte Passagen
Seite 5 - Elements of Practical Agriculture ; comprehending the Cultivation of Plants, the Husbandry of the Domestic Animals, and the Economy of the Farm. By D.
Seite 333 - The principal external appearances which distinguish this breed of cattle from all others, are the following : — Their colour is invariably white ; muzzles black ; the whole of the inside of the ear, and about one-third of the outside, from the tip downwards, red ; horns white, with black tips, very fine, and bent upwards : some of the bulls have a thin upright mane, about an inch and a half or two inches long.
Seite 498 - ... the obvious remedy is to cut a channel with a sufficient declivity to take off the water in a direction across this line, and sunk through the porous soil at the surface into the lower impervious earth. The place for this channel is where the porous soil is the shallowest above the breaking out, so as to require the least depth of drain, but the solid stratum must be reached, or the draining will be imperfect. When there is a great variation in the soil, and it is difficult to...
Seite 369 - ... the rump. The quarters long and full, and, as with the fore legs, the muscles extending down to the hock; the thighs also wide and full. The legs of a moderate length; the pelt also moderately thin, but soft and elastic, and covered with a good quantity of white wool.
Seite 76 - ... and manure. All cultivators ought to be governed by them ; but their application must be modified by the nature of soils and climates, and the particular wants of each locality. To prescribe a series of successive and various harvests, without paying any regard to the difference of soils, would be to commit a great error, and to condemn the system of cropping in the eyes of those agriculturists who are too little enlightened to think of introducing into their grounds the requisite changes.
Seite 298 - ... second interval of time is greater in quantity and richer in quality than that which rises in a third equal space of time. That of the third...
Seite 500 - ... filled with water, like a sponge, and no healthy vegetation can take place. In this case numerous drains must be made in the subsoil, and over the draining tiles or bushes which may be laid at the bottom of the drains loose gravel or broken stones must be laid to within a foot of the surface, so that the plough shall not reach them. The water will gradually sink into these drains, and be carried off, and the loose wet soil will become firm and dry. In no case is the advantage of draining more...
Seite 345 - The external appearance of the short-horn breed is irresistibly attractive. The exquisitely symmetrical form of the body in every position, bedecked with a skin of the richest hues of red and the richest white, approaching to cream, or both colours, so arranged or commixed as to form a beautiful fleck or delicate roan, and possessed of the mellowest touch, — supported on small clean limbs, shewing, like those of the race-horse and the greyhound, the union of strength...
Seite 369 - ... from the chest, so that there is, with the slightest possible deviation, one continued horizontal line from the rump to the poll. The breast broad and...
Seite 499 - ... depth to take the water out of the porous stratum saturated with it, it is often useful to bore numerous holes with an auger in the bottom of the drain through the stiffer soil, and, according to the principle explained in the diagram, the water will either rise through these bores...