Chapter 41 of 41 · 1312 words · ~7 min read

Part 41

_St. Foin_, its Description and Names, 157 Directions for planting and ordering it, 159, _&c._ St. Foin, and other long tap-rooted Plants, suffer more by their Pasture’s being overstocked, than other Plants do, 167 Directions about St. Foin Hay, 173, _&c._ Quantity of St. Foin on an Acre, 186 Why St. Foin makes a forty times greater Crop on poor Land, than its natural Grass or Turf, 157 Directions for saving St. Foin Seed, 178, _&c._ Of feeding St. Foin by Sheep, 187 St. Foin Plants not killed by cutting off their Heads, 188 St. Foin takes Nine Parts in Ten of its Nourishment below the Staple of the Land, 191 Of breaking up old St. Foin, 189 Great Improvement made on Arable Land by St. Foin, 188, _&c._ _Sarrition_, 53, _&c._ _Seeds_, in their natural Climate do not degenerate, 238, _&c._ Causes why Seeds, as to their Individuals, do degenerate, _ibid._ How to know the most proper Depth to plant all sorts of Seeds at, 58, _&c._ Some sorts of Seeds come in the Air, or by Birds, 78 _Sheep_, how injurious to drilled Wheat, 149 _Smuttiness_ of Wheat, 139 The Causes of Smuttiness, _ibid._ The Cure of Smuttiness, _ibid._ _&c._ _Soils_ differ chiefly in respect of Heat and Moisture, 20, 21 A Soil can be exhausted by nothing but Roots, 276 There is no way for us to enrich a Soil but by Pulveration, and keeping it from being exhausted by Vegetables, _ibid._ _Stratum_: The _Under Stratum_ of light Land may be richer than that of strong Land, 191, 238

T

_Tillage_ beneficial to all Sorts of Land, 36, _&c._ Tillage can never make Land too fine, 44 Tillage of the low Vineyards, 56, _&c._ Insufficient Tillage, how ’tis injurious, 40 Tillage can pulverize as well as Dung, 35, _&c._ The Plough, in Field-tillage, why preferable to the Spade, 280 The same Quantity of Tillage will produce the same Quantity of Food, _&c._, 230, _&c._ _Transplanting_, 48 _Trees_, the Damage they do to Crops is by robbing, as Weeds only, 74 The Reason why some sorts of Trees endure hard Winters better in _England_ than in _Languedoc_, 202 _Trials_ unexpensive proposed, 133, _&c._ _Turneps_, the Soil most proper for them, 79 Directions concerning them, 80 Advantage of drilling and horse-hoeing of Turneps, _ibid._ Several manners of spending Turneps by Sheep, 90

V

_Veerings_ and Hentings, 123, _&c._ _Vineyards_ owe their great Products to the Hoe-tillage; and from them the Author first took his Scheme, 56, _&c._

W

_Water_, how injurious, and how beneficial, to Wheat, 97 _Weeds_, their Definition, 73 Weeds pernicious in several respects, _ibid._ _&c._ Their Robbing proved by Experiment, 74 Why the Race of Weeds cannot be extirpated by the common Husbandry, 75 The Race of Weeds most likely to be extirpated by hoeing, 77 Weeds cannot be killed before they grow, 129 _Wheat_, why it requires hoeing more than Spring-Corn, 92, _&c._ Directions about drilling and hoeing of Wheat, _See Chap._ ix. How a Wheat-Crop is augmented, 119, _&c._ Of feeding Wheat by Sheep, 148, _&c._ Wheat Ears will be large or small, in proportion to the Nourishment given to their Plants, 119 Wheat-ears do not lodge, by reason of their Weight, 148, 149 Of weighing the Product of a Yard or Perch of a Row of Wheat, 129, _&c._ Cone Wheat and Lammas Wheat, their Difference, 425 _Smyrna_ Wheat, 104, 136, _&c._ Of keeping of Wheat by drying it, 131 Some Land unfit for Wheat, 117 The time proper for Hand-hoeing of Wheat, 132 _Winter_, what time is meant by it, 115

~FINIS.~

Transcriber’s Notes

The language used for this e-text is that used in the source document. Inconsistent, unusual and archaic spelling has been retained (also of plant, proper and geographical names). The inconsistent numbering of Plates and individual Figures (some Roman, some Arabic numerals) has not been standardised.

Page 8, ... (being brought over the Top ...: the closing bracket is lacking.

Page 16, ... (probably many times more than the Tree’s Weight ...: the closing bracket is lacking.

Page 215, ... (and it is proved, that no Plant refuses ...: the closing bracket is lacking.

Page 220, ... than remained in the Glasses F or G ...: these reference letters appear to refer to an illustration, but there is no such illustration in the book.

Page 263-264, list of particulars: for this e-text the numbers 1-9 have been inserted where they appeared to correspond best to the discussion on pages 264-266, not necessarily where the author placed them.

Page 298, ... V the Iron Ground-wrist is shewn in Fig. 9 ...: there are two items V in the drawing; the left-hand one is referred to here.

Page 345, ... the Four Screws and Nuts a₂ a₂ a₂ a₂ ...: they are given as simply a a a a in the illustration.

Page 358, description of Fig. 12: reference letters a, b and e are not visible in the illustration.

Page 381, ... which Hole is seen at a in Fig. 4. ...: the letter a is not visible in the illustration.

Changes made

Plates have been moved outside the text paragraphs. Footnotes have been moved and re-combined when printed over several pages. Individual figures from the plates have been included where they are discussed in the text.

Some obvious minor typographical and punctuation errors have been corrected silently, as have some erroneously repeated words.

Page 15: ,Who dry’d Two hundred Pounds of Earth ... changed to ‘Who dry’d Two hundred Pounds of Earth ....

Page 24: ... Sir Isaac Newton think ... changed to ... Sir Isaac Newton thinks ....

Page 49: ... or a Succadaneum to it ... changed to ... or a Succedaneum to it ....

Page 81: ... you may hoe-plow them, when you the Fly is ... changed to ... you may hoe-plow them, when you see the Fly is ....

Page 87: ... as big as one’s litle Finger changed to ... as big as one’s little Finger.

Page 104: ... whereon the next Drop is to stand ... changed to ... whereon the next Crop is to stand ....

Page 121: ... that the sowing Method can. changed to ... than the sowing Method can.

Page 146: ... gives it litle or no Increase ... changed to ... gives it little or no Increase ....

Page 149: ... that which removes all its Cases ... changed to ... that which removes all its Causes ....

Page 157: ... And for its long Contiance ... changed to ... And for its long Continuance ....

Page 189: ... to prevent its being too luxuant changed to ... to prevent its being too luxuriant.

Page 195: ... sed ligneis rasteltis ... changed to ... sed ligneis rastellis ....

Page 215: closing quote mark inserted after ... even as the different Parts of the same Vegetable.

Page 219: Closing quote mark inserted after ... quiet and undisturb’d the while.

Page 259: ... at he could at Six ... changed to ... as he could at Six ....

Page 303: ... letting the Second Coulter stand a lighter higher ... changed to ... letting the Second Coulter stand a little higher ....

Page 346: reference letter A inserted in Fig. II.

Page 362: The Two Lines e h and f g, at right Angles with the Two last-mentioned Lines ... changed to The Two Lines e g and f h, at right Angles with the Two last-mentioned Lines ....

Page 378: reference letter A inserted in Plate IV. Fig. II.

Page 385, Fig. X: right-hand reference letter E changed to F.

Opposite page 392, Plate 5 Fig. X: right-hand reference letter E changed to F.

Page 408: ... that is to pass thorough, the Hole in C ... changed to ... that is to pass through the Hole in C ....