Journal of the Royal Agricultural Society of EnglandRoyal Agricultural Society of England, 1873 - Agriculture Vols. for 1933- include the societys Farmers' guide to agricultural research. |
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... ( continued from p . 162 ) XIII . - Report on the Health of Animals of the Farm . By Professor J. B. Simonds , Principal of the Royal Veterinary College .. 374 XIV . - On Climate and the Supply of Labour as affecting Agriculture in ...
... ( continued from p . 162 ) XIII . - Report on the Health of Animals of the Farm . By Professor J. B. Simonds , Principal of the Royal Veterinary College .. 374 XIV . - On Climate and the Supply of Labour as affecting Agriculture in ...
Page i
... continued with very few exceptions till the 18th March - then followed eight days of severe cold weather , and snow fell over the country , even to the South Coast , and over the counties of Devonshire and Cornwall . This cold period ...
... continued with very few exceptions till the 18th March - then followed eight days of severe cold weather , and snow fell over the country , even to the South Coast , and over the counties of Devonshire and Cornwall . This cold period ...
Page iv
... continued till November 9th . From November 10th to the 19th was a steady cold period , but from November 20th to December 3rd the weather was warm . Then followed a period of changeable weather which lasted up to December 19th . On the ...
... continued till November 9th . From November 10th to the 19th was a steady cold period , but from November 20th to December 3rd the weather was warm . Then followed a period of changeable weather which lasted up to December 19th . On the ...
Page 89
... continued up to the present time , and are still in progress ; and we are now enabled to record the results obtained with barley , as already with wheat , over twenty consecutive seasons . Barley is , at any rate through the greater ...
... continued up to the present time , and are still in progress ; and we are now enabled to record the results obtained with barley , as already with wheat , over twenty consecutive seasons . Barley is , at any rate through the greater ...
Page 101
... in this first season than on the average of the 20 years under the same continued conditions as to manure . The comparatively TABLE II . Quantity and Quality of Barley on Selected for Twenty Years in succession on the same Land . 101.
... in this first season than on the average of the 20 years under the same continued conditions as to manure . The comparatively TABLE II . Quantity and Quality of Barley on Selected for Twenty Years in succession on the same Land . 101.
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Common terms and phrases
acre per annum adulterated agricultural ammonia ammonia-salts amount of nitrogen applied artificial manures August average annual produce Ballinasloe barley boiler bushel of dressed bushels of corn cake cattle cattle-plague Chaff coal cold considerably Contagious Diseases Animals Containing nitrogen corn and straw crop cwts cylinder deficiency diseased animals drainage Dressed Corn effect engine excess experimental experiments farm farmyard manure favourable flesh-forming foot-and-mouth disease grass guano horse-power inches increase infected inspector Ireland Irish July June land less linseed Llangennech magnesia Means mineral constituents Mixed Alkali-salts Mixed Mineral Manure Moisture Mucilage nitrate of soda nitrogen oats obtained period phosphate pleuro-pneumonia Plot port potass pure linseed-cake quantity rain rape-cake salts samples season seed sheep sheep-pox soil spring sulphate superphosphate Superphosphate of Lime supplied Table temperature Total Produce Corn turnips Unmanured Veterinary weather weight per bushel wheat whilst Woody fibre cellulose yield
Popular passages
Page 89 - ... would require four hundred years, and as much phosphoric acid as would require thirtytwo years, and as much potash as would require eighty-two years of ordinary rotation with home manuring, and selling only corn and meat, to remove. Again, in the experiments of the Rev. Mr. Smith, of...
Page xcv - ... to make it fit into the wooden box, invert the open box over it, press down firmly, then pass a spade under the box and lift it up gently, turn over the box, nail on the lid, and send by rail.
Page 333 - In the first place it will be observed that, in three of the five occasions on which all the other drains ran freely, no result is given for the farmyard manure plot. The fact is that, whilst the pipe-drains from every one of the other plots in the experimental wheat-field run freely, perhaps four or five or more times annually, the drain from the dunged plot seldom runs at all more than once a year, and in some seasons not at all.
Page 421 - ... but I may be allowed to observe, in passing, that what, before the blight of the potato crop, was a matter of undeniable usefulness, is now, by this casualty, made a matter of indispensable necessity. We are called upon in some districts, under the penalty of famine, to teach our people modes of cultivating better crops...
Page 96 - ... luxuriance or to maturation, that is, to quantity or to quality as the case may be. Hence, only a very detailed consideration of climatic statistics, taken together with careful periodic observations in the field, can afford a really clear perception of the connection between the everfluctuating characters of season and the equally fluctuating characters of growth and produce. It is, in fact, the distribution of the various elements making up the season, their mutual adaptations, and their adaptation...
Page 137 - June were not quite so hot as in 1868; and the average temperature of the whole period, from the middle of January to the end of June, was only exceeded in 1822. Concurrently with this long-continued warm weather, there was, as already said, a great excess of rain in January, and only moderate amounts in February and March ; there was a small excess in April, a deficiency in May, and a very great deficiency in June. Temperatures in excess of the average^also prevailed almost continuously throughout...
Page 223 - a local authority may, if they think fit, cause to be slaughtered any animal that has been in the same shed or stable, or in the same herd or flock, or in contnct with any animal affected with cattle plague within their district.
Page 97 - ... characters of season and the equally fluctuating characters of growth and produce. It is, in fact, the distribution of the various elements making up the season, their mutual adaptations, and their adaptation to the stage of growth of the plant, which throughout influence the tendency to produce quantity or quality. It not unfrequently happens, too, that some passing conditions, not indicated by a summary of the meteorological registry, may affect the crop very strikingly ; and thus the cause...
Page 223 - ... of the value of the animal immediately before it was affected with cattle plague, as to the local authority seems fit.