The Journal of the Royal Agricultural society of England Volume Ninth |
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Page i
... March ) .— The warm weather which set in on December 13th , 1871 , 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 ...
... March ) .— The warm weather which set in on December 13th , 1871 , 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 ...
Page ii
... March at Helston ; on the 30th at Oxford ; on the 31st at Eastbourne . Cherry was in blossom on the 14th of March at Brighton ; on the 22nd at Oxford ; and on the 31st at Carlisle . Plum was in blossom on the 7th of March at Strathfield ...
... March at Helston ; on the 30th at Oxford ; on the 31st at Eastbourne . Cherry was in blossom on the 14th of March at Brighton ; on the 22nd at Oxford ; and on the 31st at Carlisle . Plum was in blossom on the 7th of March at Strathfield ...
Page viii
... March .. 44.6 +3.7 +3.1 42.4 + 3 · 2 39.8 +3.6 15.8 +1.2 46.5 0.245 +0.030 2.8 +0.3 48.3 + 2 ° 3 +1.2 .. +0.7 41.0 50 ° 9 -I'7 -2.I 47 ° 3 -1.9 43.6 44.8 +0.3 19 ° 3 +0.7 50 ° 7 O'257 +0.003 2.9 0 ° O -1.9 19.7 -0.8 54 ° 5 0'284 -0 ...
... March .. 44.6 +3.7 +3.1 42.4 + 3 · 2 39.8 +3.6 15.8 +1.2 46.5 0.245 +0.030 2.8 +0.3 48.3 + 2 ° 3 +1.2 .. +0.7 41.0 50 ° 9 -I'7 -2.I 47 ° 3 -1.9 43.6 44.8 +0.3 19 ° 3 +0.7 50 ° 7 O'257 +0.003 2.9 0 ° O -1.9 19.7 -0.8 54 ° 5 0'284 -0 ...
Page ix
... March 84 + 2 29.625-0125 544 6 2.I +0.5 276 14 ΙΓ 6 1999 46.7 Sum Sum Mean Sum Sum Sum Lowest Highest Mean : 86 .. + I 29 ° 578 -0.188 544 - 8 6.5 +1.4 301 31 51 9 19.9 46.7 in . in . grs . grs . in . in . Miles O Mean .. 76 - I 29 735 ...
... March 84 + 2 29.625-0125 544 6 2.I +0.5 276 14 ΙΓ 6 1999 46.7 Sum Sum Mean Sum Sum Sum Lowest Highest Mean : 86 .. + I 29 ° 578 -0.188 544 - 8 6.5 +1.4 301 31 51 9 19.9 46.7 in . in . grs . grs . in . in . Miles O Mean .. 76 - I 29 735 ...
Page xiii
... March 2,777,964 265,619 1,561,748 842 , 120 31,992 281,617 April 2,285,048 209,475 1,195,388 850,241 61,012 259,845 May June .. 2,047 , 194 2,559,448 211,071 332,213 813,841 1,108,857 85,395 271,367 1,042,420 1,297,557 219,046 267,193 ...
... March 2,777,964 265,619 1,561,748 842 , 120 31,992 281,617 April 2,285,048 209,475 1,195,388 850,241 61,012 259,845 May June .. 2,047 , 194 2,559,448 211,071 332,213 813,841 1,108,857 85,395 271,367 1,042,420 1,297,557 219,046 267,193 ...
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The Journal of the Royal Agricultural Society of England Volume Ninth Journal Of The Royal Society No preview available - 2013 |
Common terms and phrases
acre adulterated Albuminous ammonia ammonia-salts amount average barley beam boiler bred bushels cake Cardiff cattle plague considerably Contagious Diseases Animals Containing nitrogen corn and straw crop cwts cylinder days-old deficiency digestible fibre diseased animals dressed corn effect engine Exhibitors Farm favourable feet fire-box flesh-forming foot-and-mouth disease governor grass guano Hall Harrow horse-power horses House Hull implement inches increase inspector Ireland iron John land Leicester less lime linseed machine Messrs Mineral matter ash Mixed Alkali-salts Mixed Mineral Manure Moisture months Mucilage nitrate of soda nitrogen oats obtained Park pigs pleuro-pneumonia Plot plough pure linseed-cake quantity rain rape-cake Reserve Number Royal Agricultural Society Royal Veterinary College sample season SECOND PRIZE seed Shearling sheep Shifnal sire of dam Society soil steam Street subsoil superphosphate supplied temperature Thomas trial trough turnips Unmanured Veterinary weeks-old wheat wheel William Wolverhampton Woody fibre cellulose
Popular passages
Page 20 - HENDERSON. The Young Estate Manager's Guide. By RICHARD HENDERSON, Member (by Examination) of the Royal Agricultural Society of England, the Highland and Agricultural Society of Scotland, and the Surveyors
Page 196 - ... court before whom he is charged that he did not know of the article of food or drug sold by him being so mixed, coloured, stained, or powdered, as in either of those sections mentioned, and that he could not with reasonable diligence have obtained that knowledge.
Page 337 - ... 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 425 - ... 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 98 - ... 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 ever fluctuating characters of season and the equally fluctuating characters of growth and produce. It is, in fact, the distribution...
Page 99 - ... 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 will be overlooked, unless careful observations...
Page 100 - But, at the same time, it is of great importance for agriculture to know with certainty that the supply of ammonia is unnecessary for most of our cultivated plants, and that it may be even superfluous, if only the soil contain a sufficient supply of the mineral food of plants, when the ammonia required for their development will be furnished by the atmosphere.
Page 139 - 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 xcix - SOILS. — Have a wooden box made 6 inches long and wide, and from 9 to 12 inches deep, according to the depth of soil and subsoil of the field. Mark out in the field a space of about 12 inches square ; dig round in a slanting direction a trench, so as to leave undisturbed a block of soil with its subsoil...
Page 641 - Its cost is 51. 10s., and, with slight modifications, it can be «asily fitted to any engine or boiler. 4788. Head, Wrightson, and Co. — This pulley-block or hoist is constructed on a novel and ingenious principle. Although its parts are simple in construction, and therefore not liable to get out of order, yet at first sight its action seems like a mechanical puzzle, and a full description of the illustrations given may perhaps be needed to explain the principles of its action. Two revolving discs...