An Encyclopædia of Agriculture: Comprising the Theory and Practice of the Valuation, Transfer, Laying Out, Improvement, and Management of Landed Property; and the Cultivation and Economy of the Animal and Vegetable Productions of Agriculture, Including All the Latest Improvements; a General History of Agriculture in All Countries; and a Statistical View of Its Present State, with Suggestions for Its Future Progress in the British Isles |
From inside the book
Results 1-5 of 100
Page 6
... carried to a higher degree of perfection there than in any other country of antiquity . The canals and banks which still remain in Lower Egypt , and especially in the Delta , are evidences of the ex- tent to which embanking , irrigation ...
... carried to a higher degree of perfection there than in any other country of antiquity . The canals and banks which still remain in Lower Egypt , and especially in the Delta , are evidences of the ex- tent to which embanking , irrigation ...
Page 14
... carried away , dung carried out , a dunghill made , seed cleaned , old ropes mended , new ones made , and the servant's clothes mended . On holidays , old ditches may have been scoured , a highway repaired , briars cut , the garden ...
... carried away , dung carried out , a dunghill made , seed cleaned , old ropes mended , new ones made , and the servant's clothes mended . On holidays , old ditches may have been scoured , a highway repaired , briars cut , the garden ...
Page 26
... carried upon two wheels ; the square surface has boards erected at the side , which , sloping outwards , make a ... carried in there out of the rain . Sometimes also the ears or unthreshed corn of the whole farm were first put in this ...
... carried upon two wheels ; the square surface has boards erected at the side , which , sloping outwards , make a ... carried in there out of the rain . Sometimes also the ears or unthreshed corn of the whole farm were first put in this ...
Page 28
... carried home and hung up ; and those for the press were put in baskets , and carried to the wine - press to be picked and then pressed . Olives were plucked by hand , and some selected for eating ; the rest were laid up in lofts for ...
... carried home and hung up ; and those for the press were put in baskets , and carried to the wine - press to be picked and then pressed . Olives were plucked by hand , and some selected for eating ; the rest were laid up in lofts for ...
Page 46
... carried to a distance by water ; though it appears from later writers to have been got almost for the trouble of removing . And leases of twenty - one years are recommended for persons of small capital , as better than employing it in ...
... carried to a distance by water ; though it appears from later writers to have been got almost for the trouble of removing . And leases of twenty - one years are recommended for persons of small capital , as better than employing it in ...
Contents
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Common terms and phrases
abundance acres agriculture animals appears atmosphere bark barley Berwickshire breed carbonic acid cattle chiefly climate cold colour Columella common considerable consists contain corn cotyledons covered cows crops cultivated culture degree districts drill dung earth East Lothian effect epidermis Europe farm farmers feet fibres Flanders flower fluid France fruit garden germination grain grass ground gypsum harrow heat herbaceous horses husbandry implements improved inches iron Italy juice kind labour land leaves less lime Lond machine maize manner manure matter means mode moisture mountains nature nourishment observed operation oxen oxygen pasture pericarp plants plough potatoes present principle produce proportion purpose quadrupeds quantity rain rollers Romans roots Russia Scotland season seed sheep soil sometimes sowing sown species substances surface temperature threshing threshing machine tillage trees turnips variety Varro vegetable vine weight wheat wheels winter wood
Popular passages
Page 10 - Woe unto them that join house to house, that lay field to field, till there be no place, that they may be placed alone in the midst of the earth...
Page iii - Improvement, and Management of Landed Property, and the Cultivation and Economy of the Animal and Vegetable Productions of Agriculture, including all the latest Improvements. A general History of Agriculture in all Countries, and a Statistical View of its present State, with suggestions for its future progress in the British Isles.
Page xiv - HORTUS GRAMINEUS WOBURNENSIS : Or, an Account of the Results of Experiments on the Produce and Nutritive Qualities of different Grasses, and other Plants, used as the Food of the more valuable Domestic Animals : instituted by John Duke of Bedford.
Page 351 - I had often, in the pride of half-knowledge, smiled at the means frequently employed by gardeners to protect tender plants from cold, as it appeared to me impossible that a thin mat or any such flimsy substance, could prevent them from attaining the temperature of the atmosphere, by which alone I thought them liable to be injured. But when I had learned that bodies on the surface of the earth become...
Page 10 - Doth the plowman plow all day to sow? doth he open and break the clods of his ground ? When he hath made plain the face thereof, doth he not cast abroad the fitches, and scatter the cummin, and cast in the principal wheat and the appointed barley and the rye in their place ? For his God doth instruct him to discretion, and doth teach him.
Page 130 - He also quoted some evidence in support of the view that the disease occurred at the end of the seventeenth and beginning of the eighteenth century in Germany and more definite evidence that it occurred in Upper Italy and Hungary in 1890.
Page 318 - The specific gravity of a soil, or the relation of its weight to that of water, may be ascertained by introducing into a phial, which will contain a known quantity of water, equal volumes of water and of soil ; and this may be easily done by pouring in water till it is half full, and then adding the soil till the fluid rises to the mouth ; the difference between the weight of the soil and that of the water will give the result.
Page 44 - My father was a yeoman and had no lands of his own ; only he had a farm of three or four pounds by the year at the uttermost, and hereupon he tilled so much as kept half a dozen men. He had walk for a hundred sheep and my mother milked thirty kine...
Page 192 - They plait and twist willows and roots of marsh plants or other materials together, which are light, but capable of supporting the earth of the garden firmly united. Upon this foundation they lay the light bushes which float on the lake ; and over all, the mud and dirt which they draw up from the bottom of the same lake.
Page 303 - 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...