American Agriculturist, Volume 9Orange Judd Company, Publishers, 1850 - Agriculture |
From inside the book
Results 1-5 of 96
Page 5
... Effects of .. 6 Value of ... 66 vs. Worn - out Land . 66 Water as a Fertiliser .. Forest Scenery of California .. Forge , Smith's Portable . Food Amount of Raised to an Acre .. Fowl , Extraordinary .... 66 Spanish 66 Tough , how to cook ...
... Effects of .. 6 Value of ... 66 vs. Worn - out Land . 66 Water as a Fertiliser .. Forest Scenery of California .. Forge , Smith's Portable . Food Amount of Raised to an Acre .. Fowl , Extraordinary .... 66 Spanish 66 Tough , how to cook ...
Page 7
... Effects of Shading .. Soils , Capacity for absorbing Fertilising Matter . " Naked , tend to Sterility .. Soup , Okra , how to make .. Sowing , Thick and Thin .. Sow , Prolific .... Sows , Spaying of .. Spanniel , Water ... Spade Culture ...
... Effects of Shading .. Soils , Capacity for absorbing Fertilising Matter . " Naked , tend to Sterility .. Soup , Okra , how to make .. Sowing , Thick and Thin .. Sow , Prolific .... Sows , Spaying of .. Spanniel , Water ... Spade Culture ...
Page 12
... effect of warming the ground , which it was intended to have produced , the heat is employed to remove the water which the lazy or shiftless owner should have got rid of by un- derdraining ; and the roots of the plants are of the air is ...
... effect of warming the ground , which it was intended to have produced , the heat is employed to remove the water which the lazy or shiftless owner should have got rid of by un- derdraining ; and the roots of the plants are of the air is ...
Page 13
... effect of atmospheric circulation is further shown , by the rapid growth of potted plants . These having a porous , fertile soil to revel in , thoroughly ventilated by a hole in the bottom of the pot , through which the air " Well ...
... effect of atmospheric circulation is further shown , by the rapid growth of potted plants . These having a porous , fertile soil to revel in , thoroughly ventilated by a hole in the bottom of the pot , through which the air " Well ...
Page 16
... effect , particularly on a stiff clay soil . The writer thus describes it : It is so easily constructed that any carpenter can make one ; nay , so simple is it , that a neigh- bor of mine made a temporary one of his har- row sledge ...
... effect , particularly on a stiff clay soil . The writer thus describes it : It is so easily constructed that any carpenter can make one ; nay , so simple is it , that a neigh- bor of mine made a temporary one of his har- row sledge ...
Other editions - View all
Common terms and phrases
191 Water st A. B. ALLEN acre Agricultural Agriculturist American ammonia animals ashes Bates better birds breed bull bushels C. M. SAXTON calved Canada lynx cattle cents clay Connecticut corn cotton covered cows crop cultivation ditch draining drills Duchess Duke Duke of Cambridge Duke of Northumberland earth eggs England farm farmers feed feet fence fertilising field Foggathorpe fowls fruit garden give grain grass ground grow guano half harrow herd hills horse important improvement inches kind labor land lime machine manure ment miles milk oats plants plaster plow potash potatoes poultry pounds produce profitable quantity Rape Seeds roots salt saltpetre season seed sheep shorthorns soil sold spring straw subsoil sugar swamp tion trees valuable vegetable wheat winter wire wood yard yield York
Popular passages
Page 345 - Mr. Bruce states J, that in the last operation for colouring the green teas, " a mixture of sulphate of lime and indigo, very finely pulverized and sifted through fine muslin, in the proportion of three of the former to one of the latter, is added...
Page 56 - ... charged with collecting and diffusing information, and enabled by premiums, and small pecuniary aids, to encourage and assist a spirit of discovery and improvement. This species of establishment contributes doubly to the increase of improvement, by stimulating to enterprise and experiment, and by drawing to a common centre the results everywhere of individual skill and observation, and spreading them thence over the whole nation. Experience accordingly has shown, that they are very cheap instruments...
Page 359 - DESCRIPTIVE ACCOUNT OF A NEW METHOD of PLANTING and MANAGING the ROOTS of GRAPE VINES. By CLEMENT HOARE, Author of " A Treatise on the Cultivation of the Grape Vine on Open Walls.
Page 56 - No direct aid has been given by the general government to the improvement of agriculture, except by the expenditure of small sums for the collection and publication of agricultural statistics, and for some chemical analyses, which have been, thus far, paid for out of the patent fund.
Page 39 - COMPRISING THE ORIGIN, HISTORY AND DESCRIPTION OF THE Different Breeds of Domestic Poultry, with Complete Directions for their Breeding, Crossing, Rearing, Fattening and Preparation for Market; including specific directions for...
Page 167 - American Bee Keeper's Manual ; being a Practical Treatise on the History and Domestic Economy of the Honey Bee, embracing a full illustration of the whole Subject, with the most approved Methods of Managing this Insect through every Branch of its Culture, the Result of many Years
Page 56 - ... analyses, which have been thus far paid for out of the patent fund. This aid is, in my opinion, wholly inadequate. To give to this leading branch of American industry the encouragement which it merits, I respectfully recommend the establishment of an agricultural bureau, to be connected with the Department of the Interior. To elevate the social condition of the agriculturist, to increase his prosperity, and to extend his means of usefulness to his country, by multiplying his sources of information,...
Page 217 - ... accumulate in a pond or reservoir, and let out occasionally, so that none be lost or run to waste. If there is but a small quantity, it must be husbanded and made to flow over as great a surface as possible. If there is water only at particular seasons of the year, and at a time when it would not be of much...
Page 77 - Potato, their much-respected guest." (Immense cheering.) He, the Onion, had known the Potato from infancy ; and though they had not always been associated in life, they had frequently met at the same table. They had sometimes braved together the same broils, and had found themselves often together in such a stew (He alluded to the Irish .'•••"} as had brought them, for the time being, into an alliance of the very closest kind.
Page 293 - Bight or nine months after the sucker has been inserted in the earth the banana begins to form its clusters, and the fruit may be gathered in less than a year. When the stalk is cut, there is always found among the numerous shoots which have put forth roots one that bears three months later.