British Farmer's Magazine, Tema 46

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James Ridgway, 1864
 

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Página 56 - 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 Institution.
Página 279 - Committee for the consideration of the measures which ought to be taken " for the improvement of the education of those who depend upon the cultivation of the soil for their support," this being declared by the Charter as the 7th national object to be prosecuted by the Society.
Página 10 - Bridport (chairman) presented the report, from which it appeared that the Secretary's receipts during the past mouth had been duly examined by the committee, and by Messrs.
Página 180 - The proper amount of some or all of these 11111*? be contained in the food supplied ; and no stimulant, or any other device, can substitute that necessary amount, if the animal is not to decrease in weight. If, on the other hand, the animal be required to increase in weight, as in the case of our growing and feeding stock, an additional amount of digestible and assimilable constituents is required, beyond that which, under otherwise equal circumstances, would keep the animal at a fixed weight. In...
Página 309 - GREY inquired whether there would be any objection on the part of the deputation to the Home Office furnishing copies of the memorials to the quarter sessions.
Página 255 - I shall adopt it as being generally understood. Organic manures are those which are capable of yielding to the plant, by decomposition or otherwise, organic matter — carbon, hydrogen, oxygen, and nitrogen — constituents which uncultivated plants derive originally from the atmosphere. Inorganic manures are those substances which contain the mineral ingredients, of which the ash of plants is found to consist.
Página 180 - ... matters, such as bran and chopped straw, will, by the admixture, be rendered palatable and nutritious. Now bran and chopped straw contain a large proportion of woody fibre ; which, though required for bulk by the ruminant animals, passes through their bodies in a finely-divided state, but otherwise almost unchanged. More or less of the soluble matters are extracted from such food during its passage ; but no evidence has been brought forward to show that these manufactured foods will so stimulate...
Página 292 - Williams introduces the air only at the front of the furnace, by means of cast iron casings, furnished on the outside with apertures provided with shutters, so as to vary the area at will, and perforated in the inside with a great number of half-inch holes. The mode of firing which Mr. Williams adopts merely consists in applying the fresh fuel alternately at opposite sides of the furnace, so as to leave one side bright whilst the other is black.
Página 165 - A very extended observation has proved that, other conditions being equal, the modification of form presented by the escutcheon will lead to an estimation, not of the quantity of milk which the animal will produce, but also of the time during which the cow will keep up the supply of milk. Without going much into detail on this point, I may briefly state...
Página 160 - ... be accumulated, and that important results to agriculture, as well as to other arts, may be hence deduced. DESCRIPTION OF THE TABLES. The numbers given, in the accompanying meteorological tables, are mostly those indicating average or mean results. The principle of deducing general laws from a multiplicity of facts or observations, though liable in themselves to error, is of the greatest value in modern...

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