c* THE RURAL ECONOMY O F NORFOLK: COMPRISING THE Management of Landed Eliates AND THE PRESENT PRACTICE of HUSBANDRY JN THAT COUNTY. By Mr. MARSHALL, (Author of MiNUTEsoF Agriculture, &C.1 Resident upwards of Two Years in Norfolk. IN TWO VOLUMES. VOL. L LONDON: printed for T. C A D E L L, in the STRANa, M,DCC,LXX.XVn. ADDRESS TO THE PUBLIC, THE utility of full and faithful Re- giflers of the prefent pradice of Hulbandry, in well-cultivated Diftrids, occurred to me about ten years ago j-^ when, in a journey of four or five hundred miles through the central parts of the Ifland, I experienced the inutiiity of a tranjient 'uieiv ; but, at the fame time„ clearly favv' the advantages which would ac- crue from a TVv'ELVE-MONTHS-RESlDENCE in the immediate Dillrid; of the practice to be regiftered. At that time, however, I was too bufily employed in regiftering my own practice * to think of extend- "^ See Minutes of Agricultukf., in Svrrey. A Z. ing i?000833 iv ADDRESS. ing my Regider, in anyway, to the prac- tice of others. — But being fortunately re- leafed from my connexion in Surrey, and having prepared for publication my Experiments and Observations con- cerning Agriculture andthe^EATU-E.'R, I found leifureto reflect more maturely on the means of perfecting thefyflem, w^hich I had, with much deliberation, iketched out, and which I had in part filled up, from my own pradlice. In February 1780, I fubmitted to the Society of Arts in London, as the firfl: So- ciety,, profeflcdly Agricultural, in the kifigdom, the following Plan. PLAN C V ) i» L A N FOR PROMOTING AGRICULTURE. THE knowledge of Agriculture ei- ther refults from experience, limply; ot is acquired through the united efforts of experience and theory. Theory may facilitate, by analyzing the fubjedt, and giving a comprehenfive view of the fcienfcc in general ; — eluci- date, by commenting on the experience already acquired ; — accelerate, by pro- pofing fit fubjeds for future invefl:iga« tions 5— but cannot convey any certain information without the aid and concur- rence of experience. The experience of Agriculture is ac- quired through adequate obfervation, cither on felf-pradice^ or on the prac- tice of others. The pradice of an individual, how^ ever, is generally limited to fome parti- A ^ culat vi ADDRESS cular branch of management, on fome certain foil and fituation -, and a general knowledge of Agriculture mull: not be expected from the pradtice of any one man. A man, nevefthelefs, who has fpent a long life in the praftice of fome certain department, muft necefiarily have ac- quired a confiderable (liare of know- ledge of that particular department : and it is probable, that were the know- ledge of the individuals who excel in the feveral departments of huibandry, — were the. knowledge of the ableft farmers in the beft-cultivated parts of the ifland colleded, Englifn Agri- culture would be found, at this day, to be far advanced towards perfedion. But the individuals who excel in agri- culture, are unknown to each other -, and, if affociated, could not probably communicate their knowledge, with any degree of precifion : for their art being the refult of habit, it is too fa- miliar to be minutely defcribed. Their farms TO THE PUBLIC. vu farms are the only records in which it is regiftered, and even there it is as fleetins as the hour in which it is per- formed. Nothing but actual obferva- tion, and immediately regiflering in writing the feveral operations, as they pafs throughout the year, can render the pradtice of individuals of extenfive fervice to the Public. In fhort, the art of agriculture muft ever remain imperfe(ft while it is fuffer- ed to languiih in the memory, and die with the practitioner : Record, only, can perpetuate the artj and System, alone, render the fcience comprehen- five *. Mr. Marfhall has already fubmitted to the Public a regifter of his own pracftice during five years -, compre- hending a plan for acquiring agricul- tural knowledge, fyflematically, from * What Dr. Johnfon fays of Language is applicable to Agriculture -*' Didtion merely vocal is always '* in its childhood. As no man leaves his eloquence " behind him, the new generations have all to learn," '^joiitfiry to the IVfJtern IJlandi of StotlancL A 4 feif- vui ADDRESS felf-pradtice -f; which plan is equally applicable to the practice of others 3 provided the obfervations be performed without remiffion, and by one who is accuftomed to agricultural obfervation. He has alfo endeavoured to trace out the foundation of a fyfLem, fo far as his Qwn pra<5tice has extended. His present Plan is, to extend his obfervations to the pradice of others; more efpecially as it appertains to the breeding, rearing, and fatting of cattle to the dairy management, — to the management of fheep, — to the drain- ing and watering of meadows, — and to the p-rafs-land, or ley-management in o-enerah After he is become profici- ent in thefe departments, his intentions are to extend his survey of provincial AGRICULTURE to the arable or plow- management. His intended mode of obfervation is this : Having pitched upon the branch of management to be ftudied, and the 4 See Experiments and Obfervations, as above. diftria: TO THE PUBLIC. IX diftrid: which excels in the pradice of that particular branch, he propofes to fix his place of refidence, during TWELVEMONTHS, in a farm-houfe ; — if poffible, in the houfe of the bell- informed farmer in the diiirid pitched upon ; and there, with daily attention^ minutely obferve and regifler the living praftice which furrounds him : not the pradice of theoretical, but of profef- fional farmers ; or rather the provincial practice of the diftrid, county, or coun- try obfcrved ; neverthelefs attending to improvements and excellencies, by whomfoever pracftifed. Nor is his plan confined merely to obfervation : he means to acquire by feif-pradice a competent knowledge of the MANUAL OPERATIONS incident to the department of huibandry which is the immediate object of his fludy ; as alfo to collect fuch implements and UTENSILS as may appear peculiarly adapted to the parpofes for which they are feverally intended j not iketches nof mcdehj X A t) D R E S ^ nicdels, but the inftruments themfelvfes which he has feen in common ufe 5 and of whofe ufes he has acquired, by manual px'-adlice, an adequate know- ledge. In order tofurnilh himfelf with every advantage which may forward his gene- ral defign, his further intentions are to employ his leifure in taking a com- plete Review of written Agricul- ture, from Fitz -Herbert, in 1534, to the prefent time {excepting the Works of fuch authors as may be living at the time of cicfing the Review); and, after his judgement has been ma- tured by a furvey of provincial prac- tice, to comprefs into as narrow a com- pafs as may be, the ufeful information relative to Britifh Agriculture, which has been already recorded; whether it appears in incidents and experiments fuiiiciently authenticated, or in hints which may furnifli fubjeds for future experiment. Briefly,— his plan is, reciprocally to receive and to offer information ; — to corn- TO THE PUBLIC. ^ communicate provincial pradice to the Public at large ; —to collect and com- prefs the ufeful information which is at prelent widely fcattered in almoft num- berlefs volumes ; — and to reduce thefe joint accumulations of agricultural knowledge to fyftematic fcience : con- fequentl}^ to offer to the prefent and fucceeding generations a comprehenfive System of English Agriculture, as it now flands ; -and to raife it on a balls fo ample and fcientific, as that future acquifitions may be added to it from time to time. CN xii A D j:> R E S S ON THE EIGHTH of the fucceed^ ing month the Society were pleafed id pals the following Refolutions t " Resolvld, ** That the colkcling a general know- *' ledge of the Agriculture of the king- " dom, as propofed by Mr. Mariliall; ** may be highly ufeful. ** PvESOLVED, " That as it is net the pradlice of* th^ ** Society to adopt the execution of plarl^ " of this kind, the Societ}^ cannot engage ** in the undertaking. " Resolved, ** That Mr. Marfhall have liberty to " confult the Books of Agriculture in the ** poffeilion of the Society, and to infpedt ** the feveral Machines and Models in " their repoiitories," THESE TO THE PUBLIC acu THESE RESOLUTIONS, though they afforded no real affiftance, ferved to eftablifh the ufefulnefs of the plan. Ihe means of carrying it into execution remain- ed now the only object of cpnfideratlon. An application to PARLIAMENT was thought of, and ftrongly recommended ; but at a time when public economy had become a necellary and prevailing principle, and when the immediate prefervation of the flate called for every hour of parlia- mentary deliberation, it would have beeai highly improper to have attempted to draw off the attention of Parliament to any other objed:, however ufeful. But being thus embarked, it was thought advifeable to proceed fo far, at leafl, as to make the Plan know?! to thofe whom it particularly concerns ; — and it was ac- cordingly communicated to feveral of the principal Nobility, and to fome few Gen- tlemen of landed Property. Its reception, however, was not fuch as I confidered it to be intitled to ; and in this fpecimen there were fufficient grounds to convince me of what might be expeded from Individuals. - I have XVI ADDRESS I therefore folded my Plan; — with, however, a degree of relu5iance ; — becaufe I was confident that, were it carried into execution, it would be produdliveof much public good ', — but without any fhare of regret ; — becaufe I had fully difcharged my duty to my Country, to m.-^ profejjion, and to my f elf. In Auguft 1780, I went down into Norfolk, as agent to Sir HarbordHarbord's eftate 3 — one of the firfl in that county. The management of EJiates, though a fifler-art to Agriculture, or the manage- ment of Farms, was in a manner new to me; and, though intimately connected with my Plan, had never ftruck me, as being, what it really is, an infeparable de- partment of Rural Economy. Eftate- Agency, it is true, has always been treated of by writers as a dilHnd: fubjecft; but it has generally been found proper to explain, in the fame book, the leading branches of Agriculture; for, beyond difpute, the ma- nagement of an Eftate cannot be con- duced TO THE PUBLIC. ^t dudled with propriety by any man unac- quainted with the management of a Farrn. Norfolk is not more celebrated for its iyftem of hufbandry, than for a fuperior knowledge in the managemen|; of landed Eftates, which is there reduced to a regu- lar bufinefs. I was Angularly fortunate in my fitua- tion • I had not only an opportunity qf feeing the effecfls of improper management committed by thofe who had gone before me ; but of profiting by my own experi- ence (thereby much extended) in endea- vouring to do away the evil effeds. With refped: to husbandry, too, I had every advantage : I had an opportunity of employing my leifure in adual prad:ice, on a large fcale : the Agency, of courfe, afforded me an extent of country to range over, and make my obfervations upon, at will : and, I am happy in being able to add, a number of fenfible men, — fome of them at the head of their profef- fion,^ — were always ready to give mc, without yvi ADDRESS without referve^ every information I afked for. Thus, — in a manner totally unforcfeen, i — I became pofTeiled of an opportunity, not only of extending my plan to an im- portant purpofc I had not thought of, but of executing the part I had propofed, in a manner which the whole landed Interert: could not, without an agency, have en- abled me to have done. I therefore embraced every opportunity of regiflering the ufeful ideas which oc- curred, whether in hufbandry, or in eftate-agency : but (I think proper to mention in this place) without any view at that tifnCi of carrying the whole of my plan into execution. At length, however, iinding, that I could no longer conduct the eftate, — in a manner, which, to my own mind, appeared to be right ;— I loft no time in finifhing a RegiAer of the Rural Economy of the county ;j and, ii> November 1782, Heft Norfolk. Slaving thought it neceflary to fay this much, in explanation of the following work. TO THE PUBLIC. XVU worki it would be a want of gratitu le not to add, that, how greatly focvcr Sir Harbord Harbord and myfelf might differ upon matters oi Bicfmefs, I flatter myfelf I fhall always retain a proper fenfe of the perfonal civilities I had the honor of re- ceiving, during my refidence at Gunton. Before I clofe this Addrefs, it may be proper to inform the Public, that it is my intention, at prefent, to iiniili the pro- pofed Plan, upon an enlarged bails ; hav- ing now extended it, not only to the Management of landed Estates, but to Planting ; an art upon which, fome time ago, I digefted my ideas, and in which I have, fmce, had an opportunity of extending m.y pradice : thus, purpo' fing to refiore to their natural union the THREE branches ofRuK AL ECONOMICS. London, jft Ftb. 1727. Vol. I. CONTENTS OF THE F I R S, T VOLUME. 3 ■TnIstrict, ■*-^ ESTA.TE3, P ige r 3. 6 3- Farms, — 8 ^■. Soils, — n 5- Manures, — 15 6. Fi-RMERS, Page 37 7. Workmen, — 4a S. Horses, — 4^ 9. Implements, 50 10. Taxes, — (Lj, II. General Management of Estates. 66 j2. Buildings, — ^^ li ^^' ^^^^3^^» — 9^ 13. Gates, — 9-i- 11 ^-S- Inclol'ures. — 116 16. Planting, and the Ma-nagement oFTimber, 119 17. General Management cf Farms, 12 c 18. 39. ^7- 23. 29. 50. 33- Laying-out, Succeffion, >Soil-PiGcefs, Manure- Pro. Seed-Procers, Wheat, Barley, Oats, Peas, Vetches, Buck, TURNEPS, 130 132 137 150 1.67 201 233 245 248 252 -5 5 ■56 34. Cult. Grasses, 301 23. Vegetating-Pro. 170 24. Hai-veft-Proccls, 1S4 ^5- Farm -Yard Management, iScj 26. Markets. — 195 5 5- Nat. Grasses, 310 36. Cattle, — 325. 37- Sheep, — 362. 38. Rabbits, — 373 39- Swine, — 373. 40. Poultry, — 375 41. Decoys, — 277 42; Bees. — 3S1. Ltjt of Rates, 3^: IV THE RURAL ECONOMY O F NORFOLK. I. THE DISTRICT. THE County, confidered as a fubjcft of Rural Economy, is aptly divifible into East, West, and South-Norfolk. The southern Hundreds partake of the iSufiblk pra(ftice ; and, though well cultivated, .do not exhibit, in its purity, the Norfolk SYSTEM OF HUSBANDRY. The western divifion is either marlhy, low land, applied chiefly to the dairy, after jthe manner of Cambrldgefliire ; or open fheep- walks and extenfive heaths, whofe flock are Vol, I. • B ilieep 2 DISTRICT. ;> fheep and rabbits ; or ncwly-inclofed country ('chiefly of the laft defcription), in which no general pLm of management has yet taken place. In East-Norfolk, alone, wz are to look for that regular and long-eRablifncd fyficm of pradlice which has raifed, defcrvedly, the name of Norfolk hufbandmen ; and which, in a principal part of ihis Dif-ritT:, remains unadulterated to the prefent time *. The climature of Eaft-Norfolk is cooler than that of other Diftrids, in this Ifland, fituated on the fame degree of latitude; namely, fifty-three degrees. The feafons, here, are from a week to ten dqys later than they are in the neighbqurhood of the metropolis. * The largeft fortunes have been made by fanners in Weft-Norfolk : not, however, by any fuperior fyliem of inanagement praftifcd in that divifion of the county ; but through extenfive trads of flieep-walks, and other frejh grounil^ held by individual.-, having been indcfcdy markJy hrakrn npy and fubjccled to the mana^cmtnt rf E afl -Norfolk ; ivhcre, farms being comparatively fmall, and having been jnciofed, marled, and plowed, time immemorial, there was j),ot room to make a Mallet, —a Dursgate, — or a Mar- tin'. Viewing the (late of hufbandry in Well-Norfolk, colleftively, it is much beneath that of the Difirid here def- cribcd, The ;. NORFOLK. | The surface of this Dlftrict, though the foil be dry, is an ahiiod uniform flat; except a border toward the fea-coaft, which is broken, and, in many places, bold and picl'urefque | and, excepting the more fonthern Hundreds, in which marflies, fens, and lakes, provinclally ?' BaOiiDs," fqme of them of considerable ex- tent, abound. The rivers of Eaft-Norfolk are fmall and few in number; but its rivulets are nu- merous;— -interfccling its flatted furface in a fingular and happy manner. Inland navigation's, Notwithflanding, Jiowever, the fmallncfs of the rivers, the na- tural flatnefs of the country renders them capable of being made navigable: ihe Yare furnifhcs a R iVER navigatiom between Yar- mouth and Norwich ; as the Thyrn, called the North River, does from Yarmouth, through the Broads, to Dilham near North-Walfham ; and out of this proceeds a canal na,vi- pATioN to Aylefliam. The roads, no.twithfLanding King Charles v/as pleafed to fay the county of Norfolk was only fit to be cut out into roads for the reft yf his kingdom, are unpardonably bad ; — B 2 narrow 4 DISTRICT. I. narrow, fhaded, and never mended : they are numerous, however, efpecially the bridle- roads ; fo that a traveller, on horfcback, has generally the choice of two or three ways, of nearly equal length, to the fame place. Not a foot of turnpike-road in the DiMridl ; excepting the road between Nor'wich and Yar- mouth. The inclosures are, in general, fmal!, and the hedges high and full of trees. This has a fmgular efFtd; in travelling through the country: the eye feems ever on the verge of a foreft, which is, as it were by enchantment, ^continually changing intoinclofures and hedge- rows. There is not, generally fpeaking, a piece of wood-land or a coppice in the whole Diflrid ; and even plantations are thinly and partially fcattered. A common or a heath (vvhich not unfrequently occurs even in this part of Norfolk) is the only variety the face of the country affords. Some remnants of common-fields ftill remain ; bur, in general, they are not larger than well-fized inciofures. Upon the whole, Eaft-Norfolk at large may be fald to be a very old-in'closed country. Tn5 i: NORFOLK. 5 The towns of Ealt-Norfolk are few. AV- wich. Tar mouth, and North-Walfcam, are its principal markets. Ilut the fmaller ports of Blakeney, Cromer^ and Munjley, are bene- ficial in afTilting to draw off the produce of the Diflrid: ; efpecially that of the northern Hundreds. For a particular defcription of the Flcg Hundred, fee Min. io6. Of the eaftern cdaft, fee Min. 112. Of Blowfield Hundred and the Yarmouth Marfnes, fee Min. 118, ESTATES. 6 ESTATES. 2. 1. ESTATES. FORMERLY, in this Diilria:, were many fmall Owners — Yeomen — provlncially called " Hatcfmcp/' who cultivated their cwn eilates. — I'hcre were infcances of entire pariihcs be- ing occupied by this refpeclable clafs of men. But, among other evil e.^efts of that inordinate paffion for farming, which pre- vailed fome years ago, the decline of the indeoendency of this country is a ftriking one. I'he vecmanrv, heretofore indepemlant and refpeilcd, feeing men, whom they had lately held as their inferiors, raifcd, by an excef- five prone which had recently been made by farming, to a degree of affluence fnperior to their own, and living in a Piyle of exnava- gance their anceQoTs had been ftrangers to,- became diiHrtisfied with the homelincfs of their ficUation in life, and either launched out into extravagances ill luited to their income, or voluntarily fold their comparatively fmall pa- 2'. NORFOLK. ^ patrimonies, in order that they might, agree- iibly with the fafliion or frenzy of the day,- become great farmers. By this means many of thofe comfortable' [ilaces which were thickly fcattercd over Eaft- Norfolk, have fallen into the hands of men of fortune ; and are now become united with their laree eflatcs. There are, neverthelefs, fome few fmall bwners dill remaining : but very few of the poilcflions, even of thofe, are freehold; the COPYHOLD tenure being prevdlcnt through- but the Diflridt; which contains fome very txtenlive, and, even to this diiv, iuerative, j'^iJANORS, B ^ FARMS. » FA R M S. 3. FARMS. THE FARMS of Eafc-Norfolk are princi- pally inckfed-y there being, as has been al- ready obferved, few common-fields at pre- fent in this Dillrift ; and thele few are in general very fmall ; ten, twenty, or thirty acres ; cut into patches and fhreds of two or three acres, down to half an acre, or, perhaps, a rood each *. But another fpecies of Intermixture, much more difagreeable to the occupier, is here An- gularly prevalent. It is very common for an inclofure, lying, perhaps, in the centre of an otberwife entire farm, to be cut in two by a flip of glebe or other land lying in it ; and fiill more common for fmall inclofures to be fimilarly fituated* Thefe inconveniencies have, no doubt, arifen from common-fields having been inelofed by * The central parts of the Diib-ifl: are more particulaily fpoken of: towards the north coaft, feme pretty exteniive common-fields ftill remain open; and fome fev^ in the fou- thern Hundreds. piece- 3. N O R F b L K. § piecemeal, without the general confent of the proprietors* They are, however, incon- veniencies which fire evefy year decrealing : many beneficial exchanges of intermixed lands have lately taken place, and many more equally advaniageoiis renuiin yet to be made Cfee MiN. 4. on this fubjedt). But notwithftanding thefe intermixtures r.nd irregularities, ave. ftiU too prevalent, and not- withftanoing fcattered and '' one-fided" farms are fmgularly abundant, there are many com- pa(ft ring-fence farms to be met with in the Diflrifb, The sizes of farms, at prefent, are of the middle cail ; few under fifty pounds, and fewer above three hundred pounds a year. Formerly they were much faialler ; but the numerous little places of the yeomanry having fallen into the hands of men of fortune, and being now. incorporated with their extended eftates, are laid out into farms of fuch fizes, as bell fuit the intereft, or the conveniency, of the prefcnt proprietors. The characteristic of farms, in this Diilri6t, is, invariably, arable up-land ; — • with, generally, a fjnail proportion of moory ffrafs- ta FAR M i §: grafsland, called meadow. Many, however^ of the fmaller farms, and fome of thofe of confiderablc fize, have no grafsland whatever belon^ino: to them. In this cafe marshes,- or GRAZiNG-GRbuNDS, at, pcrhaps, twenty or thirty miles diftance:, arc frequently hired by the occupiers of thefe farms. But, viewing the Diftridt at large, the grafs- land bears fo fmall a proportion to the arable j that its leading charadteriftic is that Of art ARABLE COUNTRT; SOILS. O R F O L K. It 4* SOILS. A SINGULAR uniformity ol" foil prevails throughout this country : there h not, per- haps, an aci-c in it which does not come under the idea of a sandy loam. Its qualityj however, varies widely, both ns to texture and produ(flivcnefs. The nor- thern part of the D lurid abounds with bar- i-en heaths and unfertile iticlofures ; while the fouthgrn Hundreds are principally covered with a richer, deeper, highly produdlive foil.- The foil, in general, however, may b^ termed fliallow : perhaps fix, perhaps fi\'idj inches may be taken as the medium depth. Inim^iately under the cultivated foil, a liaid eruit — provincially "the pan" — occurs nniverfally •, and under this fubftrata of va- rious qualitieSj an unfathomable aczan of fa-nd may be confidercd as the prevailing fubilra' turn. In feme places a hungry gravrl, but more frequently an abforbent brick-earth, is the immediat;.' sus-soil.- Marl fometimes rifes fz SOI L s: 4: fifes to near the furfacc, but fcldoiii fo high is thc^^;?. Ti^is fccms to be urlverfally ccnfidered a?: a diftinfl fomething, poifonous in its nature, and partaiving heither of the foil nor the fub- foil. It is not my intention to ridicule this received opinion; it may be welt founded; but J to me, tne pan appcrars to be a pro- dudlion not of nature, but of art ; or, to" fpeak more accurately, a confe(juence of the Norfolk culture carried on, time im.mem.orial, with the Norfolk plow ;— whole broad flat fhare being held in'-aiiably in a horizontal pofirion, and (unlefs in fallowing) invari- ably at the fame depth, the furface of the fubfoil becomes formed, by the action of the iliare, the prcffure and llidinp- of the heel of the plow, and the trampling of the horfc, into a firm, even floor, upon which che foil is turned, and re-turned, in the fame manner p would be, if fprcad on a floor of flone, or other material. But be this as it may, an^d whether the pan be a natural or a fadtitious produ£lion,-— it is a fadt well eftabliflied, tliat breaking it up by plowing below the accufiomed depth, is vtry injurious to luccceding crops. Two ^ NORFOLK. 13 Two reafons may be offered in explanatioi| of this effedt : the pan, year after year, and, perhaps, century after century, has been a receptacle of the feeds of weeds ; which, by being trodden or ocherwife prefled into it, have remained there, locked up from the fui> and air, and, thereby, deprived of the powtr of vegetation. But no fooncr are thefc feeds releafed from tbcir confinement by being brought to the furfacc wiih the plow, than they vegetate in myriads to the annoyance of the crop. The other reafon is this : — the firm clofe contexture of the pan renders it in a degree water-tight; it is, at leaft, a check to the rain-water, which finks through the foil ; prq- longing its flay in the fphere of vegetation. But the pan being broken, the filter is no more ; and the rain, which is not imme- diately retained by the foil, efcapes irretriev- ably into an infatiable bed of fand, — or fome other abforbent fubfoil. For, if we except a few quickfands, which occur on the margins of meadows, and the peat-bogs which occupy their areas, there is nor, -in the Diflrid:, an acre of retentive subsoil. The H SOILS. The Norfolk foil, however, is not vvithoiit Its partial evils : — '' fcalds" are as pcniir cious in Norfolk, as quickfands and fpringy patches arc in cold-foiled countries; and, what is vvorfe, they are, perhaps, incurable ; while a partial retcntivenefs may be eafily removed. Thefe scalds are probably occasioned by a partial abforbency ; namely, by a more abr; forbent fubfoil being interfperfed in patches among one which is kfs abforbent ; and, gene- rally, perhaps, by " heads" or prominent parts of the univerfal lubftru(3:iire fand, rifing up through a ftratum of brick-earth ; in the manner that ** heads of marl" flioot np to,- wards the furface : as will be dcfcribed in the next fecftion. For iiiflances of the abforbency of th\? Norfolk fubfoil', fee Mm. 59. l-'or obfervations on the ditch-mould o'f Is^'orfolk, fee Min. 77. For obfervations on the foils of the Flcg Hundreds, fee Mint. 106. For general obfervations on the friability of the Norfolk foils, fee Min. 106. Fc-i ^. NORFOLK. i^ For obfervations on the foil of the eallcni foaft, fee MiN. 112. For obfervations on the foil of Blowfield Hundred, fee Min. iiS. For inftance of fcalds benig injured by .|vei; weather, fee Min. 121. MANURES. UNDER this head I purpofe to enumerate the different fpecies of manure ; and de- fcribe, fo far as the obfervations I have been able to make will enable me, their refpedtivc natures. The principal fpecies made ufe of in this Diftridl are : — Marl, Dung, Clay, Compoft, Mould, Teathe of cattle^ Lime, Sheep-fold, Aflies, Soot, Rape-cake, Malt-dufl, &c. The i6 M A N U R E S. 5. I. The grand foflil manure of Norfolk is MARL; through whofc fertilizing quality^ judicioiifly applied, lands, which feem by nature to have been intended as a fcanty maintenance for fheep and rabbits, are ren- dered capable of fattening bullocks of the largeft fize, and of finifl|ing them in the high eft rnanncr. There are, in this Diftrift, two fpecies pf marl, very difcind: in their general appearances j though their quality of fertilising be fimilar. The central and northern parts of the Diftrid: abound, upiverfally, with a wjliitiih- coloured chalk-marl ; while the Fleg Hun- dreds, and the eaftern coafl, are equally fortu- nate in a ffrev-coloured clay-marl. The firfl has, in all probability, been ip vfc as a manure many pentpries ; there are oaks of confiderable fize now going to decay in pits which have obvioufly been heretofore in ufe, and vyhich.a perhaps, flill remain in uie, as marl-pits. The ufe of clay-marl, as a mianure, feems to be a much later difcovery ; even yet, there are farmers who are blind to its good effed: ; becaufe it is not 77jari, but ^' clav;" by which name it is univerfaliy known. Th-e I-. NORFOLK. 17 The name, however, would be a thing of ho import, were it not indifcrimlnately ap- plied to uncftuous earths in general, whether they contain, or not, any portion of calcareous matter. Nothing is " marl" which is not white J for, notwithftanding the county has been fo long and fo largely indebted to its fertilizing quality, her hufbandmen, even in this enlightened age, remain totally ignorant of its diftinguifhing properties : through which want of information much labour and expence is frequently thrown away. One man feeing the good efFedt of the Fleg clay, for inftance, concludes that all clays are fertile ; and, finding a bed of flrong brick- earth upon his farm, falls to work, at a great expenee, te " claying :"^-while another, ob- ferving this man's mifcarriage, concludes that all clays are unprofitable; and, in confer quence, is at an expenee^ equally ill-applied, of fetching " marl'* from a great diftance ; while he has, perhaps, in his own farm, if judicioully fought after, an earth of a qua- lity equally fertilizing with that he is throw- ing away his time and his money in fetchinp-. Vol. I. C This it Manures, 5. This is a flrong evidence of the utility of chemical knowledge in the inveftigation of fofTil manures. Before I left the county, I coUeded a va- riety of fpecimens of marls, clays, and foils of different parts of it. Thefe, with a ftill greater variety which I have colleftcd in other parts of the kingdom, I hope to find leifure, at fome future time, to analyze-, and, from the refults, endeavour to draw fome ge- neral inferences. At prefent I Hiall confine myfclf to 1. The chalk-marl of Thorp-market, in the Hundred of North-Erpingham ; 2. The clay-marl of Hemfby, in the Hun- dred of Eaft-Fleg; 3. The foft chalk of Thorp-next-Nor- wich J commonly called Norwich marl ; and to 4. The hard chalk of Swaffham. I. Chalk-marl of Thorp-Market. The natural fituation of the white marls of this Diftrld is Angular : they do not lie in ftrata, as foflils in general do ; — nor in a con- tinuation of rock^ like chalk and limeftone ; but §; N O R F O L K. i^ but in diftindt malTes, of different figures and magnitudes, riling with irregular heads toward the furface, and finking to, perhaps, ten, perhaps, twenty feet deep, and fome- times to a depth linfathomed. If the abyfs 'bf fand, in which they lie buried, could be rendered tranfpareht, thefe clouds of marl would, I apprehend, be feen fcattered under the furface of this country, in refemblahce bf the clouds of vapour, which we fre^ C|uentlyj in fummer, fee fufpended in the at- mofphere. ^/6(? general appearance of thefe marls differs, hot only in different beds or " jams ;'* but the fame jam generally affords marl of diife- irent appearances and qualities : the lipjper part is lifually fouler and niore friable, while the lower parts of the jam are of a purer, firmer, moxc chalk-like nature ; and are ufually interfperfed with " chalk-ftortes -^^ n^lmelyj lumps of 'chalk, firm enough to be ufed in writing ; and with flints, fimiUr to thofe ufually found in chalk-pits of other diftricls. The fpccimen befbre me was taken from l:he middle of a ten-foot jam. The general appearance is that of a dirty, rough, friable G 2 ci^alk 5 20 MANURES. 5. chalk ; its colour being fomewhat darker, and its contexture fomewhat fofter, and more brittle, than the common writing-chalks of Surrey and Kent. In the open air, it hreaks readily, and in- corporates freely with the foil. In water, it falls in a manner inltanta- neouily * ; but dijfolves not, in any proportion, in this element -f. In the fire, it lofes more than one-third of its weight J, and burns to lime^. * A piece of this zw^r/ plunged into water fell wida a fmart crackling noife in a few feconds : but a fmall piece of chalk contained in it, received no change frora the water. Hence we have a fimple differential tcjl of thcfe 'two foflils. ■j- One hundred grains pulverized, dried, weighed, placed in a filter, flooded repeatedly with cold and warm water, dried, weighed; — received not the fmalleft per- ceptible diminution of weight. j A piece, weighing fifty grains, retained in a ftrong fire three hours, loft eighteen grains and a half; weigh- ing, when cool, thirty-one giainj and a half. § The pit from whence the fpeclmen made ufe of ia this analyiis was taken, being worked as a lime-quarry, 1 had repeated opportunities of obferving the effect of the lime, both as a manure and a'; a builJing-matcrial. Its Itrength and operation, in both cafes, are, as far as common obfervation can judge, limilar to thofe of the chalk-limes of Surrey and Kcnu In ^, NORFOLK, ar In the acid of fea-falt, the principal part of it is dijfolved, and taken up by the acid ; leav- ing a fmall proportion, of grofs earthy matter, undilTolved. Of one hundred grains of this marl, — pulverized, dried, weighed, mixed with water, and faturated with this acid, — eighty- five grains pafs through the filter ; leaving a rcfidue of fifteen grains : two-thirds of which is palpable, confifting chiefly of fand and flint; one-third a fine impalpable clay-like matter ; mixing freely with water ; — fome part of it fubfiding with reluxftance, Afolutwn of fait of tartar,, add-ed to the fil- tered liquor, precipitates the whole of the diflTolved matter ; in a fnow-white powder : which being retained two hours and a half in a flrong fire, 1-ofes five-twelfths of its weight *, and is concreted into a porous, friable ajh- coloured mafs of quick-lime -, which being re-fufpended in acid, and again precipitated, regains the weight loft in the fire, and regains lis fnowy whitenefs. * Thirty grains of the powder, perfectly dried, loft fomewhat more than twelve grains and a half; the lime, when taken out of the crucible, weighing fomewhat lefs jhau fcvcutcen grains and a half. C 3 there- 22 MANURE S. 5. therefore, it is highly probable, that the fallible matter of this marl is a pure, or near- ly a pure, cnlctirecus earth -^f. We may therefore venture to fet down, as the component parts of one hundred grains, of this n:iarl, which may be taken as a fair fpecimen of the \A.hite marls of thisDiftri^, 8 J grahij of chalk, 10 grains of fand, 5 grains of ciay. 2. The Clay-Marl of Hemsby. In its mitural Jlate, it is fituarcd in extcn- five bedsor jams of confiderable depth (feeMiN-- 106). Its colour, when dry, fomewhat lighter than that of fuller's earth, flightly tinged with j'pecks of a yellowifh- brown colour : its ccn- texture that of a gi'itty fuller's earth, inter- fpcrfed with granules of white chalk. •f The lime has a perceptible, but very i^aXni, yelloxvijh t'nt. By the addition of a tindure of galls the ulti- rnate filtered liquor becomes turbid : a Kvh:t' mucilnre fjbfides ; leaviiig a tranfparent ^r within narrow limits, but is extended to paftur- ing flock; implying, collectively, the returns which they make to the lands they departure. The teathe of cattle is, like their dung, cflimated according to the quality of the food, and the quality of the cattle which confume it. The teathe of fat heavy bullocks, at head* keep, is eftcemed very beneficial to the lands of Norfolk ; while that of cows and lean-ftnck is, the '* jamming" apart, confidered of little value. VIII, .^, N O R F O L K. 35 Vlir. Sheepfold — Tliereare fewfheep kept m this Diftrld ; and the fold is not in ufc •, except by ayety few principal farmers; and by fome gentlemen who keep large trafts in hand. The value of fheepfold is well iinderftood ; but the main objedl of the Eafl-Norfolk husbandry is bullocks' and the farmers, by their pradtice. Teem well aware that Iheep among cattle are unprofitable flock. IX. Soot is in good repute; and, nearthetowns, IS in ufc. Rape-Cake is alfo in good efteem, in fomiC parts of theDiftridl; as are Malt- 'CooMBS', in places where they can be had at a jeafonable price. For the application, and the method of ap- plying thefe various manures, fee the article MANURE-PkOCESS. For the method of raifing farmyard m amir e^ fee Farm-Yard Management. F'br aninftanceof ^arw/^j ant-hilhiox manure, fee MiN. 6. For an inftance of utility of x\it fbG-uelling of a Jh eepfold lo ^X2i{% land, fee Mint. io. For an inftance of the ufe of fJjecpfcld to bar- ley, fee MiN. II. D 2 For 36 MANURES. ^ For experiments on different manures for wheat, feeMiN. i8. For a calculation on the value oi Jheepfold, feeMiN. 1 8. For experiments and obfervations on the adion of lime^ fee Mm. 29. For reflcdions on hullock-teathe, u^on the fair- ftead of St. Faith's, fee Min. 31. For a defcription of the Fleg-clay, fet Min. 106. For obfervations on the effedt of calcareous earths on fliff land, fee Min. 106. For a defcription of the marl and clay tf th^ coaji, fee Min. 112. FARMERS. 6. NORFOLK. 37 6. FARMERS, I DO NOT mean to hold out the farmers of Norfolk as a feparate order of men : farmers, in every country, have, in their drefs, their manner, their converfation, and their acquire- ments, a ftriking refemblance : neverthelefs, in every country, I find fome diflinguifliing cha- radteriftic. The farmers of Norfolk are ftrongly marked by a liberality of thinking, and, in confe- -quence, by an opennefs in their manner and converfation. This may be accounted for; many of them have been, and fome of them flill are, rich ; this has led them to mix, in si greater or lefs degree, with what is called the World ; of which their leafes render them inde- pendant. A tenant-at-will, be his riches what they may, is a fubaltern in fociety ; in which he dares not to mix, left his landlord, or his landlord's alTociates, Ihould be pleafed to take offence. D 3 Thus 38: FARMERS. ^; Thus the clergj', and thofe men of fmall income who fall under the denomination of country-'fquireSj arc in moft places looked up to by farmers ; while in Norfolk they are con- fidered, by the principal farmers at leaft, as be- longing to the fame order of fociety^. The * As an inilance of the ccvplacetu y. and r^oJ-hr ceding (I do not mean complaifance ox polite nefs) of the fupcrior chifs of Norfolk farmers, I will relate the ctrcumflances of dicportment which occurred to myfelf, at a farm-houfc, at which I flept accidentally. Our hoft having given ftrict orders, and fome perfonal attenion, r^fpefting cur hories, the company were led into a fpaclous kitchen, characterized by cleanlinefs and a ohearful fire. A deeent upper-fervant prefcn'ed herfelf. Supper was ordered, and a bottle of wine, ia a neat fafliion- able decanter, fct upon the table, A fmart, but not extravagant, fupper foon naade its appearance. The houfekeeper waited in an adjoining room, and a maid- fervantat the table, with a degree of propriety and deco- rum frequently unfeen in the houfes of thofe who call themfelves gentlemen. A trifling incident proved the good-fenfe, if not the good-breeding, of our hoft and his family. Forgetting that I was at the table of a Norfolk farmer^ I alked for an article cf the fide-board which was not at hand. The fervant went out of the room as if to fetch it ; but inilead of returning, the houfekeeper came in to make an apology for not happening to have it in the houfe : flie withdrew : the maid-fcrvant returned ; while the converfation went on \\*ithout any notice being taken, 9^: 6. NORFOLK. 39 The lower clafs of Norfolk farmers, hovf- cyer, are the fame plain, men which farmers in general axe, in every other country ; living in a great meafure with their fervants. Another clafs live in the kitchen v/ith their fervants, but cat at a feparate table ; while the upper claffes have their " keeping-rooms" and other com- modious apartments. In general they rife i>arly, breakfaft early, and dine univerfally at twelve o'clock, at lealt the fervants. This is well adapted to the Nor- folk practice of going what are called twojour- jiies a day vyith the plow-tearns: the men reach home by dinner-time j and, having rc- frefhed therpfelves and their horfes, are ready to or any obfervation whatever being made on tkc aukwai(i- nefs of the circumftance, In the mornhig when I returned from a walk, I found, in a decently, but not extravagantly, furniflied parlour, two tables fetout ; one with tea equipage, the other with napkins, bread and butter, ham, raddiflics, &c. The houfekeeper fat at the former, placed on one fide of the room, and made tea ; xyhich was brought to us at our table on the other : and this without the kail: fliew of parade or formality. In fliort, the whole treatment had lb much the air of that free and-eafy reception which I had formerly experienced on the eftate of a Weft-India Planter, ^hat it was with fome difficulty I could believe myfclf iu |he houfc of an Englifli farmer. D4 4^ WORK U E N. ^. to ilart again at one to two o'clock for the altcrnoon jouihe\'. For caufcs of their prefent decline with rcfpt-a: to riches, fee Min. 58. 7< VV O R K M E N WORKMEN, here, as in other places, arc divifible into yearly servants arid day- LABOl'RERS. At the public hiring of yearly servants, ah excellent cuftom fubfifts in this Diftri<5t : The High-Conllable of the Kundved in which a flatute is held, holds, at the fame time and place, what is called a " petty felTions j" at which the hiring and its attendant circum- flances are, or may be, regiftered ; which regiiler becomes, in cafes of difpute, either between mafter and fervant, or betv»'cen parifn and pa- rifh, a iifcful record. In reJ'peift to day-labourers, two remark- able fircumflanccs are united ; namely, hard ^ ^^f O R F O L K. 4> work and low wages ! A Norfolk farm- labourer will do as much work for one Ihilling, as fomc two mcrij in msny other place?, will (.\o tor eighteen -pence each. There is an honeily, I had almofl: faid an honour, about them, when working by the day, which T have not been able to difcover in the day-labourers of any pther country. For an evidence corroborating ihefe obfcrvar j:ions, fee Mjn. 98. For rcafons accounting for their adiviy, lee JVIiN. 100. For an inilance of i^ill greater exertion, fep }Ais. 106. H O R S 1: S. 4* HORSES. I, 8. HORSES. HORSES are the only beafcs of labour made life of in the Norfolk hufbandry : there is not, perhaps, one OX worked in the county. The farm-horfes of Norfolk were, formerly^ ^ fmall brown-muzzled breed ; light-boned •, but flood hard work, and hard keep, in a remark-, able manner; and two of therp were found quite equal to the Norfolk plow in the Norfolk Ibil. Of late, ftallions, of the heavier black breeds, of Lincolnlhire, Lelcefterfliire, &c. have been fafliionable ; and at prefent (perhaps unfortu- nately for the country) the true Norfpjk breed is almoll entirely worn out. I have heard fenlible old men regret this f and complain heavily againft the prefent breed : they eat up too much o.f their corn, and are not fp a(5tive as their favourite " old fort." The prefent breed, however, are by no means heavy : on the contrary, being as yet a mon- fj NORFOLK, 43 grel kind between the two breeds, they are, compared with the elephants of Lincohilhirc, a light, punch, adtive little horfe. The lingular breed of Suffolk is at prcfcnt the faihionable crofs •, and, to my mind, a very^ judicious one : for, although this flrange va- riety of the equeftrj^n fpccies— or, to fpeak from appearances, this half-horfe half-hog race of animals — arc not fo handfome in harnefs as the prefent beautiful breed of Leiceiterfliire ;, they appear to me, from a knowledge of both kinds, to be better adapted to the Norfolk hufbandry. Their principal fault is a flatncfs of rib : if this could be improved, they would, in my opinion, be the firil breed of draught- hprfes in the kingdom. It is, however, the lighter, more active part of them which is bell adapted to the Nor- folk hufbandry. Had the original Norfolk breed been croficd with thefe, inftcad of the flugs of the Fens, the produce could not have failed of being excellent. Five horfes are here called a " teamer,"and are ufually placed under the care of one " teamerman ;" who, in more leifure-times, plo.ws with two of them in the morning, and with, 44 HORSES. 8. with other two in the afternoon ; bur, in gene- ral, a labourer, or a boy, works one pair of them while the teamerman works the other pair, two journies a day ; having always, in this cafe, one horfe at reft. But in feed-time, more particularly in ^' barley feel," the fifth horfe goes to harrow ; every horfe upon the farm going to work at fix or feven in the morning, and flays till twelve : o-oes out again at one or two, and remains at work till fix or feven. In a waggon, upon the road, five horfes are univerfally in u(c. Whether upon the road, or on the farm, the common pra<5tice is for the horfes to trot with empty carriages. Formerly, this admirable cnftom was carried too far : inftead of trotting for difpatch, races were run, at full fpeed, upon the road. The lead was the goal contcr.dcd for ; a fore-horfei which would, at a Vv'ord or a fignal, break out at full fpeed, was, by the young men who took delif^ht in the diverfion of " roadino;," confi- clered as invaluable. Many waggons, and fome necks, having been broken by this dangerous amufcnienr, it is, at prcTcnr, a good deal laid •tf»ttle j lhoi?gh no^ yet entirely left off. I have mvfcif t. NORFOLK. 4S myfclf feen a race of this kind : a following team broke out, upon a common, and, un- mindful of the ruts, hollow-ways, and rough- neffes, contended for the lead ; while the lead- ing team as eagerly ilrove to keep it ; both of them going at as full a gallop as horfes in har- nefs could go, for a confiderable diflance j the drivers Handing upright in their refpedive wag- gons. The clofe of the race was the mofl dan- gerous part of it i for fo foon as the fore-horfe of the team which broke out, found that he had gained the lead, he rufhcd eagerly into the road ; which in that place happening to be hollow, it appeared to me miraculous that no mifchlef was done. Savage, however, as this cufcom may feem, the prefent fpirit of ac- tivity may be in fome meafure indebted to it; and whenever it is wholly laid afide, I hope it vt'iilbe from motives of prudence, rather than from a v/ant of fpirit and Inclination to con- tinue it. The keep of horses in Norfolk, notwlth- flanding the work they go through, is lefs ex- penfive than that of other places, where large unwieldy horfes feem to be kept for Hate, rather than for labour. This, though prevalent iiv many well- cultivated dillriifts, is an evident abfurdity^ 4^ HORSES; it abfurdiry. There may be cafes, in which heavy loads are to be drawn fhort dillances, and where the number of horfes arc limited, as in Londbn ; in which cafes heavy powerful horfes may be eligible ; bur, from the obfervatidns I have been able to make, a compadl horfe is much fitter for the varied employments upon a farm ; and, with refpedtto keep, a main Cdnfideratioii in the choice of a farm-horfe, the advantage is greatly in favour of fmall horfes. The prefent breed in Norfolk, flill retaining a confiderjlble portion of the original blood, are kept at half theexpence at which many farm-horfes, in dif- ferent parts of the kingdom, are fupported. In the leifure-months of winter, barley-fliraw is, in general, their only rack-meat ; and thro'' winter and fpring, they are fuppered up with it •, cxccpr, perhaps, in the hurry of barley feed-time -, againft which a referve of clover- hav is made ; provided the teamerman does not make away v/ith it before that time. A Nor- folk farmer has a fimilar difficulty in prevent- ing his men from ftealing hay, as thofe of other countries have to keep them from pilfering rnore than their allowance of corn. I met with one inftance, in which a judicious regulation was nL-jde, with refpedt to horfc-hay. At I. NORFOLK:. 4^ At Michaelmas, the mafler fets apart what he confiders as a fufficient quantity to lad to thci clofe of barley leecl-time. This allowance he configns wholly to the care of his men; w^ho never fail to hufband it in fuch a manner as to have the neceffary refer ve at barley feel ; whereas before he fell upon this regulation, his horfes were either worked down to il^eletons, or he was obliged to buy hay for them at that feafon. With refpetfl: to corn, a bulhel each horfe, a week', is, in the bufieft feafon, confidered as an ample allowance ; in more leifure-times a much lefs quantity fuilices. Oats are the ufiuil horfe-corn-, but barley^ when cheap or unfaleable, is fomctimes o-iven to horfes. In this cafe, it is, generally "w^/Z^^y* that isj fteepcd, and afterwards fpread abroad, for a few days, until it begin to vege- tate ; and, in this crifis, is given to the horfes. It is thought to be lefs heating, in this ftate, than it is when given to the horfes in its natural ftate. Chaff is univerfally mixed with horfe-corn t the great quantities of corn grown in this coun- try afford, in general, a fufficiency of Tiatural chaff; fo that cut chaff is not much in life : the 4$ HORSES: ^i the chaff, or rather the awns, of hurley, vvhlch'^ in ibmc places, are thrown as ufclcfs to the dung-hill, are here in good eflcem as horfe-pro- vender. Oat-chaff is deiefvedly confidered aS being of a much inferior quality. The fummer keep of horfes, is almofl wholly,* clover : — fome few tares are grown, but the quantity is inconfiderable. Soiling horfei, in the flable^ is not here a prac- tice ; except for baiting in the day-time •, the Korfes being univerfally kept out at night; and^ generally, in clover-lays. A Angular expedient to prevent their break- ing pafture is here pradtifed : — Horfes inclined to this vice are chained, two-and-tw^o, by the fore-feet ; one end of a chain, about a yard long, being faftencd with a faaekle to the near- foot of one horfc, and the other end to the off- foot of the other* This, however, though an excellent way of preventing their rambling, is a dangerous pradice : accidents frequently hap- pen. I knew an inftance of two horfes, coupled in this manner, falling into a marl-pit twenty feet deep ; and though one of them miracu- loufly efcaped, in a great meafure unhurt, the other was mangled in a manner, equally iingularf and -#; NORFOLK. ^^' and died on the fpot. Accidents apart, the pradtice is a good one : horfes accuftomed to be coupled in this manner, become, in aftriking mannerj tra(ftable and civil to each other; fo that their feeding and lleeping is not fo much Interrupted, as in theory might be conceived. Another practice, fingular I believe to Nor- folk, is that of '' roping" horfes, not only in common-fields but in inclofures : thus, inftead bf turning the horfes loofe into a piece of clo- ver, the practice is to tedder them upon it -, beginning on one fide, arid clearing the herbage as they gOi This is a middle way between foiling and palluring : it faves the expence of hiowing, and carrying to the ftable ; but does tiot eat up the herbage fo clean as foiling does : on the other hand, it is more faving of herbage than pafturing is ; but there is not only trouble ain^ expence, but a degree of rifk, in roping. Vol. I t i M P L E- 50 I M P L E M E N T S. I M P L E ISl E N T S. I. TPIE WAGGONSof Norfolk are of the middle fize and middle height : higher than thofe of Gloucefterfhire ; but lower than thofe of the midland counties. They are very nu- merous : upon -a middle-fized farm, three or four are ufually kept -, carts being feldom ufed here (notwith (landing the levelnefs of the couri- try) in getting in harveft. However, to ren- der carts ufcful in harvefl — more efpecially it waggons are wanted— a fingular expedient is here put in pradlice. With a common dung- cart and a pair of old waggon -fliafts and fore- wheels, a carriage is formed ; which, partak- ing both of a cart and a waggon, is called a II. 'MAPHRODiTEi The points of the Ihafts reft on the boifter of the fore-wheels, to which they are faftened. A copfe, or fore-ladder^ fimilar to that which is fometimes fixed upon a cart-fhafts, but longer, is alio fupported by the boifter, projcdting over the horfe in front/ in the manner of the fore-ladder of a waggon j the length and the breadth of the top of the '« 'mapbrodite"' '^. NORFOLK. 51 " 'maphrodlte" being the fame, or nearly the fame, as thofe of a waggon. In a hilly conn- try, where carts are in a manner iifclefs in liarveft, thefe cart-waggons would be found extremely convenient. III. The carts of Norfolk have a fmgularitv pertaining to them. The fliafts, inftead of being fixed hinge-wife to the axle, or to the bottom of the cart, are a continuation of the fide-pieces of the bottom itfelf ': of courfe, the Norfolk carts do not //// in the iTianner in which carts in general do. In fetting on manure, a long belly-bandl is made ufe of ; fo that the fiiafts rife with the fore-part of the cart ; the fliaft-horfe being the only ilay to its tilting up entirelyo Nor is this an uncommon circumilance ; the ihaft- horfe, in this cafe, remaining upon his hind- legs until he be drawn dowri again by the fore-horfes. This, to common obfervation, is an aukward and a harharous cuftom ; \ have not, however, been able to hear of a fliaft- horfe receiving any great injury frgm this pradtice *. * A broad foft belly-band, of leather or hemp, ought however to be ufed on this occafion. The fliarp iron chains ^ * which 52 IMPLEMENTS. 9. Marling, it is highly probable, brought it into ule : the wcar-and-tcar of carts in this rugged operation is cndlefs ; the fimpleft, ftrongcO:, and Icaft expenfive cart has, of courfe, been for ages, the fludy of Norfolk hufbandmen ; and it is probable that a more fimple, a ftronger, or a lefs expenfive cart can- not be devifed than that above-defcribed ; which is in common ufe in this Diftridt. Carts of the common conftru6tion, of which there are fome few ufed, here, for particular- purpofes, are called tumbrels. IV. The Norfolk plow is ftill more flngular in its conftruftion than the Norfolk cart; and, \vhat is equally fingular, it is, in a manner wholly, confined to the county of Norfolk. The firft I faw was at Thetford, and I do not recol. led: to have feen one plow of any other con- ftrudion while I remained in the country, nor one of that conftruftion fince I left it. It is true, this implement has been diftributcd, at different times, in almoil every dlilrid in the kingdom ; but it has not, I believe, been adopted which are frequently made ufe of, are painful to the cje at leaft. in ^ NORFOLK. 53 in any one of them j — except perhaps in Not- tingham Forell. There Is no doubt of the excellency of tfje Norfolk plow in cultivating the Norfolk foil ; or any foil which is fimilar to it ; namely, a (hallow, fandy loam, free from obftrudtionr. But the width, and general fliape, of the fhare render it utterly incapable of being worked in a flrong foil, in which ftones or other obftruc- tions abound : and the ufual manner of fetting the hind part of the " plat'' or mould-board, equally prevents it from turning, properly, a deep fquare furrow. The peculiarities of its conftrudlion are prinr cipally thcfe : — the wheels are taller, and their tackle more complex, than thofe of other fmall plows; the form of the wheels themfelves being, however, beautifully fimple. The fhare is unufualiy broad, fiat, and blunt at the point. The mould-bGard is not of wood, but of iron, fometimes wrought fometimes cait * ; bein^ a * C'afi-hon J]-ares have lately been invented, and a pa- tent procured for them, by a perfon of Norwich, For fKe rCoriblk plow, in the Norfolk foil, they appear from E 3 t\js 54 I M P L E M E N T S. 5. feparate Urong/)/^/^, twifted into a form refcm- bling the mould-board of the modern little plow of Yorkfliire and other Diftrids ; which, it is probable, has been copied from the Norfolk *' plat." Another thing remarkable in the Norfolk plow, though not lingular to it, is its having only one handle. There are readers, perhaps, who will ex- pcdt that a drawing and dlmenfions of the Norfolk plow, and, perhaps, of the other im- plements peculiar to the country, ought to have been given in this work ; in order that copies of them might have been made in other Diflri5:s. The idea, in theory, is plau- fible ; and I have myfelf, as writers in general on the fubjed of hufbandry have, fpent much time in the purfuit of it. Experience, how- ever, has convinced me that, with refpcdt to myfelf at leaft, it has been time ill- fpent : I have found even patterns infufficient guides to workmen : fo much depends on minutice the fpccimens I have fcen of them, to be a valuable In- vention. If they caa be mcAe fmn enough to Hand in a fcony foil, and hard enough to retain a fufficlent edge ia a gravel, they mull: prove, to agriculture in general, a moft valuable acfjuiruion. Jan. 1787. N in ^ NORFOLK. 55 in the conftruflion of the more complex miplements of agriculture. Nay, the very implement which gives rife to thefe obferva- tions, conftrudted in Norfolk in the mod com- plete manner, and furniilied with every ne- cefTary appendage, has lain ufelefs upon a foil it fuited, until a Norfolk plowman was fent to, bold it ! How unreafonable, then, to expedc utility from a drawing of it ! Thcfe circumftances are not fingular to the Norfolk plow ; I have known them attend other implements transferred from one part of the ifland to another : and I will beg leave to obfcrvc, herCj in general terms, that who- ever wiflies to introduce an implement which is in life in fome diftant Diilrid:, would do well to have it not only canftrudted, but fct to work, in the country where it is in ufe ; and I will venture to add, that fuccefs cannot be infured unlefs a perfon accuflomed to the work- ing of it accompanies it, and fets it to work in the Diftrict into which it is intended to be introduced. This is, no doubt, an expenfive way of proceeding ; but it is a certain one : while '9vcry other expedient is throwing away, or E A at .5^ IMPLEMENTS. 19, at leafl: risking, a certain expence, without any other certainty whatever. Suppofe the Norfolk plow, for inftance, to be tranfportcd one hundred miles, — and the charges of a man, a horfe, and a light cart, to be from fixpence to a fliilling a mile, — the expence, — to a large occupier, in a country where a fandy foil, free from obflrudions, and with an ablbrbent fubfoil, is worked by three horfes at length with a driver,— would i^ot be an objcdl''^. Plowing with two horfes without a driver, inftead of three with a driver, is, perhaps, the greatefl faving which can be introduced upon a farm : and, for the foil abovementioned, it would be difficult to conftrudt a better plow than that which is now, and has been time immemorial, in common ufe in Norfolk. If I were to hazard an Improvement of the J>«^orfolk plow, it would be the addition of an- other handle ; and to change the pradlice of driving with a whip (to rny mind a very auk- ward bufinefs) to that of driving with whipt * In thcfe clays of f^jiritcd improvements In hufbandry. I'.hcn fifty to a hundred guineas are given for one year'* rikic of a ram, five pounds for the introduft'on of a ufe- f'il ira]lcmcnt cannot be deemed extravagant. reins^ 9» NORFOLK. 5^ reins, in the Yorkfhire manner ; a practice, the excellency of whurh I have myfclf expe-. rienced, in different Diftrids. The Norfolk rein is one continued " line'* pairing from the bridle of one horfe, through a ftaple fixed on the undcrfidc of the handle of the plow, to the hit of the other horfe ; the plowman holding his plow with the left hand, and carrying a ihort whip in his right. In diffi- cult work the right hand, whip-and-all. Is ap- plied to the handle of the plow-, the plowman walking, in this cafe, inapofture and with a gait, which, to aftranger, appears extremely aukward ; and nothiY)g, but the want of another handle, could render it fufferable to the plowman him-^ fdf. The Norfolk line has, in fetting out a frcfh furrow, a fceming advantage over whip-reins. In this difficult work, at which the Norfolk plowmen are fmgularly expert, the loofe part of the line is gathered up in the right hand ; fo that the plowman has, with the fmalleft- mo- tion of his hand, one way or other, a perfedl: command of both horfes ; but if, in this opera- tion, he tie the two ends of the whip-reins together, letting the left-hand one ride beneath a pin, 38 IMPLEMENTS. ^ a pin, or in a hook, placed under the handle for that purpofe, the advantage of the Norfolk line is thereby fully 'obtained. The Norfolk harrow is adapted to the foil — light and Ihort-tincd. — Each harrow has its horfe : — that is, each horfe draws a feparatc harrow ^ — three or four harrows being fomc- times drawn abreaft, without being, as in other places, intimately connefted together. V. The RCLLERof this country is very fimplc and-j^ry light. This, coniidering the nature of the foil, is extraordinary. The farm-rollers, in general, have np {hafts — . perhaps only two lopfe pieces of wood, about two feet and a half long, with a hole near one end, to receive the gudgeon of the roller, and a hook or eye at the other, to hook the trace to : ibmetlmes two rails are fixed in between the two end- pieces, framewife, with two hooks or ftaples in the front rail to hook the horfe to. In evidence of the lightnefs of the Norfolk roller, I do not recolledt to have feen more than one horfe ufed in a common farm-roller ; and this one horfe, befides drawing the im- plement, has ufually carried the driver; it being the fingular cuftom of this country to " ride 9* N O R F a L K, 5| *'ride at roll :" an employment, however, which generally falls to the fliare of a young boy, or ^n old man. Notwithflandlng the high degree of cultiva- tion in v/hich the lands of Norfolk are un- doubtedly kept, no country perhaps has Icfs variety of implements. There is not perhaps a ^r///, zhcrfe-hoe^ or fcarcely a horfe-rake^ in Eaft- Norfolk. I favv one fpikey-roller for the purpofe of indenting the furface of a clover-lay once plowed for wheat ('fee the article Wheat) : but this, I i)elieve, was never in common ufe. There is, however, one implement, received, into the Norfolk hufbandry, which is probably a Norfolk invention, and peculiar to the county : I have not m.et with it, at leaft, out of this country : — I mean the yi. Snow-Sledge. — This beautifully fim- ple implement isufed for uncovering turneps bu- ried under a deep fnow. It is limply three deal or other boards, from one to two inches thick, ten or twelve inches deep, and (even to nine feet long, fet upon their edges in the form of an equilateral triangle, and llrongly united, \vith nails or llraps of iroDj at the angles ; at one (w I M P L E M E N T S. 9. of which is faftencd, by means of a double flrap, a hook or an eye, to hang the horfes to. This being drawn over a piece of turneps covered with fnow, forces up the fnow into a ridge on each fide, while between the ridges a llripe of turneps is left bare ; without having received any material injury from the operation, Vll. TimbertCarriaces. Although timber- carriages may nor, in flridtnefs, be faid to belong tp hufbandry, a defcription of them does pot fall inaptly under the prcfent head. They are in Norfolk, as In moft other places, of two kinds ; the four-wheeled carriage — provincially, a *-*drug •,''■— -and thepalrof wheels— provincially, *' a gill." — The laft is moft in ufe; and of this only I mean to fpeak : — not fo much pf its conr llrud:ion, as of the manner qf ufing it, The conftrudion of the Norfolk gill is fimi^ lar to that of the timber-wheels of moft other countries : namely, a pair of tall wheels, with a crooked axletree, furmounted by a block ; to which axle is fixed a pair of lliafts, or fome? times a fingle pole, only. But the method of ufing them, here, is dif- ferent from that which I have obferved in other pkccs; where the only ufc they are put to is to c). NORFOLK. 6^ to raife fhe biut-cnd of a large timber to be drawn a fliort dillance ; the top-end being fuf- tered to drag behind upon the ground, to the injury of the turf, or the road, it is drawn upon. . In Norfolk, alarge ftick of timber, or per- haps three or four fi nailer ones, arc entirely flung to the axle ; lb that.-, in drawing, no part of them whatever touches the ground ; the top-end being generally drawn foremoft, and the end toward the horfes always the heaviefl. The method of taking up a piece of timber is this : the horfes being taken off, the wheels are run, by hand, ailride the timber to be flung, until the axle is judged to be a few inches be- hind the balance-point : or, which is better, a chain is lirft put round the timber, and the wheels run up to it. It is difficult to afcertain the exadt place of fixing the chain, by the eye; neverthelefs, a perfon accuflomed to fling tim- ber in this manner, will come very near the truth. The chain hooked, and the axle brought into its proper fituation, the fliafts, or pole, is throw^n back in the ufual manner; the chain carried over the block j brought round the pole J its end made faflj and the fhafts or pole ^rawn ^2 I M P L E M E N T S. 9, idravvn down again by the horfes ; by which means the timber is lifted from the ground, and fafpended to the axle. If the required point of balance be not hit lipon the firft trial, the fliafts are fuffered to rife again, the chain is unhooked, and lliifted to its proper fituation : the fliafts being again pulled down, are bound, by an iron trace or fmall chain, clofe down to the timber ; while another fmall chain or trace is faftened round the foremoft end to hook the horfes to ; ths 'team draijoing hy the timber^ not hy the pole or Jhafis, The utility of having a fuperbalance of weight forward is twofold : — if the piece were flung in exadl equilibrium, it would, upon the iroad, be in perpetual vibration ; thereby render- ing the pull unfteady, and extremely inconve- nient to the horfes ; whereas by throwing the "balance forward, the traces are condantly kept down in their proper place, and the pull be- comes uniform : if, however, too much weight Were to be thrown forward, the draught of the horfes would not raife the point from the ground ; the frid:ion would, of courfe, increafe the draught, and the road be at the fame time burr^ ^. NORFOLK. .63 hurt. It therefore follows, that the proi^er weight to be thrown forward is enough to pre- vent a vibration, but not fo much as to prevent the point from being raifcd from the road bV the draught of the horfcs upon level ground. The other advantage by a fupcrbalance forward, is gained in going down a hill; hi Which cafe, the draught not being wanted^ the point, of courfe, falls to the ground, and ferves as a pall to regulate the motion of the carriage : if the fuperbaiance alone be ndi: fufficient to check the too great rapidity of the motion, the driver adds his own weip-ht; Likewifcj if, in afcending a hill, th& balance be lod ; he, in like manner, feats himfelf up- on the fore-part of the load, thereby keeping it down to its proper level. This method of conveying timber may* it is pofTible, be in v.k in other Diflriifts ; bur I have not feen it pradifed any where except in Norfolk. I know it to be an excellent, but p.ot a common pradlice : I have, therefore, "been induced to give this defcription of it. TAXES. €4 t A X E g. ie< 10. TAXES. UNDER this head I Ihall clafs Land-Tax, Tithe, Poors-Rates. I. The Land-tax, in this Diflriices. But thefe and other articles I lliall confidei' feparately ; comprizing under the prefent head fuch general matter, only, as necefTuily occurs npoii every leafed cltate. I. Tenancy. Tenanls-ai-lvill hvc thinly feat- tered. Leases, either for a iermy or from year- io-year, are utiiverfal. Leaf es for life are rarely heard of in this Diftri6l. II. Term. The term, fornieriy, was twenty- one years ; but the advance bf produce which took place fbme years ago, producing, as it fever will do, an advance of rent, the tenant who had then juft entered on a leafe of twcnty- bne years became, for a fcries of years, under- tented : the confsquence is, gentlemen, in ge- neral, refufe to grant leafes of longer term than fourteen ye^rs, and many curtailed them to feven years j a term, in my opinion, much too ihott. F 7 Article^; 6S AiANAGEMENT OF ESTATES. ir. Articles from year-to-year are very prevalent, efpecially among fmaller tenants ; and, in many refpcds, they are preferable to a fhort tcrmj which is a tie to both parties, without be- ing, in general, advantageous to cither. Marling is the principal improvement of a Norfolk farm j but who would marl on a feven- years leafe ? Where much marling is to be done^ fourtcn years is too fhort a term ; — and though landlords may once have felt the inconveni- encies of twenty-one years leafes, it is probable that tenants, who have of late years taken leafes of that length, will, before their expiration, experience, in their turn, feelings of a fimilar nature. I'll. PiENT. The medial rent of the Difl:ri<5t may be laid at twelve fhillings an acre : toward the North coaft the foil is lighter and lefs pro- dudtivethanitis in more central parts of the Dif- tricl ; but on the Eaftern coaft and in the fouth- ern Hundreds it is much more fertile, letting from eighteen to twenty fhillings an acre. In general, the Diftridt is very highly rented :■ there are lands in the kingdom, — I will venture to fay within twenty miles of the metropolis,— which lett at eight fhillings an acre, yet are, in: their jr. NORFOLK. 69 their nature equally fertile as thofe of Norfolk, which let currently for ten to twelve fliillings. Nothing can account for this but the fuperi- ority of the Norfolk hu{bandry ; and the quick difpatch which prevails in every departs, ment of the Norfolk fyftem of management. IV. Covenants. Covenants of leafes are, in Norfolk, as in other Diftri.cls, various as leafes themfelves : the particular circumftances of an eftate, and the fpecial matter of agreement between landlord and tenant, will ever produce this variety, in a greater or lefs degree : ne- verthelefs, every country has its natural cove- nants, and its prevailing falhions, as to reftric- tions and indulgences. Thefe fafhions, however, alter ; and an Im- prpven^ent has recently taken place, upon fome of the firft eftates in Norfolk, with rcfpedl to the REPAIRS of buildings and fences ; the tenant now covenanting to pay half the workmen's wages. This has two valuable eifecls : — the tenant thereby pays a ftrifter attention to the workmen employed ; and becomes more care- ful of thofe things which, heretofore, he had no intereft in preferving. F 3 No ?o MANAGEMENT OF ESTATES. ;i.^ V. No department of the' management of ai^ ellatc gives more uneafinefs to both landlord and tenant than do i^emoyals, or exchanges of tenants; and every covenant vvhi^h facilitates this u.nplealdnt bufinefs is valuable. The fhift- ing of tenants is no where condudled with greater eafe than in Norfolk ; where, it is pro- bable, leafes have been long in ufe ; and where removals from farm to farm are become fa- miliar. VJ. The time of receiving rents, in Nor- folk, is, pretty generally, Chriftmas and Mid- iummer ; landlords giving their tenants three months credit. Chriftmas, however, is of all others the woifl time of the year for this pur- pofe : many ferious evils arife from it (fee MiN. 47, on this fubjecft). The firft of March and the firfl of June appear to be the moft eligible rent-days in Norfolk. VII. The following heads of a lease will place the general management of a Norfolk eftate in a clear and comprehenlive point of view. They are not, either in form or fubftance, copied, prccifely, from the leafe in ufe upon any p.irticular eftate ; but exhibit, I believe, ^ pretty if. NORFOLK. pretty faithful outline of the modern Norfolk leafe. Lanblord agrees, I. to lett, certain fpecl- fied premifes, for a term, and at a rent, previ- oufly agreed upon. 2. Also to put the buildings, gates, and fences in tenantable repair. 3. Also to furnifh rough materials, and pay half the workmen's wages in keeping them in repair, during the term of the demife ; wilful or negligent damage excepted. 4. Also to furnifli the premifes with fuch ladders as may be wanted in doing repairs, or in preferving the buildings, in cafe of high wind, fire in chimneys, &c, (an excellent claufe). 5. Also to furnifli rough materials for keep- ing the gates, gate-pofts, ftyles, &c. &c. in repair ; or to furnifli the materials ready cut out; tenant paying the ufual price of labour for cut- ting out. 6» Also to pay half the expence of fuch fliores and ditches as he, or his agent, fliall di- red: to be made or renewed. Landlord reserves, i. all minerals, fofilis, ^larls, clays ; with liberty to^ work mines, F 4 quarries 72 MANAGEMENT OF ESTATES. n. quarries and pits, and to burn lime and bricks upon the premifes ; likewife, to carry away fuch minerals, &c. &c. ; excepting fuch marl, or clay, as may be wanted for the improve- ment of the farm. 2. Also, all timber-trees, and other trees and woods, underwood and hedgewood ; with liberty to fell, convert, char, and carry off fuch timber, or other woods ; excepting fuch thorns and bufhes as fhall be fet out by land- lord, for making and repairing fences; pro- vided the thorns, &c. fo fet out be cut in the winter months ; excepting, however, out of this provifo, fuch fevv as may be wanted in the courfe of the fummer-months, for flopping accidental gaps. 3. Also, full liberty of planting timber- trees in hedges, or on hedge-banks ; with a power to take to himfelf, after twelve months notice given, fome certain number of acres of land for the purpofe of raifing timber-trees, other trees, or undervv'ood ; allowing the tenant luch yearly rent, &c. for the land fo taken, as two arbitrators fhall fix. 4. Also, a power of altering roads, and of inclofing commons, or wafte lands, without; the |i. NORFOLK. 73 the controul of the tenant ; to which Intent, all common-right is ufually referved, inform, though feldom in effe^, to the landlord. 5. Also, the cuftomary liberty to view buildings, do repairs, and, confequently, to bring and lay materials. 6. Lastly, the right of fporting and de- flroying vermin. Tenant agrees, i. to pay the ftipulated rent half-yearly ; and within thirty days after it be due ; under forfeiture of the leafe ; and, further, to pay the laft half-year's rent two months, or a longer time, before the expira- tion of the term. 2. Also, to do all carriage for repairs (with- in a fpecified diftance) ; and to find all iron- work and nails; and to furnifh wheat-flraw for thatching ; and to pay half the workmens* wages, and find them with fmall-beer. 3. Also, to do all ditching, &c. fet out by landlord ^provided the quantity fet out do not exceed one-tenth of the whole) ; and to pay half the workmen's wages, and find them in fmall-beer; and to defend with hurdles QX otherwife, all fuch young hedges as fliall be eX" 74 MANAGEMENT OF ESTATES. u. exiX)rcJ, in Ipringand fummcr, toihe brovvzings of pafluring-ftock. 4. Also, to make, or pay for making, fvich gates, &c. as Hiail be wanted upon the farm during the term of the demife ,• and to hew, or to pay for hewing, all neceflary gatc-pofts ; and to put down and hang, in a workman-like manner, fuch gates and gate^ poils, at his own fole expence ; as well as tecp all the old gates on the premifes in tcnantable repair. 5. Also, not to affign over, nor, in any other way. part with pofTeffion of his farm j but to make it his conftant refidencc during the term of the leafe. Nor to take any other farm ; nor to purchafe any lands adjoining, or intermixed with it ; without the licence an^ confent of landlord; under forfeiture of the Icafe. 6. Also, not to break up any meadow, pafture, or furze-ground, under the penalty of ren pounds an acre a year. Nor to cut *' fl-ig'^," that is, turves, under fifty {hillings a hundred. 7. Also, not to lop or top any timber- free, under the penalty of twenty pounds • nor other |i. NORFOLK. 75 pther tree, under ten pounds : nor cut under- wood or hedgewood (except as before except- ed) under ten pounds a load. But, on the contrary, to preferve them from damage as much as may be ; and, if damaged by others, to give every information in his power, un- der the penalty of twenty pounds, 8. Also not to take more than two crops of corn without a whple year's fallow,- — a crop pf turneps twice-hoed,— or a two years lay, — intervening, under the penalty of . 9. Also to confume on the premifes al] hay, fi;raw, and other ftovcr; and not to carry off, or fufFer to be carried off, any part, under pretence of being tithe compounded for, or under any other pretence whatever, under the penalty of ter\ pounds, for every load carried off. 10. Nor to carry off, nor fuffer to be carried off, any dung, muck, &c. under five pounds a load. 11. Nor to impair the foundations of the buildings round the dung-yard, by fcooping out the bottom of the yard too near the build- ings • but to keep up a pathway three feet wide ?6 MANAGEMEMT OF ESTATES. u, wide between the diing-pir and the foiinda' tions (an excellent claufc). 12. Also, not to ftock any part of the prcmifes with rabbits ; but to endeavour, as much as may be, to deftroy them. 13. Also, during the lafi two years of the leafe, not to take in any agiftment llock. 14. Also, in the lajl year^ not to fuffer fvvine to go loofe without being yoked and rung. 15. Also, in the laft year, to permit land- lord, or in-coming tenant, to fow grafs-feeds over the fummer-corn •, and to harrow then:^ in, gratis ; and not to feed off the young graffes after harvefl. 16. Also, in the lafi year, not to fow Icfs than • acres of fallow, of, at leaft, three plowings and fuitable harrowings, with two pints an acre of good, marketable, white- loaf turnep-feed ; avd, in due time, to give the plants two hoeings ( by ttieafure ; for the lame duft which gives the roughnefs of handle in the famplc, prevents the corn, thus foiled by the clay's beating up, from fettling fo clofe in the bufliel as that which has been thraflicd on a clean wooden floor. IV. The stables are no way peculiar; except in their having, in general, a " hay-houfe" adjoining to them, inftead of a hay-chamber over i$: N o' R F d L It. J?| river them; a cuftom which is at once waf^e- tul both of hay and houfe-room : at prefenr, however, it is the practice to raife ftables high' enough to admit of hay-chambers over them ; with floors, not of boards, but of clay ; which is' cheaper, and, in other refpcds, much pre- ferable to board floors. V. Cow-HOUSES are unknown in a Norfolk- farmery : a fmall " fuckling-placc" and a " cnlves-houfe" are the only out-buildings ap- propriated to cattle : except VI. Bullock-sheds, which are fomctimes (but not. generally) eredied ; more efpecialiy in the fouthern Hundreds of this Ditlrid. See MiN. 118. Vri. The hoGsty of NorfollL is Angular -, tho* hot particularly excellent : iriftead of creeping into a pigfty, in the manner ufually done, a Norfolk farmer walks into his " p1g-lioufe," at a door fimilar to thole of his other out- buildings : the building is of courfe higher and more expensive, but certainly more com- modious, than in the ufual form. VIII. Granaries are few : I faw none upon' feparate pillars j and but very few over G 2 IXv t4 BUILDINGS, tU IX. Waggon -SHEDS. Thefe in general are commodious. I met with a cart-shed on an admirable plan. The width equal to the cart and fliafts ; open in front ; with a bank of earth on the back part, about eighteen inches high, and of fuch a width as juft to take the wheels before the tail of the cart reach the back of the flicd : the cart is backed in, the horfe taken out, and the cart fuffered to tilt : the bank receives the tail, while the Ihafts rife under the eaves of the front — dry, — and out of the way of cattle : the horfe is put in with equal facility : the back band, which remains faft at both ends, is entered into the groove of the laddie, and th^ Ihafts pulled down. X. RicK-YARDS in general are fmall, owing to the capacioufnefs of the barns. It is pretty common, and very convenient, to have a rick frame at one or both ends of the barn, with a pitching-hole, in at which the corn is houfed, •without the afiiitance of team-labour. Some- times thefe ftacking-places at the ends of bams are inclofed, without having a frame for the ftack ; which being houfed immediately after the firft clearing of the barn, the inclofure af- terwards n, NORFOLK. 85 tcrwards makes an admirable fold - yard for calves or yearling cattle. XI. Fold-Yards — provincially, "par-yards'* iii general, are warm and fnug: the outer fence is moftly " battoned ;" namely, made with pofts, and three -or four wide ftrong rails, or " bat- tons;" an inch to one inch and a half thick, and eight or nine inches wide ; the lower ones being placed clofe enough for an effedtual fence againft fwine, Thefe in autumn are fometimes lined with tall thorn-faggots, efpeciaUy on the bleaker (ides. The area is parted into feparate yards with common pofls and rails, to which fimilar faggots (provincially, '* kidds") arc faftened : this, at a fmall expence, keeps the different fpecies of ftock feparate, and renders their apartments comfortable. XII. DiiiNKiNG-piTS, notwithftanding the abforbency of the Norfolk foil, are common to moft farm-yards. It feems probable that they have, formerly, been made by art, and with much judgment ; as in general they retain the water very perfectly. At prefent, however, the artj if known, is out of ufe ; indeed the rivu- Q 3 LETS ?>'t> BUILDINGS. f^i JUETS which abound in fo fingular a manner in Norfolk, preclude, in fome meafure, the ufe of artificial watering-places, except in or near farm-yards : befides, Wells, in general, arefo Jliallow, and their water fo excellent, that both of them might, without extreme incon- venience, be difpenfed with. The BUILDING-MATERIALS of Notfolk are, .-•r:!-.. Bricks, which are here manufactured with great ikill. The materials are good : the lubfoi], in many places, is naturally a very fine brick earth, without any admixture being re- quired. Befides the common red brick, of which the buildings of a farm are generally conflrufted, Norfolk is celebrated for an admirable lihiteyOi rather stone-coloured brick, which, except on a near view, has all the efifecl of a well-colour- ed ilone. Of this brick the firft houfes in the xounty are built : for fo expert are the mould- ers of this excellent material, that cornices and even columns, with their pedeftals and capitals, are form.ed of it. This fuperiority in brick-making is, how- ever, one of -thole efforts of neceffity, which are frequently productive of excellency in in- vention : there is not, generally fpeaking, a (lone 12. NORFOLK. 87; jlone in the county ; excepting a few flints, thinly fcattcred among the foil; and excepting the Jea-fione ; which, near the coaft, is ufed inftead of bricks. J^f'^^-^t^^a^i^^A^/./XayJii/'j^vt-^i/^^^/^ trf 2. Sea-stones, however, are, in unfKilful */:^7itA*' hands, a dangerous material to build with ; for, being globular, their own weight, if the wall be high and run up haftily, is fafficient to crudi it to the ground : and, when carried up deliberately, if the lime be bad, or the mortar injudicioufiy made, fea- Hone- walls are liable to part; hav- ! ing nothing but the mortar to bind them to- gether. Their durability is their beil recom- mendation ; for, though the wall decay, the flones flill are there ; and it is highly probable that many of the ftoncs which were ufed in the firil buildings of that material are flill in ufe. When they are found among ruins, upon or near the fite to be built upon, they may, if fKilfully fet (and efpeciallv if the quoins and jams be carried up with bricks), be a very eligi-? ble buildine-niaterial. Weather-boarding is made little ufe of in Norfolk; — in ordinary buildings, clay-dauUng fometimes is ufed as a fubftitute. 3. V/ith refpeft to the materials of the hcitse- pAPrcNTER, oak is generally ufed for door and G A. windo" 38 BUILDINGS. i^, window-:frames ; alfo for waU.pl,ates and fills pf every kind, and for beams, when it can be had. But in a country where th,e growth of pak is confined, in a great meafure, to the hedgerows, it cannot be expected that a ful^ fupply gan be fpared for building. Aflj, and eln% are ufed as fubftitutes j and, in a maritime country, foreign timber is had at a reafpnable. price. 4. Cover inqs are principally o^pan.-tik or of reed -^—uridiUY Jlraw roofs remain; but, at pre- fent, few new ones are put on. Reed, is, at prefenr, the favourite roof; and, is of all others fgood flate excepted) the moll eligible for farm-buildings. A reed-roof, pro- perly laid, will lie fifty years without touching; and thirty or fprty more, with only adjufting (" driving"- j. it, and levelling the hollows with a little frefh reed. At an hundred }'^ars old it may be relaid ; and will then, if laid upop the up- per parts of the roof, laft through a confider- able part of another century. It Is principally cut from the margins of the *' broads -" and is carried, perhaps, forty or fifty miles into the central and northern parts of the county. A }^. NORFOLK. 8^ A covering of reed is, in the lirft inftance, coftly : but when its durability, and the high degree of prefervation in which it keeps the roof are taken into the account, it is of all Others the cheapefl covering ; befules its being, Vv^hether in the extreme of heat or cold, the moft comfortable. The price of reed, in the place of its growth, is from three pounds to three guineas a hun- dred ; containing fix fcore fathom; each fathom (compofed of five or fix Reaves) rneafuring fix feet in circumference. A hundred of reed will cover five fquares of roof : the laying is a halfpenny a yard, or four IhiUings and two- pence a fquare ^ and the tar-rope and rods for laftening it on, coft eightecn*pence a fquare : fo that a covering of new reed co.fls about eighjjeei'^ fhillings a fquare, containing one hiraireii fquare feet; befides carriage, and what is called "roofing;" namely, a cap of wheat-ftraw placed upon the ridge, in a fome- what fimilar manner, and for the famepurpofe, as ridge-tiles are put on. This capping, v/hich Is done in a mofl ef- feftual, but in a tedious and expenfive, man- gier, colts in materials and vvorkmanlhip about fixteeii ^o BUILDINGS. T2. lixteen-pence each foot in length ; which, upon a roof of fixteen feet and a half fpar, is an ad- ditional expence of four (hillings each fquare of reeding. The carriage is in proportion to the dif- tance. Taking twenty miles as a medium dif- tance ; and one fhilling a mile as a medium, price •, the expence is twenty iliillings a " load" of fixty fathom, or forty ihillings a hundred; which hying five fquares is a further addition of eight fliillings a fquare : therefore the whole expence of a covering of reed fetched twenty mileg may be laid at thirty Ihillings a fquare *. . X am the more minute on this head, as I fee this valuable material entirely neglcdied, as a covering for buildings, in molt parts of the kingdom. 5. The FLaoRjNG-MATERiALsqf this Diflri(^ aye, for upper-floors, deal, afn, elm, znd poplar ^ards: fometimes clay is yfed for cottages, and for common garrets; but, for the ground-floor, fquare bricks, paving-tiles — — provincially, *' pavements" — a.re, in farm-houfes, the almofl univerfal flooring : even the beft rooms, of the » For the method of laying reed and fcttingon the roof- icg, fee Mix. 32. firll 12. NORFOLK. 91 fn'ft farm-hoiife, are generally laijd with this ma- terial; which is manufadured in an excellen; planner, of various colours, and of various dimenfions, from nine inches to eighteen inches fquare. Two pavements of the lad dimenfion make, for a common room, an excellent Hearth. 6. Lime is m.adc from marl^ entirely ; this Diftritt affordinor neither limellone nor chalk : Weft Norfolk, however^ abounds with a fpecies of hard foflil — provincially, ^' caulk" — a kind of hard chalk — from Vvhich lime of a tolerably good quality is burnt. See Manure, p. 26. Lime is univerfally hirni with coals, and oenerally in drawing- kilns: it cofts from feven to eight Hiillings a chaldron Cmore or lefs ac- cording to the diftancc of the carriage of the coals), and is fold for nine fliillings to ten fliil- lings a chaldron*. Bricks are lurnt principally m kilns; few \n clamps : the bottom of the kiln is always fet with bricks; while the upper parts are occa- fionally filled with tiles, pavements, and other ware. For '* 1782. Oi.7. 26. Four chaldron and a half of coals (thirty- fix bufheli) burned thirty-four chaldron thirty bufiiels of liroe ^2 BUILDINGS. 12$ For the p-ice of huilding-maierials, &c. fee LIST OF RATES. For the method, and expence, of making hay- chaml/er-floors with, clay, fee Min. 15. For obfervations on the coping of gables, fee Min. 25. For the method of laying reedy and fctting on ridge-capSj fee Min. 32. For the method of laying ■pantiles on reed, ^c. fee Min. 33. For obfervations on check-beams acrofs barn- floors, fee Min. 35. lime (thirty-two bufiiels). In general, however, thirty- two chaldron is the produce of that quantity : this is fomewhat more than /even chaldron of lime to a chaldron pf fca coals. One chaldron of coals and carriage four miles 1176 Labour, at twenty-perjcc a chaldron of lime^ - o 1 1 8 Jlorfc and cart for moving marl, - -010 £2 IQ z Seven chaldron, at fcven fhili.ngs and two- pence a chaldron, - - - £ 2 10 z I have known a qitantity fold, for manure, at eight fliillings a chaldron. The chalk of Swaflfiiam yields about ^ve chaldron of |imc (thirty-two bufiiels) to one chaldron of y?^?;oal5 (of ihirry-fi.x buflicls) For >ft^ ISfORFOLK. ^ For obfervations on the utility of laying tiles en mortar, fee Mi n. 48. For obfervations on huttrejfes^ fee Min. 60. For obfervations on x.\\q general management of repairs, fee Miw. 64. For the effects of a high wind, fee Min. 91. For general obfervations on the refidenu of 'Workmen, fee Min. 92. For defcription of a farm yard in Fleg, fee Min. 106. For obfervations on farm-yard walls, fee Min. 115. For obfervations onfea-jlone walls, fee M. 1 1(5. For the defcription of a hullock-fhcd in piowfield Hundred, fee Min. ii8» For the method of building a hog-ciftcrn, fee Min. 131. .13' g?, GATES And DEAt) FENCES. ij^ 13- GATES and DEAD FENCES. IT has already been mentioned as a prac- tice of Norfolk, for landlords to furnifh their tenants with gates ready-made. This, when an eftate is intended to be made the moit of, and where the tenants, being un- der leafe, have ho right to expedl other indul- gences than the leafe gives them, is a goodf praftice ; for when rough timber is allowed, even though it be fet our, a deiigning tenant will generally get the advantage, let the eflate be ever h well looked after. It is reafonable, however, and *s, now, oh fome eftates cuftomary, in this cafe, to charge the tenant for fawing and making up; alfo for hewing pofls; and for fawing out fuch parts of gates as are wanted for repairs -, which, as well as putting doun pofts and hanging new gates, is generally done at the expence of the tenant, who fomctimeSj but not always, finds ^ate-ircns. it jj. NORFOLK, 95 It is a prafticc, not uncommon here, to drive hooks on both fides the hanging-poft ; in order that the gate may be Ihifred to this or that fide, as the pafturing-ftock are fhifted : and fome,^ times I have feen two gates hung upon the fame pod ; one on either fide : a moft effectual guard, when both fides are in pafture. The prevailing dead fence is battening (lee fold-yard) ; the tenant being charged for hewing pofts and fawing battons, in the fame proportion he is for gates or gate-iluff j namely, the full expence of workmanfhip. Even STILES are frequently provided, and charo-ed for, in the fame way, by landlords. ^ ' Ik For an infl-ance of ivy being ferviceable to ^fea-Jione fence-wall ^ fee Min. 9, For general obfervations on farm-yard fence- '■jjalls, fee Min. 115. For the method of fetting a furze-faggot fence, fee Min. 135. 14. gS L I V K H E D G E fe. i4i 14. LIVE HEDGES. THE WOODLANDS of Eaft Norfolk being few, underwood, either Iti a'b;?^j or iri coppices, is in a manner unknown. The HEDGE-ROWS, aioHC, may be faid to furnilh the Diflrit^ with timher, top-wood^ and under- Old hedges, in general, al)ound with oak^ afh, and maple flubs, off which the wo6d is cut ai'ery time the hedge is felled; alfo with pol- lards, whofe heads are another ibiirce of fire- wood; which, in a country where Coals can be liad only by fl^a, is of courfe fought after : yet it is a fadtj as iibtorious as it is interettihg, that Eaft-Norfolk docs not experience, to any degree of inconveniency, a warit either of tim- ber or firewood ; although its entire fupply may be faid^ with little latitude, to be fronf kcdgeirows. It is probably from this circumflance, that Kedge-wood is fuficred to fland to fo great an? t^ NORFOLK. 97 .age and growth as it does in Norfolk. Twelve or fourteen years is coniidered as a moderate growth ; twenty, and even thirty years it is fometimes permitted to remain without cutting. The ''' flubvvood," it is true, by this means ac- quires a degree of utility and bulkinefs ; but the " thorns" are in the mean time over-hung and deilroyed. It appears by the heads of a lease * that the top-wood, the ftubwood, and the loppings of timber, if any, belong to the landlord* They are however, in general, of more value to the occupier of the land than to any other perfon ; beiides the tenant havino- a degree of claim to the refufal of them ; and it is cuftomary to fell them to him at a moderate valuation. I. The method of valuing hedgewood is as follow^s : the tenant having been confuked j and the particular hedge or hedges to be felled, in any given feafon, having been determined upon; each top is (or ought to be) valued and minuted feparately ; carrying the jlub'wocd in the eye until fome certain quantity is gone by. But a readier method is, 1 am told, fometimes prac- tifcd ; namely, that of walking by the lide of the hedge without particularizing the indivi- * Page 73, Vol. L H duals; 0 HEDGES. X4* duals ; or, which is flill fliortcr, but dill Icfs accurate — that of Handing at one end, and>, by merely glancing the eye along it, putting down a random valuation. II. But valuing the tops and flub wood, though done in the moll accurate manner, is by no means all that is necclfary to be done in fctting out what is called " ditching:" every timber- tree, and every pollard, (landing in the hedge to be felled, fliould be cautioufly attended to. The timbers which are going to decay, or which, to appearance, will receive injury before the next fall of the hedge, fliould be mm-ked to come down : if gate-pofls be wanted upon the farm, fuch pollards as arc fit for that pur- pofe fhoiild be fet out ; alfo all fuch pollards as are already dead, or will not to appearance bear a top equal to their prefent value, before the next fail of the hedge, ought to be valued to the tenant as fire-wood. in. Other very material things to be attended to, are the young oaklings rifing among the hedge-wood ; as well as the " stands," and the GROWING TIMBERS ,* which ought to bc pruned, znd fei up, in fuch a manner, as to give freedom to the hcdgc-and the herbage growing underthem ; and i4* N O R F O L K. q^ and at lihe fame time to encreafe their ovva value, by giving them length and cleannefs of ftem. This part of the bufinefs, however, ought not to be left to the ditchers j but ftiould be per- formed by Ikilful woodmen, fent round for the purpofe (fee Min. 5. on this fubjed). It may be needlefs to add, that to go through this various bufinefs properly, pafling once along the hedge is not fufficient : the timbers, pollards, and timberlings fhouid firfl be iri- fped:ed, and, if requifite, marked j by which means the quantity of fire-wood will be more fully afcertained, and its valuation, by this double view, be rendered more accurate** * Left the reader fiiould think that I am here deviating from the plan of this part of the work, by entering inta the didaftic where defcription only was neceflary, more efpecially as limilar direftions are fcattered in the Minutes ; I beg leave toobferve, that the fubjedl appears to me to be of fo much importance, and to have been fo llightly, if at all, touched upon by writers, that it ought to be placed in every point of view which will throw frefli li^ht upon it. And although I may, in another work, have treated very ful'y upon this fubjcft, I nevertlielefs think it proper to detail, in this, the incidents and reflec- tions which have arifen, immediately, out of my pradlicc and oblcrvatioa in Norfolk. H 2 The ifoo HEDGE S. 14* IV. The treatment or old hedges. The hedge-wood being felled to the Itiib, and the pollards headed, the ditch is fcoured to its ori- ginal depth ; the beft of the foil being collcdted into heaps on the brink of the ditch for the ufe of the farmer, in bottoming his yard or his dung-heaps, and the remainder laid to the roots of the ftubs, or formed into a bank behind them. On the top of the bank a brufh- hedge is' fet as a guard to the back ; — while fometimes the bottom of the ditch is pointed (that is, narrowed to a point}, or filled with thorns or other bufhes, — as a guard to the face of the young hedge. The laft, however, is feldom done, nor often requifite ; for the Norfolk hufbandmen are pretty obfervant in cutting thofe hedges, in any given year, which face their wheat in that year ;: by which means the young hedge'acqulres four or five years growth before the inclofure, it is ex- pofed to, becomes a fpring or fummer paf- ture. This is the ufual treatment of old rough liedges in which pollards and flubwood abound, and which conftitute the principal part of the hedges of Eaft-Norfolk. Therr 14; NORFOLK. xot There are, however, m?iny plan ted l^edges; fome of them very old : of thefe, a two-fold treatment prevails : namely, that above-de- fcribed; and another, lefs eligible, called *' buckftalling ;" which is cutting off the hedge- wood about two feet above the top of the bank, and " out-hoiling/' that is, fcouring out the ditch for manure ; without returning any part of the foil to the roots of the hedge-wood. But by a repetition of thefe bad pradices, the bedges, fituated as they are in Norfolk, near the top of an artificial bank, with a deep ditch beneath them, are at length left deftitute of mould to nourifli and fupport them, dwindling away. Hub after flub, until they arje no longer adequate as fences. The practice of phjhing, or laying hedges, is, in a great degree, unknown in this Diftrid', I— Workmen, from countries where this is a favourite and common pracflice, have been em- ployed by gentlemen in this Dillrid: ; but the fuccefs has been fuch as has rendered thofc to whom it has become known, inveterate en^e- mies to the prad:ice. The unpardonable cuftom of hacking off th& fide-boughs of tall hedges, leaving the H 3 tops •Ida HEDGES. 14. tops to over-hang the young fhoots, is 'here too prevalent. But fufTering the foil to be waflied away from the roots, is not more deflrudtive to a hedge than is this vile pradticc. If *' kid" and " oven-fuci" be wanted, let a hedtre which is full-g-rown be felled to the flub. There is fcarcely a farm in the Diftridt which is not more or lefs '■ wood-bound ;" that is, injured by overgrown hedges ; which are, year after year, receiving irreparable damage for want of cutting; while the undergrown ones are damaged by a lefs pardonable treatment. The tenant's motive is founded in felf-inte- reft : he gets fuel and " manner," without •any contingent expence pr trouble; — and whe- ther the hedge endure, henceforward, for one or for two centuries, is not an objecl to him. But as, at the expiration of his leafe, his farm will be worth more or lefs, according to the flate of its fences, it ought to be the efpecial care of the landlord, or of his agent, to fee that they are properly treated, V. The method of raising new hedges in Norfolk is a cheap one j and may be prat^ifcd in 14-. N O R F O L K, 103 in any country where the foil is free from ftones, and other obflruflions of the fpade. The hedgling is defeaded on one fide by a deep ditch, while the other Mq is fufficiently guarded by the excavated mould formed into a mound, and crefted with a ilout brufli- bedge-, in the fetting of which the Norfolk La- bourers, from conftant pradlice, are very profi- cient. It is a ftriking, and indeed an interefting fad:, that hedges in Norfolk arc raifed with good fuccefs, although neither poft, rail, flake or eddcr be made ufe of in defending them. - — And it tiiay be a moot point, whether a want of underwood has given rife to this, as a pradtice of necefilty ; or whether the prad:ice, by rendering coppices lefs valuable, has been a means of doing away, fo completely, the woodinefs of this Difiricfl. - But notwithftanding much praife is due to the Norfolk method of defending young hedges, the mode of planting, here in com- mon ufe, is very reprehenfible. Inftead of the, quickfets—provincially," layer"— being planted in or near the foil which is to fupport it, they are laid in near the top of the bank— perhaps, H 4 two I04 HEDGES. 14. two feet above the natural level of the adjoin- ing inclofure — and probably five feet above the- bottom of the ditch : nor are they, there, planted with their roots downward, in the man- ner which nature didlates ; but with their heads pointing into the ditch : and, to com- plete the abfurdity of the bufinefs, the work- man, in dreffing the face of the bank, fre- quently draws "the back of his fpade down- ward over the tops of the plants, prefling them, of courfe, flat to the face, in which they not unfrequently flick ! yet, he fays, he thereby does no harm : and it is poffible he ma^ be right ; but, to a perfon who has feen any other method of proceeding, he appears to be doing very wrong. Neverthelefs, it is furprizing to fee the pro- crrefs which quick, thus planted, will fometimes Hiake the firft two or three years after plant- ing : and this, probably, is the falfe light by which the advocates for the method are led away. The top of the bank 15 loofe nuide ground^ snd the upright brufli-hedge, by colleding driving rains, fupplies it amply with moiflure. But the fame rains not unfrequently afliil in wafhing down the face of the bank, together with 14. NORFOLK. 105 with the quick, into the bottom of the ditch. Even the ordinary mouldering of the bank, by frofts and moderate rains, leaves, in the courfc of a few years, the roots entirely expofed. Should the plants preferve their upright pofture, they foon Icfe their vigour ; but it is no uncom^ mon thing to fee them hanging, perhaps by one fibre, with their heads downward as;ain{tthe face of the bank. Confequently, hedges which have been planted in this manner are full of dead gaps J and the plants which have furvived and have got down to the natural foil are, by the crowns of their roots being conftantly expofed. Hinted and unhealthy. Whoever will be at the trouble of making the obfervation, will find, that the full-ftemmed luxuriant hedges, which occur, more or lefs, in every part of theDiftricft, (the Norfolk foil being naturally affecfted by the hawthorn) but more particularly in the Fleg Hundreds, have been planted at or near the foot of the bank. The reafon why a hedge planted low in ths facioi the bank, does not fiourilh for a few years after planting is obvious : the bank being fleep, and without a break from top to bottom, it {boots off the rain-water, which falls afrainft it, into I0& HEDGE S. 14. into the ditch ; while that colle<5ted by the dead hedge, above, is not fu^icicnt to moiflen it to the bottom ; which is, of courfe, deprived of the benefit oi rain-water. Befides this want of moifturc, the fuperincumbent weight of the bank is inimical to the tender fibrils of the young plants; and their progrefs, fo long as they remain confined under th.e bank, and cramped with its prclTure, is of courfe flow. But this difficulty once overcome; the roots having once reached through the bank, and got poffeffion of the adjoining inclofure; the plants jlourilli amain; while thcjr principal roots bc- . ing firmly and cooly fuuatcd, they continue 10 fiourilh, even in defiance of •■* buckftallins:" and '^ out-holling." It is nor my defire to cenfure the pra(flicn. But fee Min. 104, on this fub- je' right. The beil feeds arc thofe of white clo- ver (among which thofe of rye-grafs or other graffes may be mixed) ; for this plant, by rnn- ning upon the furface, and fbriking root at toe joints, foon fojr.iS the rcquifite matt of her- bage. VI. Replanting WORN-OUT HEDGES. It wiH be doing juflice to the Norfolk management to mention a practice, which at prefent pre- vails, of grubbing up old worn-out hedges, and planting nevr ones in their flead. In this cafe the old hedge is (or ought to be) thrown down in autumn — that the foil may be thoroughly foaked and tempered with the win- ter's rains and frolls : — early in fpring the foot of thc^ bank fliould be formed, and, In due fea- fon, the layer put in, and the fence completed. By this means a difgraceful nuifance is re- m.oved, and a new flraight hedge obtained; and this at a fmall additional expence. — The roots alone, if the old hedge be full of large ilub*, and loaded with ilem^ — will pay for p-rubbingr : Hi HEDGES. t44 grubbing : I have known one let to grub upon thefe terms. I have alfo known fixpence a rod (of fcvcn yards) befides the roots given ;— *• alfo, one fhilling a rod and the fmall roots. The price of re-making — that is, fcouring and banking up — an old ditch is nine-pence a rod and beer ; fo that the difference between re-making the old one and raifing a new one is but three-pence a rod. VII. Grubbing the borders of old hedges, and turning up the leaves^ rough grafs, and top- loil for manure, is much in practice •, and pro- vided too much foil be not carried away from the roots of the hedgewood, the pradtice is a good one. The unplowed flip on the ditch- lide is, generally, when the ditch is fcoured, treated in the fame manner, and mixed with the ihovellings of the ditch. Thefe are pra'''cas to three pound fifteen fhillings a ton, if^^r^~7f^Jx.^ of forty feet : the price of cak-hark, from ten d^ to twelve fhillings ; and of top-ivood, from fcven to twelve lliillings, each load of timber. The price of naked oak-timber, in the rough, was fifteen to twenty-pence a foot. l.-i-fod -^Tbe price o^ afJo timber^ 9iand\x\g, was forty to fifty ihillings a ton : in the ftick, ninc-pcncc to one fliilling a foot. The i6. NORFOLK. 123 The ehn of Norfolk is of little value; for before it acquires a fize to be ufefuL it beoins to decay at the heart; — perhaps, owing to the lightnefs of the foil. The ajh on the drier lighter foils appears fluntcd and fliort j but in, and near, the meadows and fvvamps, it is of a firm growth, and a good quality. The heechis very rare in this DlftricL: never- thclcfs, I have fcen it, upon a fubftratum of marl, of a beautiful growth, and confidcrabie fjze. The method of taking down timber, in Norfolk, is uniform, and, perhaps, peculiar to the country. It is called, very aptl)', grub- felling ; the operation partaking both of grub- bing and of felling with the axe, in the com- mon way, above-ground; a method which is wafteful of timber. The Norfolk Woodman, therefore, fells below the furface of the ground ; by cutting off the horizontal roots clofe to the item ; which, inftead of fliorten- ing, he, in tffed:, lengthens, by adding to it a conical point, cut out of the crown of the root : fo that by this way of proceeding, a greater length of tiiuber is obtained, than by, £rfl-. J2+ P L A N T I N G. j6, iirfl, grubbing, and, afterward, cutting off the butt with a faw. Grub-felling is, no doubt, the rnofl eligible way of taking down hedge- row timber ; and this accounts for its being the eftablilhed practice in Norfolk. For an infla-nce of the circlimfpe<5tion requi- (ite in pruning hedge-rozv timherSj fee Min. 5. For an \x\^2.nct oi tappijjg young oak-plants, in a negleded nurfery^ground, with a common fpade, fee Min. '^6. For an inflance of fuccefs in tranfplanting Jcrgc oaks, fee Min. 37. For general obfcrvations on the proper foi{ and lituation for the , fee Min. 38. For an idea relative to changing the crop of timber in agiven fituation, fee Min. 81. For obfcrvations on thinning hedge-row tim- bers^ 2ind on tiL'in ilml^ers^ fee Mm. 85. For general obfcrvations on the treatment of timaers and pollards in hedges^ fee Min. 90. For an infcance of thinning a tall mixed pla?!- taticiiy v/ith obfervaticns on different _^//>^«Vj of timbcr-rrces, and with reflexions on the after- management of plaiiiations in general, fee ?.!iN. 95. For obfervatlons on the Midjiimmer-poat y fee G E N E R A L 17. GENERAL MANAGEMENT O F FARMS. THE PRINCIPAL OBJECTS of the Eaft-Norfolk hufbandry are. Bullocks, Barley, Wheat ; the other produdions of the Diflricft being in a great meafure fubordinate to thefe three ; from which, chiefly, the farmer expe£bs to pay his rent and fupport his family. The bullocks are fatted chiefly on Tl'rneps, and fometimes finiihed with Ry£-grass, and Clover: which laft are alfo raifed for horfes, ftore- cattle, and the dairy, Oat» 126 MANAGEMENT OF FARMS. 17, Oats, too, are raifcd in {mill quantities for horfe- corn ; and Buck *, in great abundance, for pigs and poultry. Some fc'.v Peas are alfo grown for fvvine, (^or are bought up by the millers, to improve the eolou?- of their vvheat-ilour) ; — and fome, but very few',. Vetches, for foilino: horfcs. Weld, Hemp -f, Hops, and CoLIi-SEED, ("the laft more particularly in Fleg) arc occa- fionally raifed , but in inconfiderable quantities. * Buck — pclygc;iHm fa^ntyrjim—hwcV wheat, or hranJt ; its common naiiie in the fouthern hundreds of Eall-Nor- folk ; but in thii { art of the county its only name is Buck : indeed the addition ivhcat (prob.ibly a corrup- tion of the Dutch iwf/) is abfurd, and altogether impro, per. f Some fmall quantities are ^rov/n iipca the eaftcrn coaft. Sheep »?• NORFOLK, 127 Sheep can fcarcely be enumerated among the objegti of the Eait-Norfolk hufbandry ^ and Cows are kept chiefly for the purpofc of breeding, and the ufe of the family. Swine and Poultry aMv well attended to ; and, in the fouthern parts of the Diftrid, are carried, in great quan- tities, to the Norwich and Yarmouth markets. Rabbits, though fome few warrens occur in Eafl-Nor- folk, arc not a ftaplc produdion. But before the particular praftices obferved, and the procefies made ufe of, in obtaining, fe- parately, thefe feveral productions, can, with any degree of propriety, be defcribed ; — it will be neceflary, firft, to premife fuch general PROCESSES, and departments of management, as do not pertain, efpeciaily, to any individual OBJECT. The general subjects neceffary tobepre- mlfed on the prefcnt occafion, are. The prevailing method of laving out FARMS, in Norfolk. The I2S MANAGEMENT OF FARMS. ^-j. The succession of arable cRori;, in this Diftricl:. The soil-process ; — or the Norfolk method of putting the foil into a proper flate of cul- tivation. The manure-process; — or the general ap* plication, and method of applying, manures in Norfolk. The seed-process; — .or general obferva- tions on the different modes of fovving. The vegetating-process ;■— or tEe fum- mer care, protedtion, and management of crops, in general, from feed-time to harveft. The harvest-process ; — not the procefs of harveiVmg any one particular crop ; but the general bufinefs of harveft. The farm-yard management; not a de- tail of the barn-management and confumption of one feparate fpecies of crop, nor the win- ter-treatment of any one particular fpecies of livc-ilock ; but a defcription of fuch general bufinefs of the barn and farm-yard, as cannot with the fmalleft degree of propriety be given iind?r any one fpecies, — either of ftock, or crop. For f^y. NORFOLK. 120 For obfervations on the Norfolk farmers partiality to arable land, fee Min. 49. For further obfervations on this fubjedt, and of their negled of grafs-land, fee Min. 51. For an evidence that the ftock of a farm onght to be adapted to the given foil, fee Min. 75. For an evidence of the cheapnefsof the Nor- folk pradice of hnfbandr)^ fee Min. ^S. For the general management of the Fleg Hundreds, fee Min. 106. For an evidence of the excelk'ncy of the arable management of Norfolk, fee Min. 112. For an evidence of its being adapted to a dry foil, fee Min. 114. For the general management in Blowfield Hundred, fee Min. iiS, Vol. I, K. i^> I3© LAYING-OUT FARMS. iZ, 1 8. LAYING-OUT FARMS, MANY of the prefent farms, efpeclally thofe of confidcrable fize, have formerly lain to perhaps two, three, or more feparate meffa- ages J each, perhaps, occupied by its refpec- tive owner : this, and the intermixture of pro- perty already fpoken of, accounts for that abun- dance of petty inclofures, — or " pightles" — fo difo-raceful to Eafl-Norfolk as an arable coun- ts try. It is, however, the prevailing fafliion at pre- fent, when adjoining pightles belong to the fame proprietor, or when they can, by ex- changes, be brought into the fame hands, to erafe the intermediate fences, and lay them in- to inclofures proportioned to the fize of the farm to which they belong. This, namely, proportioning the fize of the fisldsto that of the farm, is a matter to which Norfolk hufbandmen at prefent are very atten- tive. The fingular fyftem of hufbandry prac- tifed ISi NORFOLK; 131 tlfed in this Diftridl calls for a greater number of divifions than arc neceffary in moft other places. For although ah Eaft-Norfolk farmer divides his farm into what he calls " fix Ihifts," to receive his principal crops in rotation, he does not wifli for fewer than nineteen or twenty arable divifions, in order that he may have an opportunity of diftributing his turnep-crop over different parts of his farm. For fimilar reafons he does not clafs, but in- termixes, his other arable crops. This intermixture of crops renders driftways neceffary ;— and they are no where more nu- merous than in Norfolk. Another important matter to which Nor- folk hufbahdmen are attentive in laying-out their farms, is that of endeavouring to lay their " furlongs" north-and-fouth, that the fun may have an equal influence on either fide the nar- row ridges, upon which their wheat is almofl linlverfally raifed. K 2 S U C^ 1-22 SUCCESSION. 19. 19. SUCCESSION. IN NORFOLK, as m other arable coun- tries, hufoandmen vary more or lefs in the fuc- ceffion of crops and fallows to each other. But if we confine ourfelves to ibis Diflridl ; namely, the north-eaft quarter of the county ; we may venture to aflert, without hazard, that no other Diftri(ft of equal extent in tlie kingdom iis fo invariable in this refpeCt ; common-field Diftrifts excepted. It is highly probable, that a principal part of the lands of this Diftridt have been kept inva- riably, for at lead a century pad, under the following courfe of cultivation : Wheat, Barley, Turneps, Barley, Clover, Rye-grafs, broken up abour Midfummer, and fallowed for wheat, in rota- tion. Thus, ig. NORFOLK. 133 Thus, fuppoiing a farm to be kid-out with nineteen or twenty arable divifions of nearly- equal fize, and thefe to be brought into fix re- gular fiiifts, each (hift would confift of three pieces ; with a piece or two in referve, at li- berty to be cropped with oats, peas, tares, buck; or to receive a thorough cleanfing by a whole-year's fallow. This courfe of culture is well adapted to the foil of this Diftridt, which is much more pro- dudlive of barley than of wheat ; and is in every other refpedt, as will hereafter appear, admirably adapted to that excellent fyflem of management of which it is the bafis. The foil of the fouthern parts of the Dif- triri(ft moil immediately under defcrip- tion : which is furnifhed with a lefs genial foil -, namely, that fliallow, and fomewhat lightifh, ^fandy loam, which maybe called the common covering of the county ; broken, however, in fome places, by a richer, ftronger, deeper foil ; and in others, by barren heaths and unproduc- tive fands ; from which even the Hundreds of Erpingham, Turnflead, and Happing, are not entirely free ; though, perhaps, they en- joy a greater uniformity of foil than any other Diftricl of equal extent in the county. This, therefore, is the fite be{l adapted to the ftudy of the fyftem of management which has raifed the name of Norfolk hufbandmen, and which is ftill prefer vcd, inviolate, in this fe- ci uded Diflrid. For a fhallow fandy-lpam, no matter whether it lie in Norfolk or in any other part of the kingdom, there cannot, perhaps, bedevifed a better courfe of culture ; or, taken ail in all, a better fyftem of management, than that which is here in univerfal practice *. * If any improvement of the prefent fyOcm can be madi, it wcu'^d perhaps be by adopting the praiSticc of a judici- OUSi 19- NORFOLK. 135 But excellent as this fucceffion of crops un- doubtedly is, it cannot be invariably kept up j for even a Norfolk hufbandman cannot com- mand a crop of turneps or a crop of clover; and when either of thefe fail, the regularity of the fuccefiion is of courfe broken into. If his turneps difappoint him, he either lets his land lie fallow through the winter, and fows it with barley, in courfe, in the fpring ; or, more frequently, though lefs judicioufly, fows it with wheat in autumn ; fometimcs, though not always, fovving it with clover and rye-grafs in the fpring; by this means regain- ing his regular courfe. If the clover mifs, the remedy is more dif- ficult; and no general rule is in this cafe ob- ferved. Sometimes a crop of peas is taken the firfl: year j and the next, buck plowed under : or perhaps a crop of oats are taken the firft year, and over thefe clover fown for the fecond : in either of thefe cafes, the foil comes round for wheat the third year, in due fucceffion. ous Hufbandman in the northern part of the Diftrift (Mr. Edmund Bird, of Plumftead) ; who divides his farm into feven, inflead of fix, fliifts ; his courfe of crops are the fame as thofe of his neighbours ; his feventh fluft being a U'hole-yc:jr'sy«//* dinary, when we obfcrve their paces, rcfpec- tively. Plow-tc?.ms, in general, travel at the rate of one to two miles an hour ; whereas in Norfolk they ftep out at not lefs than three to four miles an hour ; and the fame, or a greater agilltv, is preferved in the other departments. I. Plowing. — Every thing is plowed with two horfes, abreaft, driven and guided by the plowman (fee Implements) ; and the common day's work, except in wheat feed-time is two acres! afad", this, which nothing but adlualob- fervation could have taught me to believe. The Norfolk hufbandmen pay due attention to thejiate of the foil to be plowed, being care- ful not to plow it too wet *, nor toa dry ; the * The Norfolk plowmen have a fingular expedient to prevent the foil when moift from turning up in whole gloliy farrows, which they term *' fcoring ;" to prevent which they tie a piece ©f ftrong rope-yarn round the plate or mould-board ; which, by this means, is prevented from gifting as a trowel upon the fpil. latter 14© S O I L - P R O C E S 3. zo. latter moft efpecially : not only becaufe their plow and team are ill-calculated for flubbom work ; but lel1:, in breaking up the foil at a time when it is too dry to be cut clean with the iliare, it fhould rife in clods, and thereby dif- turb the " pan ;" which, upon every occafion, -is held facred (fee Soil). Jnftances of the mifchiefs of deep-plowing are related : one of them by an old, and mofl judicious hufbandman, to whofe opinion the greateft deference and attention is due *. His men having, in his abfcnce, plowed part of a clofe when it was too dry, it broke up in large thick clods ; the pan, which adhered to the foil, being of courfe brought up to the furface. He immediately forefaw the efFcdl which, I have not a doubt, followed. This patch, from -no other apparent circumftance whatever, could nor, with all his fl^iil and induftry, be brought to bear a crop of any kind equal to that of the reil of the clofe, for fix or feven years afterward. The crops on this part were uni- formly, and obvioufly, not only foul, but bad ; and this, notvvithftanding an extraordinary al- lowance of manure and tillage were, from time to time, beflowed upon it. • Mr. Arthur Bayfield, of Antingham. From 20. NORFOLK. 141 From this and other inflanccs of a fimllar kind, as well as from general obfervation, I am convinced that to plow beneath the wonted depth, would, under the lingular circumftances of the Norfolk foil, be injudicious manage- ment ; — unlefs fome ready method could be hit upon of forming, at a greater depth, a frefh paia. 'The methods of -plowing are various.— Ipx making fallows, the prevailing praftice of plowing fleet and " fUll pitch," alternately, is very judicious : it not only breaks and mixes the foil more readily than the common pradtice of plowing always the fame, or nearly the fame depth ; but, in the firft two plowings, it ren- ders the operations more eafy : the firft, being thin, goes lighter off the fliare ; and the fe- cond being always (except for turneps) a crofs- plowing, the Ihare has frefli firm ground to lay hold of, by which means the plow is kept fteady to its work. To increafe this advantage it is common, on very thin foils, to break up fallows by " rice- balking," or by " Hob-furrowing i" which are nearly the fame operation performed in diffe- rent ways. In 14-2 S O I L - P R O C E S S. 20-. In rice-balking, the '' flag"* is always turned toward the unplowed ground, the edge of the coulter paffing clofe to the edge of the flag laft turned : whereas, in flob-furrowing, the flag is turned towards the plowed ground, the coulter pairing fifteen or fixteen inches from the laft plow-furrow; — into which, in this cafe, the edge of the flag hangs ; — and, in both cafes, a flip of unplowed foil, of a width nearly equal to that of the flag, is buried. Thefe methods of plowing are not peculiar to Norfolk ; but I know no Diflridt in which they are fo commonly praflifed by farmers in general as they are in this county. The firft h mofl: in ufe : it is the neater, and, perhaps for the Norfolk foil, the more eligible operation. Another method of plowing pradtifed iii Norfolk, but not peculiar to it, is " two-fur- rowing :" — trench-plowing — double-plowing. This is done with two plows, one following the other in the fame place : it is, in the flial- low foil of this Diftrict, a difficult operation ; but the wheels and the broad-fliare of the Nor- folk plow render it Angularly well adapted to this bufinefs. The foil, perhaps not more than - '•• The provincial term for the furrow turned. four >•. NORFOLK. 143 four or five inches deep, is to be divided into two thin flices, the under one being to be taken lip thick enough to bury the firft, wlthovic bringing up at the fame time any part of the fubilratum or pan : and this I have fcen done with great exadlnefs.; ^he price of plowing, with a plain, clean furrow, is two Ihillings and fixpence an acre ! which is the current price of the country, and the rate which is, I believe, almoft invaria- bly adopted by referees between out-going and in-coming tenants. This interefting fadt alone, accounts for the comparative high price of land in Norfolk. In many parts of the kingdom, ten {hillings an acre is a price of plow- ing, equally current. How much, thea, ic behoves gentlemen of landed property to in- troduce upon their eftates the prad:ice of plow- ing WITH TWO HORSES, AND GOING TWO JOUR- NiES A DAY, — where it is pracflicable ; and where it is not, to endeavour, by other means, TO LOWER THE EXPENCE OF PLOWING J and thus by introducing a real improvement, add a permanent incrcafe to their rent-rolls. 11. Harrowing. — In making fallovv's, it is cuftomary to harrow prefenily before each plow- ing ; 144 S O I L - P R O C E S S. 14. ihg •, the operation being too frequently defer- red fo long, that the feeds of weeds, fet at liberty by the harrows, have not time to vegetate, be- fore they are again turned under the foil, and placed out of the fphere of vegetation. This injudicious management is not how- ever univerfal ; good farmers making a point of letting their fallows lie a fufficient length of time between the harrowing and the fucceed- ing ftirring. One admirable pradtice peculiar, I believe, to Norfolk, is that of making the horfes trot ac harrow : it being a cuflom, which is prevalent throughout almoffc every department of this operation, to walk the horfes againft the rife, if any, and trot them back again in the fame place. ,,,T'^^^ excellent pradice not only rids work and difengages the root- weeds from the harrow-tines, as well as from the foil, leaving them loofc on the furface ; but levels the land,- in a manner which would be difficult to de- fcribe, and which obfcrvaiionj alone, can render evident. The day's work of a pair of horfes, walk- ing one way and trotting the other, the har- rows over-lapping fo as to give the ground at full double- tine, is laid at about feven acres. ilJ. ao. NORFOLK. 145 III. Rolling. — Very little general matter falls under this head. One circumftance, how- ever, requires to be mentioned. The roller, notvvithftanding the lightnefs of the foil, and its pronenefs to be injured by dry weather, is never ufed in Norfolk for the purpofe of comprefllon. I never faw one ufed by a farmer either upon fallow or upon a lay ; rot even upon the firft year of a clover-lay to fmooth the furface for the lithe. The only ufes to which I have feen a roller put, in this Diftrid:, are that of fmoothing the furface before fowing, to prevent the feed from running down too low, and that of fmoothing it afterwards as a preparation for the iithe * : and even this operation is performed with a roller not more perhaps i^han feven or eight inches in diameter ! a circumftance which I confefs, I am no way able to account for: never- thelefs, it would be rafhnefs to condemn an eftablifhed practice, unlefs I could, from my own experience, or from adequate obfervation on the experience of others, prove it to be in- eligible. I cannot, however, refrain in this Inftance from recommending to the Norfolk hufband- * And fomet'mes wheat is rolled in autumn. See "VV^heat, Vol. I. L men ^4^^ S O r L - P R O C E S S. at,- men to try, by accurate and repeated experi- ments, whether the rolling of fallows, lays-, corn-crops, and ilicadows, with a heaTy roller, would, or would not, be eligible management, on the Norfolk foil, IV. Cleansing plow-land.- — Tlie Nor- folk method of cleaning fallows from " quicks" and other root-weeds, is, when they arc dif- cngaged from the foil, to draw them into " rirb- ges"-^rovvs — ^with the fame hatrows with which they were difengaged (neither horfe nor hand- rakes being ev«r ufcd in the operation j. In this cafe, the horfes, walking flowlyy ai=e driven with reins-, the driver following the harrows, and lifting tbem up, at ftated diftanees. The " quicks" are thervihook into' heaps with fork?,- aad either b^rnt in the clofey or carried off to^ digeft in large heaps, as the v;eather fuits, or the j-udcment of the farmer may determine. Jf it be right, in making a fallow, to burn or carry c^ the roots of couch or other graflesy this is perhaps as fmipi'e a procefs as can be ilfed for the purpofe. It is a general idea tliat marl helps to cleanfe' th^ foil from quicks. 20, NORFOLK. 1^ V. Laying-up plow-land. — For wheat, the foil is ufualiy gathered up into very narrow ridges : but for every other crop it is laid into wide flat " warps," or beds of about ten paces wide ; without any regard being had to the na- ture of the fubfoil : which, notwithflanding it is, in general, fufficiehtly abforbent to admit of .this pradlice, is fometimes too retentive, and coldi to admit of it with propriety. This kind of larid, however, feldoni occurs in Norfolk ; and this circumftance may be a good reafon why a Norfolk farmer is fo truly helplefs on a wet cold-bottomed foil * ; and may account, in fome meafure, for his generally failing in his attempts to farm on any other foil than that of his own country. The idea of gathering the foil into ridges, and finking crofs-furrows for the purpofe of getting rid of the furfacc-waterj is unknown to iiim : if the fubfoil is not thirfty enough to drink up the rain-Vv^ater as fall as it falls, it lies upon the warps, or makes its Way acrofs them in a channel of its own. This, however, even fuppofing the pradlice to be without exceptions, is no heavy charge * For a ftiiking inftance, fee Mi n. 114. L z a^ainS: 148 S O I L - P R O C E S S. 20. againfl the Norfolk hufbandmen, confidered merely as fuch •, for the Norfolk foil in gene- ral is fufficiently abforbcnt to require neither ridge nor furrow. But there are patches, efpeclally on the fides of the fwells, and on the margins of the mea- ddws, which are too retentive to admit of fuch management ; and there 2iXG: fofne few hufband- men, who are fufficiently attentive to furface- drains for carrying off the fuperfluous rain- v/ater ; or, if that be found infufficient, have rccourfe to VI. Under-draining. — This, however, is a pradlice which is not of long {landing in the Diflrid: ; but may, I make no doubt, be found highly ufeful to many parts of it. Under-draining has, hitherto, been chiejfly, I believe, done with wood; there being no Itoncs in the Diflridt ; except a few fmall flints ga- thered off the land ; and except fea-ftones up- on the coaft ; — either of which would, if pro- perly ufed, be preferable to wood. For 20. \ NORFOLK. 149 For an inftance, and the method, of under- draining with wood, fee Mix. 2. For a particular foil-procefs for barley and turneps, on a very thin light foil-, fee MiN. c^^. For an evidence of the excellency of the Norfolk foil-procefs, fee Mi n. 98. For an inftance of injudicious management of a wet foil, fee Miw. 114. For further obfervatlons on fallows, fee the heads buck., turneps, barley, wheat. L 3 n't* Jfp MANURE-PROCES S. 2U 21. MANURE-PROCESS. THE PRINCIPAL MANURES fet on upon the lands of this Diflridt appear, in page 13, to be, 1. Marl, clays, and other earths. 2. Dung, and compoHs formed v/ith it. 3. Lime. 4. Soot. 5. Rape-cake, 6. Malt-coombs. I. Marling. Marl has been To long in ufe in ikis Diftrid:, that there are few farms vvith- out marl-pits upon, or near them ; fo that fearching for marl is at prefent feldom requifite, and the art of difcoverlng It not much ftudied» The herb coltsfoot {ttifJago farfara) abound- ing on the foil, is confidered as an indication of a jam of marl being fituated near the fur- face. But, whether this is, or is not, an in- fallible guide, — time and accidents or inten- tional refearches have not failed to difcover beds 21, N O R F O L K. isi beds of marl In a^mofl: every eftate, and, ia fome places, on almofl every farm, fituated fufficlently near tlxe furfacc to he worked with advantage. Of the quality of mar%s, a« has hctn already cbfervcd, the Norfolk farmers are, in a great meafiMre, uninformed. That which falls moft •readily, and *' gets to work'* the fooneil, is in the belt eiieem ; but, in general, the quan- tity of " uncallow'* (namely, the coping, or covering of earth, which lies upon the head, -or jam) is more attended to ths.a the intdnfie i]uality of the marl. The deplb of uncalloffj is generally very un- equal : perhaps, iif howfoever plaufible, prevent a man from reap- ing the advantage which fo fortunate a circum- Hance has thrown in his way. There may be foils in Norfolk upon which the Norfolk lime would have no beneficial ef- fect ; but that there are fome upon which it has a beneficial effed:, I am certain ; not only from my own experience, but from the practice of fome of the beil farmers in the Diftxldl; and this, too, upon lands which have been here- tofore marled^. If by lime, or any other fofiil or extraneous manure, a Norfolk farmer could fecure a crop of wheat without dung, the advantage would be very great. The whole fyjftem of the Norfolk management hinges on the turnep-crop ; and '^his depends, in a great meafure, on the quan- tity of dung. No dung, — no turneps, — no it, NORFOLK. 163 bullocks, — no barley, — no clover, — nor teathe upon the fecond year's lay for wheat. How much then it behooves the Norfolk hufbandmen, and turnep-farmers in general, to trcafure up dung for the turnep-crop. The lofs of a crop of wheat is only a lingle lofs, and its efFedts momentary and certain ; whereas the lofs of the turnep-crop deranges the whole farm, and its effects may be felt to the end of a leafe. If it be found, from adequate experience, that lime is infufficient to anfwer the defired purpofe ; and if it be found neceffary to right management that a certain quantity of wheat Ihould be every year grown ; other fadlitious or extraneous manures might, by a continued fearch and a proper fpirit of indullry, be ob- tained. The general method of applying lime is to let it fall in large heaps, and tofpread it out of €arts upon fallowed ground, either 'for wheat or for barley. 7he quantity ufually fet on — about three chal- drgas an acre* M 2 IV. i64 A! A N U R E - P R O C E S S. m. IV. Sowing Soot. Near towns foot is ufed as a top-drcffing tor wheat, ia February or March. 'The time of fovAng is confidered as very ma- terial. If it be fown early, andthe froft catch . it, its ftretigth is theFcby lowered : if late, and Ro rain falls ta v/afk it in, it is thought to be rather injurious than beneficial to the crop of wheat. And it is not, in any cafe, found of much, if any, fcrvicc to the fucceeding crop of barley, *The method of /(Hjohrg it is extremely fi-mple-, and, in the only inilance I faw the fowing of foot pradlifcd, her^, was very complete. A favo-urable opportunity being embraced,, <\'hen the wind blew gently and in the direc- tion, o? nearly in the fame diredion, as the lands or ridges lie, — the fame waggon which brought it from Norwich, and which, until the opportunity ofFersd, had ftood fafe under cover, was dravvn^ in a furrow, againft th-c wind ; while a man, {landing on the outlide of tht waggon, fpread the foot, with a fhovel, feveral yards wide, on either fide of him ; th« height of his fituation at once enabling him to fpread it wide, and cten. As he reached the- 2fC NORFOLK. 165 the windward end of the lands, the team wheeled round under the hedges, and took a fr-efli width. The quantitj fct on was forty bufliels an acre. V. Manurin-c with rape-cake.-— Rapu- cake is not a common manure in this Diftrift ; but it is ufed by fome very good hufbandmen, towards the north coafV : particularly by the jiidicious manager mentioned, in this fedlion, under the article marling *; who has not only marled one hundred acres of land, which men of lefs judgmiCiit than kimfclf confidered as unimprovable by marl ; but ha<:, in the courfe of about twenty )'ears, laid out eight hundred pounds in rape-cake : and his fuccefs is a ftriking evidence in favour of the doflrine above held forth ; namely, that of applying the dung wholly to the turncp-crop, and drcf- fins for wheat with fome other manure. He fetches the cake fevcn or eipht m/ilcs, from Cromer or Blakeney ; where it cofls him from forty fhillings to three pounds a ton ; <^ith which he drcfles three acres. Being prC' ** IMr. Edmund Bu;d, of Plumftcad. M 3 vioufly |66 MANURE -PRO CESS. 2U vioufly ground, or broken into fmall pieces, it is fown, by hand, out of a common Tecd-box, upon the lafl plowing but one of a fummer- f allow, for wheat. VI. Malt-dust. — This is the moft ge- neral adventitious manure of the Diflridt ; every malt-houfe furnifliing more or lefs of it ; but the quantity, even upon the whole, being fmall, it can only be of advantage to a fevy ^idividuals. For obfervations on marling, in South- Walfham Hundred, fee Min. §5. For a propofed melioration of the foil by an improvement in the foil-procefs, fee Min. 77. For obfervations on *' claying," in Fleg, fee MiN. 106. For experiment on the time of manuring grafsland, fee Min. 127. For the expence of marling, by water-car^ riage, lee Min. 136. 22. 312. NORFOLK. i6; 22, THE SEED-PROCESS. I. BROADCAST may be faid to be the *. ,8^ FARM-YARD MANAGEMENT. THIS HEAD may be divided into, 1. Barn-management; and 2. Straw- yard management. I. Barn-management. — Every thlng^ 13 thraflied by the coomb of four bufhels ; little or no thrashing being done by the day.* It is obfervable, that notwithilanding the fpa.- cioufnefs of the Norfolk barn-floor, the labour- ers in general obje-i^ / the allb'warice is made to the corn-buyers only : ' ' for in dealings between farmer and farmer for feed, &c. the *^ bare" meafure only is given. It is a pradice among Norfolk farmers, as prevalent as it is judicious,, not to ftore up dief- fed corn ; but either to let it remain in the itrsLw, br, if this be wanted, to keep it ai few weeks in the chaff till a fair market offers ; frequently flowing it av/ay in a fecefs cut out of the face of th6 mow, for this purpofe. ir. STKAw-YARf) MANAGEMENT— The Nor- folk hufb'andmen are, in general, very attentive to fcparating their ftdck in the flraw-yard. For this purpofe their '^ par-ya'rds" are j>^r/^i^ into fundry divifioris with faggots, in the manner already mentioned under the fubjedt Repairs. One divifion is fet apart for the cows — an- other for the '* buds" or yearlings, — fometimes ai third for the two-year-olds, — and, when tur- rieps are brought into the yards, a fourth for the bullocks. By this judicious rriariagement the weak is placed out of the power of th.e ftrdng, and the Vol. L O colder :?94 FARM-VARD MANAGEMENT*. i^ -colder and befl of the ftnuv may be given to fuch as require the befl keep. Sometimes the ftravv is given to the cattle in " bins;" fometi;T.cs laid in heaps ; and frequent- ly for bullocks at turnep, it is fcattered loofe about the yard. Upon the whole, the Norfolk farmers may be faid to be wafteful of flraw -, moire efpecj- -ally at the beginning of the winter, when it is frequently thrown into the- empty yard entirely -wafte as to fodder : this, however, is not looked upon in fo improvident a light in Norfolk as in moil other places ; for here a notion of the utility o-f having plenty of ftraw among dung prevails fo flrongly, that the flraw which is eaten by cattle is confidered by feme men, as being in a manner wafled' as to manure. For fui^her obfervationsoivthis fubjeft, fee vMiN. 73. 2&. '-.f^ m NORFOLK: 195 260 MARKETS. NORFOLK, taken colledively as a county^ is fingularly well-fituated for markets : the Norwich manufaftdry is produdive of a re- gular internal confumption ; while Yarmouth^ Lynn, the fmaller ports, Smithfield and St. Ives, takeoff the furplus produce. Smithfield is the grand market for cattle and fheep, and the sea-ports for barlev. Wheat is principally bought up by the mil- lers, and the furplus of what is confumed in the country fent to the london market in flour. Some wheat in grain is alio fent to Bear-Key. With refpeft to veal, pork, lamb, and fome- times mutton, a lingular pradlice prevails in Norfolk; moft efpecially at the Norwich market, which is fupplied with the above articles entirely by the farmers ; who, for fif- teen or twenty miles round, are moft q( them capable of drcffing a calf, a lamb, or a fheep ; ^hich, with poultry made ready for the fpir, O 2 are 196 M A R K E T S. 0.6. arc carried weekly by themfclves, their wives, their daughters, or their fcrvants, to Norwich market ; which, whether for plenty or neat- nefs, is, I believe, beyond all comparifon, the firft in the kinfrdom. o Thefe articles arc brought to market in pan- niers— provincially, " peds*' — either on horfe- back, or in market- carts (a convcniency which few farmers are not pofTcffed of) and placed in rows in the *' ped-markct;'* a fpacious triangu- lar area in the center of the city ; the market- women fitting in a row on one fide of the pcds, \\''hile the other fide is left free for their cu Homers. Whether viewing the ncatnefs of the market- women themfelves, the delicacy of their wares, or the clevernefs which, through habit, many of them are miftreffes of in the difpofal of them, the Saturday's market of Norwich ex- hibits a very agreeable fight. It 13 not necelTary to add to this account of the ped-markct, that the bufinefs of a butcher in Norwich is confined, in a great mcafure, tO" beef and a little mutton. Indeed the trade of a butcher is not, in any part of the county, a o-ood one; the principal farmers butchering their tt: NORFOLK. 1^7 their own meat ; and the fmaller ones who kill for the ped-markets, living chiefly on the oif^ and the unfold joints. The corn-market of Norwich is likewife a very capital one. But the bufmefs being chiefly . >, done at the Inns, it makes no Ihow. The river '/ Yare, which is navigable from thence to Yar- mou:h, affords an eafy conveyance of the fur- plus corn bought up at Norwich, for the Lon-' don market. The principal market of ibis Diftridtfsthatof North-Walsham ; — a very good one: great quantities of barley and wheat are bought up weekly, and the fyrplus of the home confump- tion either fent down the north river naviga- tion to Yarmouth, and from thence ihipped off for the London or other market ; or is deli- vered by land carriage atCROMERor MiJNSLEy, and there (hipped off. "When the ports afc open for exportation, great quantities of corn are fent immediately from Norfolkto Holland, and other foreign MARKETS. One general obfervation remains to be made refpedting the markets of Norfolk : they are in geixeral afternoon-markbtsj no bufinefs be- Q 3 ing t^^ MARKETS. 26, ihg done in the corn-marker, at leaft, u»til three or four o'clock in the afternoon. The market of Norwich is, however, an exception to this cuftom, and there may be other fore- noon markets in the count)'. Many conveniences and advantages accrue to the farmer from afternoon-markets : he has all the morning to himfelf : he dines with his fa- niily ; and fees his rnen at work, and his teams out for their afternoon journey, before he fets off for market. His market-expences are curtailed, and a habit of lounging out a whole day, idly, prevented. The only incon- veniency incurred by afternoon'markets, to a farmer, is the necejjity of returning home in the dark of winter's evenings : this, however, is an inconveniency which farmers in general who go to market at ten o'clock in the morn- ing 'Voluntarily difpenfe with. The Inn-keepers may be faid to be the only fufferers by afternoon- mar kets. The Fairs of Norfolk are not fo confider- able as they are in fome other counties; ex- cept the fair of St. Faith's, which is one of the largeft fairs in the kingdom. 5A3t ji6u NORFOLK. 199 But as I made a point of attending feme of the principal fairs, and of minuting the ob- ferv^ations which ftruck me vvhilc they were, frefh in the memory, I forbear faying any thing further refpedting them in this place ; but refer to the Minutes themfelves ; which. I pub- lifti the rather, as nothing gives a more lively, and juft idea of what may be called the ECONOMY OF LIVE-STOCK in a given Diftrid:, than the bufinefs which pafTes at the fairs of that Diftrid:. Belides, fairs and markets are the great ftumbling-blocks to gentlemen-far- mers ; who, through want of affability, or want of cournge, remain in general entirely ignorant of the bufinefs of fairs and markets ;. even when they have made conliderable pro- grefs in the bufinefs of the farm. — This is my only motive for giving the minutias of the Minutes as they (land in my Minute-book ; for on a fubjed: fo totally new as this is, I believe, to written agriculture, every incident becomes valuable ; I mean to thofe, whom, in this par^ ticular, I moft efpecially wilh to inform. For obfervations on St. Faith's fair (1781), f&e MiN. 27. O 4 Fof ■zop MARKETS. 26. For obfervatiqns on Holt fair, fpe Min. ^9. For obfervations on Walfliam cqrn-markcr^ fee Min. Zo. Fdr pbrervations on Aylefliam fair, fee P4iN. 94. For obfervations on Norwich clover-feed marker, fee Min. ioi. For obfervations on \yalfham fair, fee Min. 105. For obfervations on Worftead fair, fet^ MiN". 107. F'or obfervations on Ingham fair, fee Min. J12. For general obfervations on Norfolk fairs, fee MiM. 1 12. For obfervations on Cavyfton fhecp-fliqw, fee M?N. 123. For obfervations on St. Faith's fair (1782), fee Min. 134. For fundry obfervations on Smithficld mar- ket, fee the article Bullocks. n^ ^7 N 0 R F Q iv K. ftot WHEAT. IN TAKING a fyflematic view of the cuU Jiireof this crop, it will be proper to conlider, 1. The fpecies of wheat ufually cultivated in Norfolk. 2, The foils on which it Is ufually grown t. 3, The fucccffion ; or the crop, 6fc. which wheat ufually fucceeds, in the manage- ment of Eall-Norfolk. 4. The foil-prpcefs, 1 c. The manure-procefs, I ^ nri r , r 2^^ prattice tor 6. The feed-procefs, 1 J^^^^ .^^ ^^_ 7. The vegetating procefs, 8. The harveft-procefs, 9. The farm-yard procefs, ^ 10. The markets for wheat, )- wheat in Nor- folk. I. The species. — The long-eflabliflied ?< flock" of this country is the ^' Norfolk 5:ed,"— which is faid to weigh heavier than any Other wheat which has yet been introduced • The ?i/lANijREs applied for Wheat appear under art. JylA-NURK-Paocr-s. 102 . WHEAT. 7-^1 into the county. Irs appearance, however, is very much againU this afTertion ; for it is a very long bodied, thin grain, partaking more of the Ihape of rye, than of wcU-bodied wheat. A favourite new fpecies has lately been in- troduced, under the name of the *^ Kentilh "white colh." The grain is plump and red j but the " coih," or hufi-:, white ; refembling very much the velvet wheat of Surrey gnd Kent. The " cad," or yield of this is allowed TO be greater than that of the ** old red," — and the millers begin to like it nearly as well j — though, on its firft inrroduction, fome fif- teen or twenty years ago, they were, or afFed- ed to be, prejudiced againfl: it. A remarkable circumflance is faid to take place, refpefting this fpecies of wheat, when ibwn repeatedly in Norfolk. Though the colh be perfe(5lly white on its introdudlion, and though it be fludioully kept feparare from the red cofh •, yet, by being repeatedly fown, year after year, it lofes the fairnefs of its huiks ; which firft become "pied,'* and, at length, change entirely to a clear red, refembling thofe of the old Norfolk ftock. I have feen them in their pied flate, and have been aflurcd by Ij, NORFOLK. 2A3^ by men of obfervation, that they acquire thia |late, though kept perfeftly feparate from the. rci^l-coih variety. If this be really Jv fa<^, it is a llriking evidence p-f the power of foils and fituations, in eftabliOiing what the botaqiUs call varieties, \n the vegetable kingdom. II. The soil. — In this, as in moft other Diflriifls, wheat is fown on almoft every fpccies of foil. But the farmers here, as in other places, too frequently find out, at harveft, that a full crop of barley, or oats, would have paid them better than half a crop of wheat. In the northern parts of this Diftrid: there are many very light-land farms, — and fome in the central parts of it — which pafs under the denomination of barley-farms : and on which the occupiers judicioufly content them- felves with a fmall proportion of wheat. But the fouthern parts of the Diftridl, and ^he fouth-eaft parts of the county in general, enjoy a ftronger, richer foil, well adap^d to the propagation of wheat. III. The succession. — In the regular courfe «f hufbandry, the wheat-crop fucceeds inva- riably 2C4 WHEAT. lyj rlably the fceond yearns lay ; but, as has been al- ready intimated, the regular fuccefTion is in a greater or fmaller degree broken into by farniers in general ; and it fometimes happens that wheat is fown on the frjl yearns lay — fometimes after peas, or after huk harvejled or buck plowed under, or turneps, or fome- times on a " right-out fummerly,'* or, fiimmer fallow. But it may be faid, without Jiazard, that three-fourths, perhaps nine- tenths, of the wheat fown in this part of the Diftrid, is fown on the fecortd yearns lay, IV, Soil-process, — This varies with the nature and ftate of the foil, — the nature of the preceding crop, — the circumftance of the farm,— and the ikill and judgment of the farmer. I, The prevailing practice is to make a •* t^ackward fummerly"- — a fort of GHtamnal fallow — of the second yxar's lay. When feed is fcarcc, the fecond year's lay . is fometimes fown on the ^' flag;'* that is^ upon the unbroken furrow of one plowing', cf}>ecially if the ^tQd. be intended to be dtb- plcd vn. But, for b road ca(l-fo wing, neither the ■5-7. NORFOLK. 20$ the depth of the Norfolk foil (except in feme few places) nor the conflru6tion of the Norfolk plow, will admit, with any degree of propriety, of this (in many parts of the kingdom) moft excellent prad:icc. TUE BACKWARD SUMMERLY of the SECOSD year's lay, is made in different ways. Some farmers plow only twice ; rice-balk- ing the firft time very fleet. When the flag is rotten, they harrow acrofs and fet on the muck ; and, the laft plowing, go a fuil depth ; kying the foil in " warps-," or wide flat beds, on which they fow the feed above-furrow. This, however, is confidcred, as it really is for wheat, a ilovenly practice. Others plow three times : the firfl fleet ; the fecond a full pitch ; the laft of a mean depth ; with which laft plowing the feed is plowed m under-furrow. The foil is harrowed between the plowings, and the dung in this cafe fei upon the fecond harrowing, and plowed in with the feed. But the pra(5lice of thofe who excel in their profeflion, andwhoare, in their neighbourhoods looked up to as fuperior huft)andmen, is this : »!^ \V ii t A r 27, Kis fccond year's lays having finiihcd hi^ bullocks, and brought his ftock-cattle, and hories, through the fore-part of the fummcr ; and his firft year's lays having been mown, and ready to receive his flock ; the farmer begins to break up his '■' olland" for v;hear, by rice- balking them as fleet as pofTible, fo as to carry an even regular furrow ; embracing his opportunity when the furface has bcenmoiftened by a fummer fnower. In this rice-balked flate his fummerlies remain until the wane of harvefl: •, when his torn being chiefly in, and his horfes more at lei- fure, he harrows, and afterwards plows his fum- merlies acrofs the balks of the firfl plowing ; bringing them up this feCond plowing the full depth of thfc foil. On this plowing he fpreads his manure; harrows, and immediately " fcalcs'* it in by another fleet plowing. This third plowing has feveral good effeds : it mixes, effedually, the foil and the manure, __cuts off and pulverizes the upper furfaces of the furrows of the fecond plowing ; and by doing this, moft effedtually eradicates or fmo- th<^rs fuch weeds as had efcaped the two former 37- NORFOLK. a^y former earths ; and, at the fame time, by excluding the air from the under-parts of thofe furrows, renders the whole aa mellow and fri- able as a fummer-fallow. In this (late it lies until feed-time; when it is harrowed, foiled, fown, and gathered up into ridges of fuch width as is agreeable to the nature of the foil, or the ildll or fancy of the farmer. Thofe of fix furrows are the moft prevalent ; but there are verv good farmers who lay their wheat-land into four-furrow, and others into ten-furrow, ridges ; which lail they execute ih a ftyle much fuperior to what might be ex- pedted from whsel-'plovjs. ■ But the fix-furrow work is that in which the Norfolk plowmen excel. It is generally performed with three plows in this manner ; the firft fetsout the ridge, the fecond takes the middle-bout, and the laft makes up the furrows. The bed: plowman is of courfe put lafl, the fecond firft, and the worft takes the middle- bout. The firft plit is fometimcs turned par- tially back by the fecond, by letting theolf- horfe go 'back in the firft^made furrow; and fometiaies- the firft furrow is left entirely open, by 4o8 W H E A T. 27; by letting the oif-horfe go back out ©f the firft furrow. The lafl way makes the ridges wider,' and rids more ground ; but the firft ftirs the ground better, and is thdught tb diftribute the feed more evenly. The plowman who goes laft: and makes up the furrd'AS, divides his horfeg by means of a Idng " horfe-tree^'* or middle whipping ; io that each of them takes an out- fide furrow^ while he and his plow alone oc- cupy the furrow he is making up. This an- fwers two good purpofes : — it gives the plow-^ man a free fight, and prevents the horles from treading the ridges. If the fdil be wet and pioach)''^ fome judicious farmers divide the mid- dle-bout horfes in the fame manner. The horfes are of courfe fomewhat aukward at firft fetting- outj but they foon become tradable, and much more fteady than when they ilagger about and joftle each other in the fame furrow. The four-furrow ridges are plowed in a fimilar man- per by two plows. There are feveral advantages arife from tKi^ tiiethod of laying-up narrow ridges. The \\'hole bufinefs is carried on in regular pro- grelfion. The feeds-riian -begins on one fide ^f the clofe, and fows towards the other with ds 27» NORFOLK. 239 as little interruption as he could do for one plov/. For although two or three plows are employed in the fame piece, there are no frefh fettings-out, nor any crofs-work at lafl -, favc fuch as is neceflarily given by the figure of the field. There is much time faved (more efpe- cially when wheel-plows are ufed) in altering the plows,* and the whole piece is equally well executed ; each ridge being fet out^ and each furrow made up,- by the fame men. The Nbrfolk plowmen, when plowing in wheat, ca'rry very narrow furrows; fo that a fix- furrow ridge, fet out by letting the ofF-horfe return in the firft-made furrow^ does not mea- fure more than three feet eight or nine inches.- 2. After the first year's lay the feed is generally fown on the flag. 3. After peas, the farmer gives one two three or four plowings, and manages in every other refpedt the fame a's he does after the fecond year's lay. 4. After buck harvested, he is more con- fined in refped: of tune, and feldom gives more than two, fometimes but one, plowing. If he plow twice, he fpreads his manure on the Hubble, fcales it in fleet, harrows, rolls, fows and gathefs up the foil a mean depth into Vol, I, P narrow 119 WHEAT. afi narrow work. If he plow but once, he, m like manner, fpreads his manure on the ftub- ble ; and, what Teems very extraordinary to a ftranger, fows his feed among his manure; plowing the whole in together, and gathering his foil up into narrow ridges ; as if it had un- dercronc the operations of a fallow. There is, however, one very great evil at- tends this method of fowing wheat after buck ; efpecially where rooks are numerous. The buck which is neceffarily Ihed in harvell- infy the crop, and which is, of courfe, plowed under with the manure and feed-wheat, vege- tates the fucceeding fpring, and becomes a %veed to the wheat ; and, what is of ftill worfe confequencc, (hould rooks get a haunt of it, they will not only pull the buck up by the roots, but the wheat-plants likewife ; fo as to leave large patches almofl deftitute of plants. But, by firft fcaling in the manure and felf-fown buck very fleet, and harrowing the furface fine, the buck vegetates, and the evil confe-^ quence is thereby, in a great meafure, prevented. 5. After buck, plowed under. — This, as well as the preceding, is a favourite prac- tice among good farmers ; and the Norfolk plowmen perform the operation of plowing the crop under in a mallerly ftyle. They fvveep it down NORFOLK. 211 down l^y the means of a bruili or broom, made of rough bufhes fixed to the front of the '^ fickle-tow ;" or fore-tackle of the plow, be- tween the wheels ; fo as to bear down the buck without lifting the wheels of the plow from the ground. To prevent this, Vv^hen the buck is ftout, it is firft broken down by a roller, going the fame v/ay as the plow is Intended to go. A good plowman will tuck it m fo completely, that fcarcely a ftalk can be feenl The furface is, fometimes, harrowed and rolled after plowing : fometimes left rough ; the former is perhaps the mofl eligible ma* Jiagement. In either cafe, the foil remains in that f^ate iintil after harveft, when it is harrowed and taken up a full pitch, acrofs the warps. At feed-time, it is harrowed, — rolled,— fowed, — and ufually gathered up into " narrow work," in the mariner above defcribed. 6. After summer-fallow. — The praflice of fummer-fallowing feldoni occurs in this Diftrict ; — turneps or buck being generally in- troduced as a fubfiitute for it. However, when land has been worn-down by cropping, and is much run to *' beggary" and weeds, a " right- ©ut fummerly" is efteemed by many judicious P 2 hufbandmen 212 WHEAT. 27. huibandrticn as good management ; and is, it feems, fince the late failure of the turnep-crops, gaining ground every year. The clofe of a fummer-fallow is the fame as that of a backward-fummerly : the manure Is fcaled in with the lall: plowing but one, the feed plowed in moderately deep, and the foil gnthered into narrow ridges by the laft plow- ing. 7. After turneps. — In general, the foil is plowed a mean depth, and the feed fown over the firft plowing : if, however, the turneps be got offearly,the weeds are fometimes firfl fcaled in, and the feed plowed under with a fecond plowing, gathering the foil into narrow ridges. General observation. — Excellent as the Norfolk pradtice of hulbandry may be, taken all in all, it feems in this place neceflary to obferve, that although there are fome fuperior hufbandmcn who put in their wheat-crops in a mafterly ftyle, a very confiderable part of the land fown with wheat in Norfolk, is llovened over in a moft unfarmer-like manner. The fecond year's lays in general are broken up too late, and receive too inconfiderable a por- tion of tillage to bring them into a hufband-like {late. Were t7. NORFOLK. 413 Were a Kentiih, or any other good wheat, farmer, who had heard much of the fupe- riority of the Norfolk hufbandry, to ride thro' Eaft-Norfolk hi the month of November, he would experience fome difficulty In conceiving himfelf travelling In a country of which fame has fo long fpoken loudly. It is true, he would not unfrequently be ftruck with a beauti- ful objed ; — a kind of fluted frize-work, or any other ornament to the face of the country his fancy might pidure to him ; but he would not lefs frequently be difgufted with the fight of fields which he would little fufpeft, on a curfory view, to be fown wdth wheat. He would rather, at firft fight, take them for rough fallows, on which flieep had been fod- dered with hay they could not eat ; the whole furface being flrewed with tufts of roots and fiems of withered graffes, and with grafl'y clods of every fiiape and dimenfion *. * There are, neverthelefs, men who argue in favoi of this management; and, were it prudent to fow wheat on very light *' running fands," it might be proper to preferve part of the *' wreck," as it is well termed, to prevent the fand from being run together by heavy rains • but foils of this nature are, as has been already obferved, generally improper for wheat. P 3 In 214 WHEAT. 27. In their culture of barlej'' and of turneps, the Norfolk hufbandmen, no doubt, excel ; but, taken colled:ively as a body of profcffional men, they cannot, defervedly, be ranked among wheat-farmers. Neverthelefs, there are, as I flatten myfelf- fully appears by the foregoing detail, fomc hufbandmen in Norfolk who merit no part of this cenfurc ; their management being, per- haps, the befc that art can devife for the foil they act upon : while, therefore,. I condemn them as a body (for reafons which I flatter my- felf are obvious), I mean to except, with all due refpeft, a number of individuals. V. The manure- process.— Land which has been recently marled or clayed, requires no, further addition; — nor has land which has received fifteen or twenty loads of dung and mould for turneps, — the firft year's lay having been teathed in autumn, and the fecond fed off, — any need of another dreffmg for Vvheat. Where the foil is good, and the wheat apt to, run too much to flraw, fome few judicious farmers fet their manure upon the young plover, thereby checking the effcd of rank- nefs to the wheat, • • But $7- NORFOLK. 2IS But the molT: general praftice is to fpread the manure upon the broken ground, in the manner defcribed in the laft fedlion ; or, if the feed be fown upon the flag, to fpread it on the turf and plow it under ; or to fpread it on the plowed furface, and harrow it in with the feed, as a top-drefling. The lafl: I have feen done in the following judicious manner. Three or four bouts are firft plowed in the middle of each warp, forming a narrow bed of plowed ground, wide enough to fet the manure upon, but not too wide to be received between the wheels of the cart ; which, in fetting on the muck, run in the plow-furrows on each fide the bed. The manure is then fet in hillocks upon thefe plowed flips ; the warps are iiniihed-plowing ; the manure fpread over them j — the feed fown ; . — and the whole harrowed in together. By this management the manure goes on with eafe to the team, and without the newly- plowed ground being cut to pieces by the wheels of the cart, or torn about by the feet of the horfcs ; for the cart being always, as it were, on the nail, the horfes have no obftacles to ftruggle againfl:. In a wet feafon this pradice is Angu- lar ly eligible, P 4 The 2l6 W H E A T. ^f' The quantity of manure fet on for wheat is generally lefs than that fet on for turneps. Of dung eight to ten cart-loads (as much as three horfes can conveniently draw) an acre is reckoned a tolerable drcffing. Of lime, three to four chaldrons an acre. Of rape-cake, a ton to three acres. Qi Jhot, about forty bulhels an acre. For obfervations on xht fp.ecies of manure for wheat, fee the article manure-process. VI. Seed-process. — In defcribing this dcr partment of the culture of wheat, it will be neccffary to perfpicuity, to confider, fepa- rately, 1 . The time of fowing ; 2. The preparation of the feed; 3. The method of fowing; 4. The quantity of feed ; 5. The method of covering; 6. The adjuftment of the foil. I. The time qf sowing. -~An orthodox farmer never thinks of beginning " wheat-feel'* iJntil after St. Faith's fair-, which is held on the 17th of Odober. So prevalent^ indeed. ay. NORFOLK. 217 is this cuflom, that, perhaps, nine of ten of the farmers in Eaft-Norfolk begin to fow wheat between the 17th and 24th of O6I0- ber; — and continue till the beginning of De- eember ; — fometimes even until Chriflmas. If they finifh in November, they confider them- felves in very good time. W heat fown in the ordinary broadcaft manner is, however, here fpoken of : for dibbling or fetting of wheat, Michaelmas is efteemed the heft time. The reafon which the Norfolk hufbandmen. give for fowing their wheats fo late, compared with the pra6tice of other light-land counties, is, that their early-fown wheats are liable to be winter-proud, and run too much to ftraw; whereas their late-fown crops afford lefs ftraw, but a greater ^' call'' more efpecially, on land which has been recently marled. This laft idea, perhaps, accounts for the origin of their prefent time of fowing. The prefent practice of hufbandry, in Norfolk, was eflablifhcd a century, perhaps two or three centuries, ago ; and has been handed down from father to fon with but very little improve- ment or alteration. The prefent time of fow- ing was, o.f cQurfe, fixed when the land was full 5tiS WHEAT. 27. full of marl, and was no doubt judicioufly founded on experience. Marl, however, has now, in fome mcafure, loft its efficacy ; and it feems probable, that not only the time of fowing wheat, but the very fyftem of Norfolk hufbandry will require, ere long, to undergo a confiderable change. Suffice it, however, in this place to fay, that there are fome fen- fible, judicious men, who already fee the folly pf waiting for St. Faith's fair, before they begin to fow their wheat. 2. Preparing the seed.' — The ordinary method of preparation is to fteep the feed in brine, and candy it with lime, in a way limi* lar to that praftifed in other counties ; and, probably, with the fame effed:. There are, however, men in this county who fpeak with firmnefs and confidence of that they can prevent, by a preparation of the feed, the fmut or ** brand" of wheat. They, like, wife, feem clearly of opinion, that all wheat would naturally become fmutty, if not checked by a proper management of the feed ; but that v/ere it become, through negled, as black as- (mutitfelf, they would engage in three years tiaie to eifecl a radical cure. The firft year, it %1. NORFOLK. zii^ is alloxved, there will many grains cfcape ; the fecond fome ; but the third year, there will not ^•emain in the whole crop one ** brandy" ker- ;iel. This is fpeaking clofely to the point, and (ieferves a hearing. Th e procefs, though fimple, is truly chemical; and the idea, I flatter myfelf, totally new to written agriculture. Their method is this : Inftead of difiolving ^he fait in a large proportion of water, in order to form a brine to fteep the wheat in ; it is dif- folved in a very fmall quantity of water ; — ■ barely enough to bring on the folution. With this li(iuid fait the lime is flaked ; and with this faline preparation, in its hotteft ftate, the wheat is candied ; having previoufly been moillened, |"or the purpofe, with pure water. I fliall not, here, comment on this procefs ; but only obferve, that the wheat-crops of the perfons who pride themfelves on this pradice,^ are, in general, freer from fmut, than thofe of their neighbours. 3. The mode of sowing. — Bro^dcaft is the prevaling pradlice. Dibbling, or fetting, is in much ufe on the Suffolk fide of the county.— Pibbling and fluting rollers are alfo ufed by fome ftiflr WHEAT. 47; fonie few individuals. But what is remarkable, drilling is, in a great meafure, unknown in Norfolk ; notwithftanding the foil is fo pecu- liarly adapted to that pradllcc. It appears under the foil-procefs, that plow- ing in the feed under-furrow, is the favorite mode of fowing wheat in Eaft-Norfolk. It is done in this manner. The land, having been harrowed down level, and the furface rendered fmooth by the roller, the head-plowman (\i at Icifure) " fets out the warps;" that is, marks out the whole piece into narrow divifions, or ftripes, of about a ftatutc rod in width. This he does by hanging up his plow in fuch a manner, that no part of it touches the ground except the heel, which ilides upon the furface, and makes a guide-mark for the feedfman. If the plows are all cm- ployed, the feedfman will fet out the warps himfelf, by drawing a piece of wood or other thing behind him, fo as to make a mark to fpw by. This method of fetting out the feedfman's work, when he has no interfurrows to fowb)', 'is very accurate, and much preferable to the Kcntifh method of fowing, by Hicks fet up iq the «-7« NORFOLK. 221 the form of a lane ; for, there, much depend^ upon the eye; whereas, by the Norfolk method, the feedfman fees to an inch how far he has fown, and where each handful ought to fall; he, of courfe, leaves no flips unfown, nor gives others double feed. If the foil be intended to be gathered into fix-furrow ridges, the feedfman fows, on the warps, about two-thirds of his feed; — if into four-furrow work, fomewhat lefs than two- thirds *. The plowman then begins to fet out his ridges, the fame way that the warps are drawn ; but without any regard either as to their ilraightnefs, or their width ; they being in- tended merely to diredt the feedfman, not the plowman. In fix-furrow work, the middle- bout plowman follows next, and after him the feedfman, ftraining the remainder of his feed in the trenches made by the middle-bout plow ; which is called " fowing the furrows." The head-plowman follows laft , — covers up the feed, and finiflies the work. In four-fur- row work, the two firft furrows are fown, and the ridgelets made up in a fimilar way, * See MiN. 67, on this operation. The ^^4 W H E A To Kf. The ufc of fowing the furrows is to give the outfidcs of the ridgclets their due pro- portion of feed ; thereby preventing the inter- furrows from being left too wide and naked of plants. Some farmers fow only one of the "dutfide furrows ; namely, that toward the Worked ground •, and this is undoubtedly the more requifite buifinefs ; for the feed on thi^ fide having been all gathered up by the pre- cedin<5' furrow, the crumb or fhovelling of the inter-furrow is left naked; and there would, of courfe, be no feed buried under it, if it were not thus fown by hand, in the preceding plow- furroW-. In fix-fur row work, three plows employ a fecdfrnan^ and finilh about three afcres a day'. In four-furrow work, two plows find employ- ment for a feedfman, — there being, in thi^ cafe, more furrows to be fown,— and finifli about two acres. The dibbling^ "dabbing," or fettingof wheat; is confined principally to the country about \Vyndham, Attlcbury, Buckcnham, Harling, ■V ficc. In the other Diftrids of Norfolk it is but little known, and no where panifedi, though fometimes tried by way of experi- '*'^"'- The- a;. NORFOLK. 223 The propriety of the pradice depends upon circumftances; fuch as the price of labour, the price of the feed, and the quality of the foil. There feems, however, one thing always ef-^ fentially needful ; that is, a good foil. And this may, in fome meafure, account for the flow progrefs which it has made in the more northern parts of Eafl-Norfolk ; but why it fhould not gain ground in the Blowfield, South-Walfham, and Flegg Hundreds, is a matter of furprize. Perhaps, nothing but the fandiion of cuflom and fafhion is wanted to render it, in this well-foiled quarter of the county, the univerfal practice. For a full account of this procefs, fee the MiN. 23. 26. 28. ^he Dibbling- Roller is made fomewhat ^mllaf to the common fpiky roller ; wqthj however^ thefe diflindions : it is in itfelf fhorter, and the fpikes, inftead of Handing perpendicular to the circumference, are bent obliquely thereto, that they may leave fmooth and clean indentures, without pulling up or breaking the flags. Between each row of fpikes is a fcraper to difengage the roller from the mould, which is apt to ftick between the fpikes, and which 224 WHEAT; 2^ which in moifl; weather renders it wholly ufc- lets. The feed is Town broadcaft over the in- dentures, and fwept in with abufh-harrow. 1 have feen wheat come up very well after the fpiky roller ; but an implement which a Ihower of rain renders ufelefs, feems ill-adapted to the bufinefs of fowing wheit in November*. 4. Quantity of seed. — Three bulliels an acre, broadcafl, is the favorite quantity df feed-wheat; without much regard being had to the time of fowing. This accounts in fome meafure for the want of fuccefs in the early-fown wheats; Three bufhels of feed fown in September is equal to four or five buihels fown the latter end of November. It is no wonder, then, that the flraw fliould prove llender^ and the grain light J for the plants being too numerous, and the foil weak and Ihallow, though perhaps in fufii- cient heart to pufh the plants through the win- ter and fpring, the vigour of the foil is fpent before harveft, and the ears of courfe abridged of half their load. "Whereas, had there been a due proportion of plants, the exhauftion during winter and fpring would have been lefs, and the flrength of the foil referved for the * The fluthig roller I did not meet with. more 27- NORFOLK. 22$ more material purpofe of perfecting the plants at harveft. 5. Covering the seed. — The feed fown over the rough furrows of the firfl or fecond plowing is covered in the \ifual manner with tined harrows : generally with two finall har- rows and two horfes led by a boy, and fome- times guided with a plow-line ; the man or boy following the harrows to lift them up, and difengage them from the rubbifh, which too frequently incumbers them. That fown after the hand-dibbles or the dib- bling-roller is fwept in with a bufh-harrow, made of a gate, hurdle, &c. wattled with thorns or other bulhes. 6. Adjusting the soil. — The fubfoil of Norfolk being in general of an abforbent nature, crofs-water-furrows are in many in- flances unnecefTary : however, where the fub- foil is a brick-earth, which is not unfrequently the cafe, crofs-furrowing becorries abfolutely neceffary to good managem.ent, though not always put in practice. Some neat hufbandmen roll their ^' wheat- figgs" immediately after fowing, A common roller takes two ridges ar once, the horfes draw- VotL. L Q^ ing 226 W H E A T. «7. ing in the furrow between them. This gives an immediate neatnefs ; renders the crop beau- tiful at firft coming up ; anticipates the labour of rolling in the fpring; and thereby precludes the danger of unlocking the weed-feeds at that vegetative fcafon of the year. VII. The vegetating-process. — Hand- •weeding is the principal labour beflowed upon the wheat-crop between feed-time and harvefl. If the interfurrows be wide and thin of plants, or if the crop be otherwifc broken, the hoc is fometimcs, but very rarely, ufed. Feeding wheat in the fpring, though It can- not be called a common practice, is, never- thelefs, frequently done ; efpecially when fpring-feed is peculiarly fcarcc, as it was in the fpring of 1782; when almofl all the wheats in the country were fed off: not by fheep, as is ufually the cafe, but by every other fpecies of live ftock. See Min. 106. If wheat abound with " red weed" — pop- pies— ■fw'me are frequently turned upon it to eat out this troublefome weed ; which they will do, with little or no damage to the wheat. For ip NORFOLK. 227 For the method of fearing rooks •, and obfervations on game ; fee the general fubjedt VJEQETATING-PaOCESS. VIII. The harvest-process. — i. The TIME OF WHEAT - HARVEST, in Norfolk, is fomewhat late^ The feafons are later, here, than they are in the more fouthern provinces, and the Norfolk farmers, in general, fuffer their wheats to ftand until very ripe. In fome of their fmall *' woodbound pightles," they are, indeed, under a degree of necelTity of letting it fland until it can be cut and carried imme- diately • for fliould it, in this fituation, re- ceive much wet in the Ihock, they would find it difficult to get it dry again, before it re* ceived confiderable damage. 2. The method of harvesting. Wheat, as has been obferved, is feldom cut by the acre ; every farmer providing harveftmen fufficient to get in his crops. It is, almoil unlverfally^ "fhorn'* with fickles ; either with or without teeth, as beft fuits the hand or the fancy of the " Ihearer." Of narrow work, each man takes his rigg ; a Hiethod which makes the work go on regular- CL2 ly 228 W II EAT. 27. ly and with great conveniency to the workmen. Sometimes each man binds his own eorn ; but more frequently, two-and-tvvo lay together; the firft making the band, the latter binding the iheaf. If they work fingly, they drive the corn before them with their feet, until having colledled a fheaf, they flop and bind it up. This method is more expeditious than that of delivering the handfuls in detached reaps or fhoves, which, in this narrow work, would be tedious to gather up V but, in appearance at leaft, it is wafleful, and at the fame time conveys, to a ftranger, an idea of llovenli- nefs. The bands are, in general, knotted ; the fheaves made of indeterminate Hzes ; tied loofcly, with the band about the middle; fet tip in fliocks, as clofe as they can fland^ and with generally a fheaf placed at each end, as if ftudioufly intending to exclude the air en- tirely from getting into the fhock. No caps or head-fheavcs are ever made ufe of. If the crop be tall, the flubble is lefc eighteen inches or two feet high. Unworkmanlike as all this would feem to a mzn of Kent, the Norfolk reapers have one quali- iicatioh which, in fome meafure, atones for theil' 27. N O R F O t K. a29 their fins of undoubted flovenlinefs : a com- mon hired harveftman, who is not working for himfelf, but for his raafter, will clear with his own fickle, one day with another, from two to three roods of wheat ; in propor- tion to the ftoutnefs of the crop. If the flieaves receive much rain in th« jfhock, they are, the firfl fine day, fet out fingly, in order to have the benefit of the fun and air ; which, in the clofe flate in which they are ufually huddled together, it^ is impoffible for them to receive. This is by no means fo tedious an operation as theory may fuggefl ; but is, when the fheaves are very ^vet, an eligible expedient. 3. An excellent regulation is common, ^^ this Diflrid, refpecling gleaners ; everyi. parilh, or parifhes in general, referving their f fcartered corn for their own parilhioners.yThis is not only equitable ; but refcues the farmers from thofe clouds of gleaners, which, in fome countries, ftroU about from parifh to parilli. But, even with this regulation, the number of gleaners which are fometimes feen collediecj . together, is Ihameful ; generally including a (number of ftrong healthy young women, who Q^ 3 wojil4 230 WHEAT. a?: would be much more laudably employed, as they are in other Diflridls, in aflifting to reap the crop. Some farmers allow the gleaners to follow the Ihearers ; but, in general, they are not permitted to enter the clofe until the ihocks are out of it. 4. Laying ue the wheat-crop. Formerly the wheat-crop was put entirely into the fpa- cious barns, with which this Diftridt abounds; a wheat-rick being a phenomenon : of late years, however, pillar-frames have been con- flrudled ; and wheat-ricks are now no longer an uncommon fight. 5. Wheat-stubbles. — Notwithftanding the length which flubble is generally left, it is feldom mown for ftable litter : the general prac- tice being to throw turneps upon it, in autumn, and, when the bullocks have trampled it down, to pull it into " rucks" with a pair of har- rows, and carry it home as litter for the yards. IX. The barjt-majjagement. — After what has been faid already, on this fubjeft, under |he general head farm-yard-management, little remams to be added here. Wheats. jsy. N O R F O L K. 23? Wheat-ftraw, being of lefs value, in Nor- folk, than in moft other places ; owing to the great quantity of reed uied in thatching; lefs care is obferved in thrafhing wheat, here, than in places where it is either fold for litter, as about London, or where it is in general ufc for thatch, as in moft parts of the kingdom : even when it is intended for thatch, it is thraflied rough, and {hook off heads-and-tails ; it being the univerfal pradice of thatchers, here, to blend their ftraw, and draw their jhatch. X. Market. — This, alfo, has been noticed in the general articles : fuffice it, therefore, here to add, that Norfolk abounds with corn- mills ; — the fmall ftrcams which are very abundant in this country, are convenient rc- fources for water-mills : befides which, num- bers of windmills are difperfed over the face of the country •, fome of them very capital and coftly. One lately ered:ed in this Diftridt is faid to have coft twelve hundred pounds. For obfervations on the effecl of herbery on \yjieat, fee Min. 13. Q.4 F«' 232 W H E A T; Jijf* For an Inftance of mowing wheat, fee MiN. 14. For an experiment with different manures for wheat, fee Mi n. 18. For an experiment on the mode of fowing^ fee MiN. 19. For the origin and method of fetting wheat, fee MiN. 23. For further obfervations on fetting, fee MiN. 26 and 28. For the method of plowing for wheat againft fheafantSf fee MiN. 41. For an inftance of fowing wheat hetween-fur- roWf fee Min. 43. For an exception to the common method of fowl fig wheat in four-furrow work, fee Min. 67. For obfervations on the praftice of feeding wheat, fee Ml N. 106. For an experiment made by planting herhery among wheat, fee Min. 133. %%, BARLEY. ^% NORFOLK. a^^ 28. BARLEY. THIS SUBJECT llkewlfe requires to be divided into the following articles : 1. Species, 6. Seed-procefs, 2. Soil, 7. Vegetating procefs, 3. Succeffion, 8. Harveft-procefs, 4. Soil-procefs, 9. Barn-management, 5. Manure -procefs, 10. Market. I. Species. — The common long-eared bar- ley {hordeum vulgare) is the prevailing and al- moft only fpecies of barley fown in this Di- itria:. II. Soil. — The Norfolk foil is peculiarly well adapted to this crop : even the lighteft of it, if it be in fufficient heart, will bear tolerable barley -, and the ftrongefl is not too heavy for this grain ; which is no where produced in greater perfeftion than in Norfolk j whofe barlev ^34 BARLEY. ^^i barley is coveted for feed throughout the kingdom. III. Succession. — In the grand routine, barley fucceeds wbeai and turneps ; and in 'feme very light land farms, k is fown inflead cf wheat, after the fecond yearns lay. IV. Soil-process. — i. After wheat;-— the ftubble having been trampled down with bullocks at turneps, and wheat-feel being €nifhed, the farmer begins to i^ fcale in his ^^eat fiubbles" fjor a winter fallow for barjey. If the land lie in narro\y work, the ridgelets are fplit ; if in warps, the ground is likewife plowed clean, but very fleet. The beginning ©f March, the land is harrowed, and prefently ^fter the farmer ** takes up hiswheat-ftubbles'* by a full-pitch crofs-plowing ; or, if the feafoii be wet and the foil heavy, he reverfes the ridges. In April he harrows, and begin? .•'■flirring for barley,** with another full-pitch plowing, lengthway ; generally gathering the foil by this plowing either into five-pace, or into ten-pace warps ; in which it lies until feed^tirue ; — when it is harrowed ; rolled ; [faiwn ^ a8, NORFOLK, 23^ fbwn ; plowed fleet; reverfing the warps, and *5 flading down" the furrows, — fo as to ren- der the entire furfape as even and level as way be. 2. After turneps,-— the foil is generally broken up as fail as the turneps are got off; if early in winter, by rice-balking ; if late, by a plain plowing. The general practice, if time will permit, is tq plow three times ; the firfl fleet the fccond fulUpitch ; the laft a mean depth ; with which lad the feed is plowed in. But when it is late before the turneps are got off, different ways of management are fol- lowed, according to the Hate of the foil, and the feafon, and the judgement of the farmer.-— Sometimes the ground is only plowed once, and the feed fown ab©ve ; but more frequently it Is broken by three plowings, as above j notwith- itanding, perhaps, the farmer has not more ;hah a week to perform them in. This at firfl fight appears injijdicious manage- ment : the plowings being fo quick upon each other, neither the root-weeds have time to wither, nor the weed-feeds to vegetate ; yet a principal part of the moiflure of the foil (a fhing peculiarly valuable in Norfolk at that time 236 B A R L E Y. 2?, time of the year) is neccffarily exhaufted. But this being a frequent practice of fome of the bcH farmers in the Dillrift, we may rell: affurcd that two plowings and harrowings are not wantonly thrown away. The Norfolk farmers in general are mailers in the art of cultivating barley. They feem fully aware of the tendernefs of this plant in its infant ftate, and of its rootlings being unable to make the proper progrefs in a com pad: or a cold foil : they therefore ftrive by every means in their power to render the foil open and pul- verous. To this intent it is fometimes two- furrowed, and fometimes a fourth earth is given ; efpecially in a cold wet feafon. The backward fpring of 1782 tried their ikill : fome lands were two-furrovred twice^ over, laying the foil up in ridgelets, dry and hollow ; fo that two or three fine days fitted it for the reception of the feed 5 breaking under the feed-plowing as fine as afhes. Nor is this caution confined to ^' turnep-bar- ley," but is extended more or lefs to " flubble- barley ;" which, however, does not require (o great a degree of care; the foil in this cafe being kept open, in fome meafure, by the undigefted ftubble. tt NORFOLK. 237 Hubble, and the roots of grafles and other weeds, which a turnep-fallow is, or ought to be, free from. This, perhaps, accounts fully for the fuperi- ority of ftubblc-barlies, overthofe produced by a well-tilled well-manured turnep-fallow : a myfterious fadt which cannot, perhaps, be ex- plained on other principle. 3. After lay, — the turf is generally- broken by a winter-fallow, and the foil treated in other refpeft, as after wheat. (For an excep- tion fee MiN. 57.) V. Manure-process. — Barley is feidoni manured for ; except when fown after lay 5 '■when it is treated as wheat. After turneps, no manure can be requiiite ; nor after wheat, if this has been manured for : if not, the tur- nep-crop following immediately, the barley is left to take its chance j unlefs the opportunity be embraced for winter-marling. VI. Seed-process. — i. t i me of sowing.-- Notwithftanding the drynefs of the Norfolk foil, barley may be faid to be fown late, in this Diftrid. There is little fown before the mid- dle of April, and the feed-time feldom clofes lantit i^i BARLEY. 28. until towards the middle of May. The tinie of fowing, however, depends in fome meafure on thefeafon; which, with refpefl to fowing barley, is more attended to in Norfolk than perhaps in all the world befide. Until Linnasus hit upon the idea of fowing by the foliation of trees, the republic of agriculture never heard of any other guide to the time of fowing than the almanack ; which is ftill followed impli- citly in every Diftridt in this kingdom except Norfolk : where a maximj probably as old as the prefent fyllem of husbandry, Ihews that her hufbandmen are not inattentive to the foliation of trees with refpeft to the proper feafon of fowing; their maxim importing, that the fowing of barley ought to clofe with the foliation of the oak :— a When the oak puts on his goflling grey, *' *Tis time to fow barley night and day j'* that is, when the oak puts on that fallow aj)- pearance which it does at the time the buds are breaking, a few days previous to the cx- panfion of the leaves, no time fhould be loft in getting the feed -barley into the ground 5 that ftS, NORFOLK. 23^ that being the happy juncture which ought to be embraced. In the backward fpring of 1782, barley was Ibwn in June, with confidence, and with luc-- eefs : I have by me a fample of exceedingly- good barley, produced from feed fown, by an experienced hufbandman, the fourth and fifth of June. See note to Min, 125, for remarks on this incident. 2. Preparing the seed. — I never met with an inftance either of fortifying it againil difeafe, or of fleeping it to forward its vegeta- tion in a dry feafon, or a backward feed-time. This is flrong evidence, though not a proof, that fleeping feed-barley with intent to pro- mote its vegetation, has no beneficial efied:. 3. The method of sowing. — All fown broadcaft ; and almofl all under-fiirrow ! that is, the furface having been fmoothed by the harrow and roller, the feed is fown and plowed under with a fhallow furrow : a circumftance this, which, until I obferved it in Norfolk, had never occurred to me, either in pradicc or theory ; though admirably adapted to a light dry foil ; and, indeed, to any foil which is light enough to produce good barley ; pro- j^j, BARLEY. 28. provided it be rendered Sufficiently fine, and the feed be not buried too deep. "Wheiher through general cuftom, or from particular experience, the Norfolk farmers are very partial to this method of putting in their barley : however, if the feafon be wet, and the foil cold and heavy, good farmers not un- frequently fow barley above. And, in all pro- bability, the diflinftion is well founded. In a dry fpring and fummer, fowing under muft, to all human reafoning, be eligible -, and in a cold fpring, or when the foil is rough with clods, fowing above may be equally good manage- ment. Neverthelcfs, I have known a judicious farmer give, under thofc circumftances, an earth extraordinary, rather than not have an opportunity of plowing in his ked. In a forward fpring, and when the laft piece of turneps happens to be eaten off late, the ground is fometimes, at a pinch, obliged to be plowed only once, and to be fown above ; but, even in this cafe, there are men who arc not at a lofs for an expedient. Inilead of turn- ing over the whole thicknefs of the foil at once, they " two-furrow" it, and fow betix;een j in the manner dcfcribed in Min. 43. Thi^ 2».- NORFOLK. 241 This method, if the under plit be fuffici- ently moiil: and mellow to break kindly with the harrow, appears to be moft eligible ma- nagement. 4. The quantity of seed. — Three bufliels an acre may be taken as the nearefl medium quantity of feed-barley. 5, 6. Covering^ — adjusting. — Whether or not grafs-feeds be fown over the barley, the furface is harrowed, prefently after the lall plowing ; and, when the barley is up, run over with a light roller, VII. Vegetating PROCESS. — Kandweeded. VIII. Harvest-process. — i. Time of cut- ting. Barley, like wheat, is generally fuffered to Hand until it be very ripe. 2. Method of cutting. — It is univerfally mown into fwath ; — with a fmall bow fixed at the heel of the fithe. — Cradles are not in ufe ; and the north-country method of letting it up in finglets, is unknown. 3. Method of drying. — If barley receive ■wet in the fwath, it is treated in a fingular method in Norfolk. It is not turned, but Vol. I. R '' lifted:'' ii42 B A H T- E Y. 28. ^'■lified:'' — that is, the heads or ears are raifed from the ground, either with a fork or the teeth of a rake ; thereby admitting the air underneath the fwaths ; which, though they be fufFcred to fall again immediately, do not fall fo clofe to the ground as they lay before they were lifted ; the air having free admifilon xmder them. This method of lifting is thought to ftop the ears from vegetating nearly equal to that of turning ; which requires more la- bour ; befides breaking and ruffling the fwaths; which, by repeated turnings, lofe their fliffncfs, becoming weak and flabby, and liable to fall into clofe contaft with the ground ; in which ftate the corn prefently be- gins to fprout. When the fwaths are become thoroughly dry, and ftiff on the upper fide, they are then turned^ that the other fide may be got into the fame flate ; and, if the wea- ther be fuitable, rendcrrd fit for 4. Cocking. — This is never done until a fair profpedt of carrying offers itfelf ; it being efleemed in Norfolk, as it is in the fouthern pounties, negligent management to leave bar- ky all night in cock. The method of cock- ing, or, as it is provincial ly, and more pro-f pcrly, tt. NORFOLK. H3 perly, called—" gathering," — is, in Norfolk, performed in a particular manner. Some fmall part may be gathered by men, with " gather- ing-forks.''— common corn-forks ; — but the principal part of the barley-crop is gathered by women, with " gathering-rakes :" — ^nanie- ly, ftrong rakes, with long teeth— with which the fwaths are rolled up into wads of about a a pitch, or fork-full, each, the women at the fame time raking the fwath- Heads. This rids work, faves men, and puts the barley into a convenient form for pitching •, a roll hanging better together upon the fork, than a cock made up in layers in the Kentifh manner. 5. Carrying. — Generally two pitchers and two loaders ; who load with the hands only : wci)men take after the carriage : men, at lei- fure-times, rake the ftubble with drag-rakes : trot with empty carriages : — tread mows, and fometimes ricks, with horfes : frequently make a f^ well," — that is, carry up a flue or chim- ney, in the middle of a barley-rick ; and fome- times, when the feafon is catching, ufe the fame judicious precaution in a *' gulph," or mow, in a barn. E. % IX. Barn- fi44 BARLEY. 28. IX. Barn-management. — See the general head. X. Market. — Befides what is fhipped off to the London and other markets, a confider- able quantity is malted in the country ; both for a market and for home-confumption : this, however, is fmall, compared with that of other countries of equal extent and populouf- nefs : fmuggled fpirits leffen the quantity ; — and the quality of malt-liquor, in Norfolk, is lower than in many parts of the kingdom ; the " harveft beer" excepted; which is ufu- ally brewed in Odober, and kept round till the enfuing harveft. For an in (lance of fhecp-fold being of great ufe to barley, fee Min. ii. For an experiment with lime for barley, fee Min. 29. For a fin^jlar foil-proccfs for barley, fee Min. c;7. 29. 29. NORFOLK. 24S OATS. THE QUANTITY of oats grown in tb'n Diftridt is inconfiderable, when compared with that of barley. The only species I haveobferved is a white oat, of a quick, growth, and probably of Dutch extraction. They are grown occafionally on all soils ; but moft frequently on cold heavy land, or on very light unprodutftive heathy foils. Oats mofl frequently succeed wheat or olland-barley ; but there are no eftablillied rules refpeffting any part of the culture of this time-ferving crop. The SOIL-PROCESS is ufually the fame as that for barley : the ground being, generallyj broken by a winter fallow of three or four plow- ings ; oats, however, are fometimes fown on one plowing. The SEED-PROcESs, too, is frequently the fame : except that oats are more commonly fown above>furrow than barley is. The time R 3 of 246 O A r S. 2^i of fowing oats is generally made fubfcrvient to that of fowing barley ; fome being fown be- fore ; others after bai ley-feel : an uncommon circumftance. I have feen oats fown in June •, and it is remarked by men of obfervation, that oats fown late, grow ripe earlier than bar- ley fown at the fame time. This Ibews that the Norfolk-oats arc of a quick-ripening kind. Tht quantity of feed from four ro five bufhels an acre. I met with one reiiiarkable inftance refpc(ft- ing the culture of oats. The furface of a piece of groundj which had been fown feveral days with oats, but which were not yet up, was " run," by heavy rains, into a batter ; and baked by fucceeding dty days to a cruft ; fo that the owner defpaircd of a crop : he there- fore, as an expedient, plowed the ground ; turning the oats, notwithftanding they had begun to vegetate, under a fleet furrow. The iuccefs was beyond expectation. This operation, however, was not altogether a game of hazard : there being, it feems, a farmer, fomewhere in the Diftrict, who ufes it in common practice ; plowing in his oa4:s v.'ith a very fleet fiirrow; and, after they have *• chicked/' 29- NORFOLK, 247 " chicked," but before they appear above- ground, turns over the foil a full pitch : and he is faid to find his account in this Angular management. Two things are, undoubtedly, obtained by this pra(5tice : weeds of every fort are either totally deftroyed, or fufficiently checked to give the corn an opportunity of gaining full pofleflion of the foil ; which, by this opera- tion, if performed in proper feafon, acquires a degree of porofity, giving a degree of free- dom to the rootlings of the young plants, which, perhaps, no other procefs could give. The opennefs and freedom communicated by this operation, feems to be fingularly well adapted to the infant plants of barley; which, it is highly probable, might frequently receive benefit from this extraordinary opera- tion. The HARVEST-PROCESS, — BARN-MANAGE- MENT, &c. of oats, are fimilar to thofe of barley; R 4 50- P E A S. 24? PEAS. 3c. PEAS. PEAS cannot be called a flaple crop of thi» country : neverthelefs they are every year 'grown, in greater or fmaller quantities ; ac- cording, perhaps, to the demand of the pre- ceding year, and according to the comparativ'e prices of peas and barley; which, in Norfolk, may be called rival crops ; peas being ufually fown on v;heat-ftubbles, or on light-land lays, which, in the common courfe of culture, are objcdis of the barley-crop. The very low price of barley in the winter 1 781-2 fickened the farmers of that crop; and, in thefpringof 1 78 2, more peas were fown in Faft- Norfolk, than, perhaps, had ever been known iii any preceding year. This circumflance afford- ed me a favourable opportunity of making remarks on the different modes of cultivation made ufe of in producing this crop; which, as- will appear by the following fketches, has nor, iiere, any fcttJcd mode of culture appropriated to p, NORFOLK. 24^ to it. Yet no crop, perhaps, affords greater proofs of the ingenuity of the Norfolk huf- bandmen, and of their talent for expedients, than that which is now before us, B-» — m dibhled * feven pecks of white peas an acre, on olland, once-plowed, in flags, " as *'_^wide as he could whelm them." Two rows of holes on each flag -, the holes about three inches apart in the rows ; namely, *' four holes in the *' length of the foot," one pea in each hole. Gave 4s. 6d. an acre for " dabbing;" and hired *^ droppers*' by the day (children be- longing to the parilb) ; which coft him about 4s. an acre more. The men offered to dibble and drop for 9 s. — The foil free from floneSo Finiilied 27 Feb. H d foived four bufliels an acre of white peas, broad-calt ; on harley-jlubhle, after turncps — the clover miffing. Soil light and fliallow. Finiflicd 1 March. M s dibbled two bufliels of Vv'hite peas an acre on wheat -Jlubble. Gave 8s. an acie for dabbing and dropping. Finiflied the begin- ning of March. * Dibbling : for parriculars refpa^ting thi^ operation, fee MiN. a^ S » aic? PEAS. 36* S —\-\fon-ed{ouY biiflicls, broad-caft^ on ellandi — part once-plowed; part rice-balked, and afterwards plowed a mean pitch j the whole Ibwn above- furrow, and rolled before fowing. G — n dibhkd two buihels on olland ; the price four Ihilllngs a bufhcl for dabbing and dropping : about three holes and a half in a foot : one pea in each hole. Flags narrow, D 1 dibbles nine pecks oh any thing which is in heart. Gives any price to have them done well, and put in thick. His dib- bled peas, lafl year, produced ten coomb an acre: dibblrs, about twenty acres this yeat : almofldone; 21 March. F r has fawn upwards of twenty acres this year on wheat-fiuhhky infiead of barley : fows four bufhels of white an acre. Plows three or four times, and plows in the feed un- der-furrow. Finifhed 2 April. B r [owed four bufliels of white an acre, broad-caft, on a 'xheat-jiuhhle winter-fallowed : hamely,fcaled in — two-furrowed acrofs— Itirred '--harrowed — fowed-— and 'plowed tindery about three inches deep; the outfide furrows fown, and fladed down, and the whole harrowed acrofs once in a place the beginning of ApriL B-^d 3^ NORFOLK. 2$i H-^dfozvs three buflicls of grey peas, broad- caft, the beginning of April. Ke thinks three builiels of grey are equal to four of white. B d, on light tliln-lklnned olland^ dib- bled part with two buihels an acre ; and two- furrowed the reft with three bufhelSj/^cc;^ by hand between the furrows; each of them about one inch and a half thick ! The Norfolk plow iin- gularly adapted to this work ; and, in loofe bro- ken ground, the procefs would be excellent; but, in whole ground, the back of the firft fur- row being fmooth, and the peas round and ilip- pery, they do not reft where they fall, but roll more or lefs into the feams and hollows, not- withftanding the operation was, in this inftance, performed in a mafterly ftyle. Thus it appears that various ways are prac- tiled in putting in the pea-crop ; but, from thofc and other inftanccs, I may venture to dra'.v two general inferences. Lays are feldom plowed more than once for peas; and the feed is, in gene- ral, DIBBLED IN, upon the flag of this one plow- ing. But STUBBLES ate, in general, broken by a winter-fallow of three or four plowings ; the feed being eown- broad-cast ; and plowed im, about three inches deep, with the laft plowhig. VETCHES, 45i VETCHES, 31, n T ■' VETCHES. WHEN we confider the nature of the Norfolk foil, and the excellency of the Nor- folk hufbandry, we are, at the firfl fight, fur- prifed that vetches arc not more in ufe, as fummer-food for farm-horfes ; — and nothing, perhaps, but the cftablifhed prevalence of clover can account for it. Clover is not only inown for foiling horfcs in the ftable; but, as has been already noticed, horfes are fre- quently "roped'* or teddered on clover; as well as turned upon it loofc. This prafticc was, probably, eftabliflied when clover was new to the foil, and the crops of courfc large and luxuriant ; and it was then no doubt the moft eligible management : never- thelefs, it may, now, when the foil is no longer the favorite of clover, be worth the at- tention of farmers, of the prelent day, to try whether more vetches, and proportion;ibly lefs clover, would not be the moft eligible management. 32. 32. NORFOLK. as» BUCK. BUCK is an objed of the Norfolk culture, in a two-fold light. It is propagated as grain, and as manure : and it will be proper to view it in thefe two lights. However, the main in- tention of its propagation, whether as a crop, or as a melioration of the foil, being the fame; namel)^, the cleanfing of foul land ; it will be convenient to keep the two obje^ T U R N E P S. THE TURNEP-CROP is the grand bafis of the prefent fyftem of Norfolk hufbandry. X lliall, therefore, endeavour to defcribe its culture as amply as comprehenfivenefs will permit. In doing this it will be neceflary to coniider, 1. The fpecles, 5. Manure-prccefs, 2. The foil, 6. Seed-procefs, 3. The fuccefiion, 7. Vegetating-procefs, 4. The foil-procefs, 8. Application. I. Species. — There are four different fpecies, or, perhaps, I'ariefies of one fpecies, fown in Norfolk. I. TlfE 33. NORFOLK. 257 1. " The Commont white stock," — white- loaf — white-round — white-rind — or, as it is called in marly places, the Nor folk turnep. 2. ** The purple stock." This, in its iKape ^nd the manner of its growth, is {imilar to the common turnep ; but its rind is of a dark red or purple colour, its fize, in general, fmaller, arid its texture clofer and firmer than that of the common white .{lock ; arid it is al- lowed to fland the winter better, and to pre- ferve its firmnefs and fucculence later in the fpring, than the common turnep. But it feems to be a fad: well-eftablilhed, that the purple turnep is not fo well affcdcd by cattle as the bther fpecies : this circumftance, added to the fmallnefs of its lize, confines its culture within narrow limits. 3. " The green stock." This fefembles, ftill more, the common white turnep; from which it differs principally in the colour of its rind. It is in tire hands of very fcvv : thcfe few, however, fay that it is preferable to the com- mon flock. 4. " The pudding stock*.'* This, in its Ihape, is fo perfedlly different from the * The tankard- turnep of the m'dland counties. Vol. I. S com-i ^5^ T U R N E P 5. 33. common fort, that it might well be ranked as a diftindt /pedes. Inftcad of fpreading itfelf flat upon the ground, or burying itfelf parti- ally in the furface-mould, it rifes in a cylin- drical form, eight, ten, or twelve inches high ; ftanding in a manner wholly above-ground ; generally taking a rough irregular outline, and a fomewhat reclining pofture. In colour, con- texture, and quality, it refembles very much the common turnep ; of which it is by much the mofl formidable rival. Indeed, for early fowing, to be eaten off in autumn, this long- rooted fpecics fcems to gain a preference even to the common white-rounds : the roots are of quick growth, — acquire a great fize, — and, ftanding wholly above-ground, are readily drawn; or, if eaten off by llieep, are con- fumed with little wafle ; the refufe fhells being fmaller than thofe of broad flat turneps half- buried in the ground. But this very circumftance renders them wholly unfit to be fo'.vn as a fpring-food ; for, {landing, as they do, cxpofed on the furface, they become liable to the attack of every froft; and, from annual experience, it is known that they fuffcr fooner, and more, from the 33- NORFOLK. 259 the feverltics of winter than the commom WHITE-ROUND STOCK ; wliich, taken all in all, is, I believe, the beft fpecies of turncp known, at prefcnt, in thefe kingdoms. II. Soil. Turneps are Ibwn on every fpecies of foil in ufe as arable land. It is ob- fervable, hdwever, that the ftronger, heavier foils, of the fduthern parts of this Diftridt, will not bring turneps freely without marl ; tvhich^ perhaps, by rendering the foil more friable, and confequently lighter, fits it for the tender fibrils of the turnep-plant in its infant- flate; or, perhaps, the marl itfelf is accept-, able to this luxuricus plant. Be this as it may, marl is found highly bene- ficial to the crop ; and the faft proves, that a foil by nature ungenial to turneps, may in fome cafes be rendered agreeable to them,' by art. See Min. 136. III. Succession. In the regular coiirfe of management, turneps fucceed barley after wheat; and in this part of the Diftridt, where the hexennial round is obfcrved with confider-* able regularity, they feldom fucceed any other S ?. crop; i^o T U R N E P S. 33. crop ; excepting fonie few Ibwn on wheat or pca-ftubblc after harvefl ; but this 13 not a general prad:ice, IV. Soil-process. — i. The farnier having finifhed fcaling hi his wheat-flub bles for bar- ley, he begins about Chrillmas, to break up HIS BARLEY-STUBBLES for tUmepS. In this inftance, he quits his general rule of beginning to break up a fallow with a fleet plow- ing; for, in breaking up a turnep-fallow, he goes the full depth of the foil — " turning it " up a full pitch to take the winter." — His motive in this, as in moft <5ther cafes, is a good one. In this inftance, indeed, his pradice obvioufly proceeds from a degree of necef- lity ; his general plan of management not al- lowing him time to plow his turnep-fallows more than once, during the winter-fcafon. For, no fooner has he given them this one plowing, than his wheat-flubbles require lo be taken up for barley j which, with his other ipring-crops, engage every hour of his tinje, until the clofe of fpring feed-time. 2. This iini(hed, he begins to take up his TURN£P FALLOWS. In doing this, too, he deviates from 35- N O R F O L K. 261 froQi general praftice ; for the fecond plowing of a turnep-fallow is notacrofs but length-way. But here, likewifc^ he adts from a degree of jiecefiity ; for the firft plowing having been given the full depth of the foil, there is no whole ground left for tte plow to lay hold of in crofs-plowing; and the flags, of courfe foul, having lain fome months unmoved, are become too tough to be cut readily with the coulter j but would, of courfe, drive into rucks before ihe plow. 3. This loofe woolly flate of the turnep- fallows is, however, fometimes leflened by har- rowing them in the b.eginnipg of April ; and, while the lays are Ihut up, throwing tur- ners upon them for bullocks ; the treading of which gives the foil a degree of firmnefs, and renders the fecond plowing more tolerable. 4. The teams, from the middle of May to the beginning of July, are almoft wholly em- ployed in plowing, harrowing, and manuring the turaep- grounds : for the fecond plowing finilhed, and the furface fmoothed with the harr iow, a THIRD PLOWING IS given. 5. This plowing, being well reduced with the harrow, and the root-weeds coUeded, and S 3 burnecj 262 T U R N E P S. ZS- burned or carried off, the dung is fet on, and, if time will permit, fcaled in fleet by a FOURTH PLOWING. 6. After which, the foil and manure are in- timately blended with the harrow; and, in due feafon, the seed-plowing takes place. The fourth plowing is, however, fre- quently omitted ; either through want of time or other reafon ; the manure being in this cafe turned in immediately with the feed- plowing, which, in either cale, is of a mean depth. The former is, no doubt, to appearance, the moft hulband-like practice, and, in a light foil and moift feafon, may be the mOil: eligible m.anagement ; — but, in a dry time, and on a ftout clofe-textured foil, the latter, provided the manure be finely broken, and evenly fpread, may be more eligible. SeeMiN. 71. on this fubjedl. V. Manure-process.— I. The species of manure which is principally depended upon for turneps is " muck ;" — that is, dung, with a greater or fmaller admixture of mould, marl, &c. — Malt-cocmbs are in good repute ; and oil-cake is fometimes ufed by fome few in- dividuals ; 33. NORFOLK. 263 dividuals ; but it may be fald, that nine ticrcs of ten of the tiirneps grown in Eaft-Nor- folk are manured for with '^ muck." The quantity of malt-coombs made in the county is inconfiderable, when compared with the num- ber of acres of turneps annually fown in it ; — and rape-cake is principally confined to the north coafl : nor are either of thefe manures equal to the tafl< of keeping up the foil thro* the barley and the two grafs crops ; much lefs of aflifting to fupport it under the fuc- ceeding crop of wheat, in the manner which may reafonably be expedted from a proper dreffing of dung ; the whole quantity of which, made upon a given farm, ought, in my opi- nion, to be applied folcly to the turnep-crop : and, if the foil require fupport under the ■wheat, let it be affifted with lime, malt-dufl, foot, oil-cake, or other light manures ; which may not be only adequate to fecuring a crop of wheat, but may be more or lefs ferviceable to the fucceeding crop of barley. This has already been mentioned •, but I think it merits a repetition in this place. 2. The QTTANTiTY of dung fet on for a crop of turneps, generally depends on the S 4 quantity 264 T U R N E P S. 33. quantity on hand, and the quantity of turnep- ground to be manured : there is little danger of fetting on too large a quantity : ten to fif- teen cart-loads of good muck are confidered as a fair drefflng. Of oil-cake, about a ton to three aqres : of malt-cocmbs, fifty or fixty ; — • and of foot, forty or fifty bufiiel$ an acre. For the method of carrying out, compoft- ing, and fetting on muck, fee the article MANURE-PROCESS, VI. The seed-process.— I. The time o? SOWING depends upon the application.— When they are intended for early confumption, they are fown as foon as the foil can be got into pro- per order for them : but if they be intended tp ftand the winter, the beginning of July is thought to be early enough. The moft ge- neral rule is, to begin to fow about a week before Midfummer, and continue fowing, from time to time, until about a fortnight after Midfummer ; — fay, from the feventeentli or. eighteenth of June, to the fevcnth or eighth of 1% 33. N Q R F O t. K. 2&^ It is a fadt well afcertained, that late-fovvn turneps (land the winter better than fuch as arc fown early ; which are fubjca: to the blight -, liable to be rotted by much wet, as well as by froft; and become tough and woolly in th| ipring, when the later-fown pnes are in full per- fedlion. If a Norfolk farnier could infure his iirll fowing, he would fow later than he now does ; but liable as the turnep-crop is to numerous accidents and mifcarriagcs, it is prudent to have a week or two in refcrve for a fecond fowing, in cafe the firft fowing fhould fail. 2. Old feed is fpmetimes prepared by keep- ing it in water, in order to forward its vegeta- tion ; but this is by no means a general prac- tice. Experiments have been tried on coating the feed with fqlphur, foot, &c. as a fecurity agalnfl the " fly ;" but the refults have not been fuch as to eftablifli any praiSlice of this nature ; the feed, whether old or new, being vfually fown dry, and unprepared. 3. The method of sowing is univerfally broad-caft. The feed-plowing having been gpne over, once in a place, with the harrow, the feed is fown with a wide high call, the feedfman 266 T U R N E P S. 33. feedfman going twice over the ground ; agree- ably to the prevailing, tliough nOt the gene- ral, method of fowing. 4. The quantity of seed, two pints an *crc. 5. The feed is covered by two tines of a pair of light harrows, ufually drawn " backward;'* that is, wrong-.end-foremofl, to prevent the tines, which are generally fet fomewhat point- ing forward, from tearing up the clods, and burying the feed too deep. The horfes are univerfally walked one way, and trotted back again in the fame place. This is an excellent euftom ; the quick zigzag motion of the harrows at once affifting to level the furface, and to diftribute the feeds more evenly, VII. The vegetating-process. Turneps are univerfally hoed : and, unlefs they be fown very late, are generally hoed twice. I. The diftance of time between the fow- ing and the. first hoeing is very uncertain; depending on the foil and the feafon : the fize of the plants is the only guide. If turneps be fuffered to grow too large Lefpre they be ho.ed, the plants are difficult 33. NORFOLK. nh-j to be fet out fingly, and are liable to be drawn up by weeds ; thereby acquiring a flender upright tendency ; whereas their na- tural growth, in their infant-flate, is procum- bent, fpreading their firft leaves on the ground, and taking the form of a rofe. If the hoe be put in too foon, the plants which are fet out are liable to be buried, and their tender rootlings difturbed, in the act of fetting out the neighbouring plants. The critical Hate obferved by judicious hufbandmen, is, when the plants, as they lie fpread upon the ground, are about the fize of the palm of the hand : if, however, feed- weeds be numerous and luxuriant, they ouf>-ht to be checked before the turnep-plants arrive at that fize ; left, by being drawn up tall and ilender, they Ihould acquire a weak fickly habit. 2. The method pr hoeing turneps is diffi- cult tp defcribe : nothing but pradtice can teach it: — and, like other manual arts, it ought to be learnt in youth. A boy in Norfolk, by the time he is the, height of a hoe, begins to make ufe of one ; f onfequently, every man who has been bred to country- 56§ T U R N E P S. 33, country-bufmefs i^ a turnep-hoer j yet not al- ways, even with this advantage, an expert one. The operation J to be performed quick and well, requires a quickncls of eye, and a dex- terity of hand, which every man is not favored with : while fome men catch the proper plants to be fmgled, an4 fet them out, with a rapidity and neatnefs of execution, very plpafing to the pbferver. The hoe is generally drawn round the plant, with a long fweeping ftroke ; and, when the plants are fmall, this is the only ftroke that car^ be ufed v/ith propriety j but, when the plants are out of danger of being buried, a fliort ftraight ftroke is more expeditious, and, ih the hands of fome few, makes tolerably good work. Upon the whole, it matters not which way the operation be performed, provided the ground be ftirred, and the weeds eradicated ; the plants fet out fingly, and at proper dif- tances. 3. The proper distance depends upon the foil, and the time of fowing •, jointly, and fe- paratcly. Tyrneps 55. NORFOLK. 269 Turneps fown, early, in a vich produftivc foil, require to be fet out wider than thofe fown late, on a foil of a contrary nature. If the foil be at par, the time of fowing ought to regulate the diftance : if this be at par, the nature or flate of the foil Ihould be the regulator. Thefe rules, however, felf^evident as they un- doubtedly are, are not attended to by thegenera-^. lity of farmers -, who, led away bylong-ellablilh- ed cuftom, or by the interelled perfuafions of their labourers ^farmers in all countries being more or lefs warped by the opinion of their workmen) fuffer their turneps to be hacked out fourteen or fifteen^ or perhaps eighteen inches afunder, without any regard to the ftate of the foil, or thefeafon of fowing* This praftice was eftablilhed while the Nor- folk foil was full of marl, and new to turneps ; and when, it is probable, eleven or twelve inches in diameter was no uncommon iize ; with tops proportionally large and fpreading : and fourteen or fifteen inches might, then, be a proper diftance. But, no'.v, when the efficacy of marl is lef- fenedj and the foil no longer the favorite of tornepsj 270 T U R N E P S. S3- turneps, which feldom reach more than (zYCii or eight inches in diameter, it is ruinous arid abfurd to continue the prafticc. But the prcfcnt price of hoeing was likewife eftabliflicd when large turneps were grown, and when wide hoeing might, perhaps, be pro- per; and a workman cannot, at the prefent low wages, afford to fet out the plants at a Ihorter diftance ; for though, in either cafe, he ftir the whole ground, yet the more plants he has to fingle, the more tedious the operation becomes. If the plants be fet out at eighteen inches — each fquare yard contains four plants : but^ at twelve inches, the fame fpace of ground con- tains nine plants: fo that in this cafe the hoer has more than twice the number of plants to fingle and fet out. But does it not follow that the farmer has more than twice the number of turneps to fat Kis bullocks upon ? and is not this interefting fad a fufficient inducement to farmers in ge- neral to break through a cullom whofe original foundation no longer cxifts, and to filence the perfuafions of their men by an adequate ad- vance of wages ? There 33- NORFOLK. 271 There are men, whofe good fenfe and dif- cernment have fhewn this matter to them in its true light, and who are fully aware that the *' proof" of their turncp-crop depends more on its " tightnefs" than on the fize of the plant. And it is the practice of thefe men I wifh to hold out in llriking colours, in order that it may become the general prad:ice of the Dif- tridl ; as well as to endeavour to do away a per- nicious idea which has gone abroad refpefling this part of the culture of turneps, in Nor- folk ; where good farmers do not fuffeu their turncps to be fet out fifteen or eighteen inches apart! but rather from ten to fourteen, ac- cordingly as circumftances point out ; and ac- cording to the lituation of the plants with fe- jpeA to each other. Thus, if tlu-ee plants fland in a line, the two outer ones fourteen inches afunder, the intermediaic one is, of courfe, taken out : but fliould two healthy plants ftand in a wdde vacancy, ihoufands of which vacancies gene- rally occur in every piece of turneps, they are both of them fuffered to remain, though they ftand not more than fix or eight inches from each other : for^ when the tops have room to fprea tig? 33- N O Pv F O L K. 2.9S licc is not uncommon ; 2nd much depending on care and management in this bufincfs, they may, probably, find their account in it. Un- der this trcatmenr, tlie cattle have a little barley-draw given them, from time to time, to clean their mouths, and dry up the fuper- fluous juices of the turncp^ Sometimes {hed-bullocks are '' blown up" with pollard and barley-meal ; but this is con- fidered as an unfair practice by the butchers m Smithfield, who prefer turneps and hay in winter, and rye-grafs in the fpring, to every ether kind of fatting. In the fouthern Hundreds of thas Diflrid:, the foils of which are, in general, too tender to bear cattle with propriety in a wet feaibn, the yard and the flied are more common re- ceptacles of bullocks than ihey are in i^ij neighbourhood. In Blowfield Hundred, a commodious bi^^t expenfive (lied prevails : it has one main ad- vantage over the little hovels in which bul- locks are fometimes cooped up : the lofty, fpacious area in which the bullocks breathe, ^ilbrds them a plentiful lupply of frelh air, U 4 and 296 TURNERS. 33. and keeps their bodies in a due degree of tem- perature. For a defcription of one of thefc (hcds, fee MiN. 118. B. Drawing and DisTRiBuTn:G the whole CROP over the turnep-ground. This be- ing only in ufe where a large flock of flieep is kept and few bullocks are fatted, it is feldom practifed in Eaft-Norfolk. It differs from the ordinary method of hurdling off turnens, in that the fheep, inftead of being put upon the plants as they {land, are kept back upon the cleared ground, upon which the turneps are thrown. But as, in this cafe, the turneps mufl either be thrown in part over the ground already fouled by the fheep ; or be confirled to a fpace iimilar to that off which they are drawn ; — by which means the princi- pal intention of drawing is fruftrated ;— a third method of harveiling has been invenied : namely, C. Carting off half and distributing HALF. This ingenious method is, I belieVvT, of modern invention ; and is now chiefly prac- tifed by a few capital farmers, who lat large quantities both of cattle and flicep. Ill 33- NORFOLK. 297 In this cafe, the headlands and fidclands being cleared, the area is drawn and carried off, warp for warp ; leaving the piece in ftripes, about ten paces wide. The firft drawing is expended on the bul- locks in one or other of the ways already de- fcribed ; while the remaining flripes are draw^n and fcattered over the entire ground for Iheep. By this means the principal intention of drawing is obtained j namely, that of diftri- buting the turneps evenly and thinly ; fo that u'hile one Is eaten, another may not be foiled : a principle which, it may be taken for granted, is well founded ; as it is (Iriiflly and invariably attended to by good farmers in ge- neral. This advantage, however, does not appear to me to be the only one obtained by drawing turnep for Iheep in the fold. When a fiock of fheep are turned upon a fiiift of {landing turneps, the firft thing they do is to run over the whole ; and, then, to eat fuch of the tops as they have not tram- pled down in running over them. While they are doing this, they (land upon the roots : which, being firm in the ground, and f.at on the 298 T U R N E P S. 35- the top, are no way inconvenient to ftand upon. But v\han is worfe, if the foot happen to fall near the edge of the turncp, the fliarpr.efs of the hoof, and the fixed fuuarion of the root, renders it liable to be barked, as well as fouled^ and rendered unfavoury to this falli- dious animal. On the contrary, if fhcep be put upon drawn turneps, their tops may be in fome mca- fure injured, but their roots cannot; for being round, and lying loofe upon the furface of the ground, they afford no foot-hold to Hand upon. And, if the hoof be put upon the edge, the turnep rolling with the ilightefi: touch, the foot flips, and the rind is faved. Thus the roots in this cafe, inftead of being foot-flools become ilumbling-blocks to the fnccp •, which, care- fully avoiding the turneps, ftand, in this cafe, entirely upon the ground; which, under thcfe circumftances, is left almoft wholly free for their feet; the turneps touching it with a fmall portion of their circumferences only j whereas, in their natural ftate of growing, they occupy a confiderable portion of the furface. For 33- NORFOLK. 299 For obfervations on Jieeping the feed^ and rcfciving^ fee Mi n. 3. For obfervations on the turnep-caterfillar, fee MiN. 12. For obfervations on the grub and Mhry, fee MiN. 20. For an inftance of the *' Jly* being checked by the fneep-fold, fee Min. 21. For preventatives of the Jnhuryy fee Min. 22. For experiment with lime for turncps, fee Mm, 29, ^ For the j a^«///y of turneps eaten by bullocks in the yard, and calculation on their p; educe value, fee Min. c^6. For an incident refpedting the ** proof" of turneps ♦, and reafons accounting for it by a particular foil-procefsy and clofe bocingy fee Min. 57. For a fimple way of frejerving turneps m winter, and refl-edlions upon it, fee Min. 61. For inllances of the price of turneps, fee Min. 63. For cpniparative obfervations on fl^ed and sut-door bullocks, and on the praftlce of in- dii'iduals in fatting bullocks on turneps, ice Min. 69, For ^00 "I* U R N E P 33- For SLpznicuhrfeed-proce/s, fee Min. 71. For the pradlice of fundry individuals in the confumption of turneps on Jlore-cattle, fee Min. 74. For an opinion refpedting the great ufe of turneps to eaterprize would make a proper feledion ; and Vkfould paj?- the fame attention to X-hc Norfolk "breed as is paid to the long-horned breed, 115 the midland counties, and to the Ihort- horned, in the north of Yorkfhire ; — every poirht might beyond a doubt be filled up, and the prefent - Valuable qualities be at the fame time retained. But the great caufe of negle^ m the breed- ing of cattle in Norfolk, is, that men of judge- ment and fpirit rather choofe to purchafe of the Scotch drovers, or of their poor and induflri- ousbutlefs judicious neighbours, than to go themfelves through the tedious round of rear- ing. However, if we confider the prefent uni- 5t?erfal fcarciry of cattle (iy86^, and that the Y 4 Scotch- 328 C A T T L E. 36. Scotchmen, through recent improvements in their plan of hufbandry, arc now enabled to fat a part of that ftock, which formerly they drove wholly tothefouthward; it feems highly probable that the Norfolk graziers will, hence- forward, find their advantage in encreafing, and improving, their own breed ; and th^y ^iiay reft alTured, that he who firft fets about its improvement will have it, in his power to keep the. lead ; and reap, of courfe, the higheft ad- - vantage. II. Cows. — The prime intention or keep- ing cows in this country is the rearing of young flock; — the produce of the dairy, unlefs in the neighbourhood of large towns, being a fe- condary objedt. But the number of cows kept, even by the rearing-farm.ers, is few : eight or ten may be confidered as a middling dairy of cows upon a middle-fized farm ;— I mean on the eaft fide of the county. In Weft-Norfolk, efpccially on the marlh- hnd fide towards Cambridgeftiire, large dairies of cows are kept, for the purpofe of making butter ; which is fent weekly to London under the denomination of Cambridge butter. This 36. NORFOLK. 3^20 This is a fortunate circumftance ro the Eaft- Norfolk breeders, who draw an increafc qf rearing-calyes from that quarter of the county : whofe dairymen, in their turn, are benefited, in being by this means enabled to get riddance of their calves, at an early age ; jobbers mak- ing it a bufinefs to transfer them from one iide of the county to the other. By this means, and by buying up the calvqs of cottagers, farmers, and gentlemen of the neighbourhood, who do not rear their own, an Eaft-Norfolk. breeder is able to rear a greater number of calves than the pumber of his cows amount to. Ten or twelve calves may, perhaps, be con- fidered as the medial number reared at prefent, on a farm of one hundred and fifty pounds to two hundred pounds a year. In the neighbourhood of Norwich and Yar- mouth, cow-keeping is frequently applied to the Fatting of calves for the ped-markets (fee Markets). Alfo, in the neighbourhood of thefe and other towns, Butter becomes an objed of fale. Cheese 53*9 C A 1^ T L E. 3&, Cheese is .likewife an article of the ped-mar- kct ; where it is generally Ibid in a crude re- ;cent ftate ; elpccially in the fpring and early part of the fummer ; when it is bought up at a, few weeks, perhaps at a few days old, by the working-people ; of whom at that feafon of • the year it is the principal food. With refpedt to the management of the Nor- folk dairy-women, and their ikill in butter ' zr.d cheefe making, little ^an be faid which v.'iU redound to their credit. However, in extenuation, it may be faid, and with truth> that rank meadows, and new lays, in fummer, snd turneps in winter and fpring, are ill calcu- lated for producing the delicacies of the dairy : and it may be added, that where perfedtion «annot be hoped for, emulation lofes its effcd:. Befides, cuftom has been very kind in recon- -c.iling their countrymen to thofe things v;hich a ftranger revolts at ; lb that they have, now, > no motive for endeavouring to correftthe rank- .Hcfs of their butter, or the rancidity' of their cheefe. Ncverthclefs, in one thing they are ex- tremely culpable : this is in fuffering their ..icheefes to be devoured, year after year, by a r|>ecie« 34. NORFOLK. 3.3'x fpccies of maggot peculiar, perhaps, to this coi^nty, with every appearance of tamcnefs and refignation ; as if they were confcious of its being a judgment upon their evil manage- ment. But even, in this cafe, cuftom is friendly to them : for fuch is the depravity of tafte, \vhen ied away imperceptibly by habit, that even the maggots themfelves arc to fome grateful. This, however, is only a palliation of their crime ; for, not unfrequently, the entire dairy, except the ordinary Ikim-cheefe, is mor,e ' or lefs affetted ; fo that, before Michaelmas, the cbeefes would be literally fo many bags of maggots, were they not fold off, and con- fumed, at an age, at which, in any other coun- try, they would not be ranked among human food. I have myfelf fcen a dairy of cheefe — that is, the ftock then left on hand — in total ruins before that time. An Eafl-Norfolk cheefe, found and whole at Chridmaa, is a rarity; by Lady-day, there is not, generally ipcaking, a pound of Norfolk cheefe, nor even a handful of maggots, to be purehafed in the ViMii. I am m C A T T L E. 36, - I am the lef? refcryed in my cenfures of the Norfolk dairy. women in this refpec^, as I know, from my own expcri>-nce in the count}', that the evil which is here fpoken of, and which is a caufe of great and unneceflary hardfliip to the labouring poor, in the winter ii^onths, ori- ginates, principally, in a want of attentiotj and management. But having in that cafe, as jii others relating to my own experience, mi- nuted the circumftancfis, as they occurred, or as icon as a regular Minute could be formed of |:hem, I Ihall not enlarge upon the fubjeQ:, ^^re, but refpr to Minute 108. III. Rearing cattlc.— This fubjedt calU for a threefold divifion. 1. Calves, 2. Yearlings, 3. Two-year-old^. •^ I. Calves. The rearinsr of cattle is be- come, in my opinion, a lubjecl of the firfl importance to this country : a univerfal and growing fcarcity of neat flock is experienced, more or lefs, throughout the kingdom. I have therefore paid more than common attention to the rearing of calves ^rhe firft and mpft diffi- cult 36. N O R F d L K. 333 cult part of the bufinefs) In this Difl:r*i<5l : not only as behig a primary objed; in the Eaft- Norfolk fyftem, bnt becaufe the praclice here iSj in many refped:s, peculiar to the country. The number has already been mentioned iil general terms : it varies, however, with the quantity of meadow or other natural grafsland belonging to a given farm ; and fometimes, but not always, with the time at which the cows happen to come-in. The time of reading. — '^omQ farmers " bring up" all the year round ; — rearing every calf lie has dropt. Others rear in winter, only ; fatting his fummcr calves for the ped-markets ; or, at a diftance from them, for the butcher; Norfolk farmers, in general, begin early in winter to rear their calves : fome fo early ag Michaelmas ; in general, if their cows come In, before Chriftmas : not only as being fully aware of the advantage of rearing early ; but in order that they may rear as many of their own calves as poffible ; " drove calves" being always hazardous, and fomctimes fcarce. No dlftindlion is made as to fex : males and females are equally objetrs of rearing, and are both, occafionally, fubjefted to caftration ; it bsins 334- CATTLE. 36, being ^ prevailing cuftom to fpay all heifers intended to be fatted at thrcc-year-old ; but fuch as are intended to be finifhed at two-year- old are, I believe, pretty generally left "open :" as are, of courle, fuch as are intended for the dairy. There are two reafons for this pradice : they are prevented from taking the bull too early, and thereby fruflrating the main inten- tion ; and by this precaution they lie more quietly — are kept from roving — at the time of fatting. This may be one reafon why fpayed heifers are thought to fat more kindly at three- year-old, and to be better fleflied, than open heifers. The method of treatrdent remains now to be explained. — This depends in fome meafure on the time of rearing : the winter calves require more milk than the later-dropt ones do. The general treatment of a calf dropt at Chriftmas may befaid to be this : fucks, twice a day, the firft fortnight : has the pail, twice a day, for the next month or fix weeks : and once a day, for a month or fix weeks longer : — with hay in a rack, and turneps in a manger j and, fometimes, with cats and bran among the ,6. NORFOLK. 335 the turneps : which laft^ after a calf has taken freely to them, ferves as both meat and drink. In this confifls the chief peculiarity of the Norfolk method of rearing calves : which may bc faid to be with milk and turneps : the ialt a fpecles of food, which, in every other part of the kingdom, is, 1 believe, entirely neg- ledted, or unthought of. As foon as the weather gets warm' enough^ the calvcs are turned out, in the day, among the fatting bullocks, or on to a patch of tur- neps, or upon a piece of wheat, or a forward grafs-piece, and houfed again at night : until, the days growing long, and the nights warm, and the clover and darnel have rifen to a ful! bite, they are turned out altogether y and con- tinue to have the firft bite of every thingv which is good and palatable tathem^ through-. out the furamer. This, as beforememioned, may be called the general treatment of calves dropt^it Chril!:- mas ; but as the managements of no two far- mers are exadtly the fame, I made it my bu- linefs to attend to the pradlice of individuals ; and as the refult of my obfervations appear in Mjnutes 53, and 70, I Ihall refer the reader to thqfe 33') CATTLE. 36. thofe Minutes for further particulars on the fubjcft. 2. Yearlings. The lattermath and bub- bles being finiflied, the yearlings — proviiv dally " buds," — are put to turneps : either as followers to the bullocks, or have fome frefh turneps thrown to them : in either cafe, they fleep in the par-yard, and generally have a fe- parate par allotted them ; though fometimes they are parred with the two-year-olds. In the yard, the beft of the " ftover" is al- lowed them^ and, perhaps, a little ordinary hay : it being a maxim; pretty generally adopted among good farmers, to keep their young ftock as well as they can the firft winter. In fpring, and fummer, they follow the "bullocks, and run in the meadows * or, if thefe be wanting, are fometimes fent out to fummer 2:rafs in the marflies or grazinor- grounds. For the agiftment price, fee the List of Rates. 3. Two-year-olds. Run in the ftubbles and broken grafs till Chriftmas, or until tur- neps can be fpared them ; when they generally follow the bullocks. In winler, they are always 36. NO R F O L K. 337 always " parred" at night ; fometiines with the cows ; fometimes with the buds ; fome- times alone* Good farmers generally keep them feparate :■— if parred with the buds, they rob them ; if with the cows, they are liable to be ** horned," and are never at reft : except while the cows are eating up the beft of the fodder* < Some farmers, when turneps rUn ihort, " put out" their two-year-olds in winter : and others, when they are plentifulj " graze," that is, fat their two-year-olds. In general, however, they are " kept over- year," on meadows or lays, or are fent to the marfhes or grazing-grounds, as fituations ^nd circumftances point out; and, at Michael- mas, are put to turneps as fatting-cattle. The agiftment price for two-year-olds, from May-day to Michaelmas, varies with the keep. See List OF rates. For further particulars fee the Minutes referred to below, IV. Bullocks *.— This is the grand obje(ft to which every part of the Norfolk hufbandry more * *' Bullocks." — This is a gisricral term, in Norfolk, for all kinds of cattle at turneps, or other food, with an in- .Voi. I. 2. tention 3j8 CATTLE. 3^ more or lefs tends, and which diflinguifhcs it, ind has long diflinguifhed it, from the huf- bandry of all other countries. The praftice of fatting bullocks on turncps IS, however, now beginning to creep into every part of the kingdom : but it may b« faid to be flill in a flatc of infancy every where, except in Norfolk; and an accurate account of the practice of this parent-county cannot fail of being ufeful to every other tur- nep-land Diflridb. Impreffed with this idea, I fpared no pains, HOT let Hip any opportunity, of making my felf acquainted with the fubjcdl. The refult of my obfervations and enquiries I regiftered as they occurred, and appear in the Minutes.* AU, therefore, that remains to be done in this place, is to make a general analyfis of the fub- tcntlon of being fatted ; whether they be oxen, flcerf, heifers, or cows. A fimple general term is much wanted in this cafe ; and, although the term bullocks may not be entirely free from objeftion, I ftiall, in this place, adopt it, Dr, Johnfon defiues it "a young bull;" but the mod general acceptation of it, at prefent, is--*'an aged ox." Upon the whole its meaning is vague, and it may without much impropriety, be applied to fatting and fatted cat- tle. j6. NORFOLK. 339 jed^i and to delineate its outline, fo as to place it in a regular and clear light ; and thereby prepare the reader to go through the Minutes with the greater eale and advantfgc. The four grand divifions of the fubjefb are, 1. The fpecles of bullocks fatted, 2. The method of obtaining them. 3. The method of fatting them. 4. The method of difpofing of them. I. Species. — The oniyafpecies of cattle fal?i fed in Eaft-Norfolk may be faid to be ** homc- breds" and " Scots." Some ** Irifh beafts" have, at different times, but not regularly, been brought into the country, and have ge- nerally done very well. In Weft Norfolk, great numbers of Lincolnfhire and Yorkfliire oxen were formerly, and fome few, I believe, «re now, fatted ; but in this Diftridl they have always been confidered as much inferior t« the Scotch and home-bred (lock. H0ME-BR£DS COnfifl of Steers, Spayed heifers. Open heifers. Barren cows, " Running; calves." o Thft 340 .CATTLE. 36. The laft is a fpecies of fatting;cattlc pecu- liar, perhaps, to this country. They are calves, which arc fuffered to run with their dams until they be a twelvemonth or more old : the cow being all the while at " head- keep,*' of which the calf partakes, as well as of the milk of its dam : which, herfelf, in the mean time, generally gets fat enough to be , fent to Sraithfield, with her calf (perhaps, as heavy as herfelf) by her fide. The Scotch cattle fatted in Norfolks confill of " Galloway Scots j" other " Lowland Scots j" " Highlanders ;» " Ille of Skys." "The Galloway Scot is large, thick, fliort-lcgged, moftly hornlefs, and of a black or brindled colour : the flefh well grained ; and the form altogether beautiful; — chine full ; — back broad and level ; — quarter long and full at the nache j round barrel ; — deep girt ; — and the bone, head, and chap, in general, fine. This I apprehend is the genuine original Galloway Scot ; and a principal part of the bullocks brought into Norfolk under that name are 3^. N O R F O L K. 341 are of this defcription : — but the droves are generally adulterated with a mongrel fort; — the produce of a crofs with the iong-horned breed. This fpecies of adultery is fald to be com- mitted and encouraged by the nobility and landed gentlemen of the countries they are bred in ; but the fa6l appears to be, that they have already one of the iinefl breed of cattle in the world upon their eftates ; and it behoves them to hand it down to pofterity as pure at leaft as they received it. In this age of im- provement, it might be laudable to endea- vour to improve it to the utmoft : not, however, by foreign admixtures-, but by giving the mod beautiful females to the moll beautiful males of their own breed. They appear to me to have much to lofe, but nothing to gain, from croffing, — not even witli the prefent long- horned breed of the midland counties. This fpecies of Scotch cattle appears to be originally of the county of Galloway, which forms the fouthern extremity of Scotland ; but they are now, it is faid, propagated in other Z 3 parts 342 CATTLE. 3$. parts of the Lowlands, efpecially in the rich- land counties of Lothian, in the neighbour- bood of Edinburgh. I have known them fat- ted to eighty flone ; and have been informed, from authority which I have no reafon to doubt, that they have been known to reach near one hundred ftone (of fourteen pounds each). • Lowland Scots. The ordinary breed of ilackcattki in the Lowland counties, are aiizc below the Galloways, — and appear to be a mixture between thefe and the Highland Scots. Sixty Hone is a good weight for a Lowland Scot. His form and inclination to fat partake of the Galloway breed : the former, however,. is feldom fo near pcrfedion as is that of a true Galloway Scot. Lowland Scots ar€ fome of them horned, fome of them polled : their colour black, or brindled, or dun. Highland Scots. This feems to be a diftin(!t breed. The fize is beneath that of the Lowland Scot : forty to fifty ftpne is the ordinary weight ©f a Highland Scot. In form, iiefh, and fat- ting quality, the " Highlanders'' refemble inuch the Galloway Scots ; except that theiF ^acj^s in general arc coarfer, their bone pro- portionably 3^. NORFOLK. 34J portionabiy larger, and in that they have, in general, but not always, horns,— of the mid- dle fize, and moftly bent upward, — like thofe of the Welfti cattle — but finer. In general appearance there is a (Irong re- femblance (their horns apart) between the Highland Scots and the black cattle of North- Wales ; but with refpeft to flefli and fatting quality, — the main objefts, — the companion is greatly in favour of the Scotch breed ; which the gentlemen of North-Wales are faid to fetch annually out of Scotland, or to buy them up at the Englifh fairs, to be fatted for their own tables. The IJle of Skys appear to be only a variety of the Highland bfeed ; contraded by foil, or climature, or both. They are, in point of fize, the loweft in the gradation. But with regard to flefli, fatting, and growth while fatting, they may be faid to fl;and foremofl:. I hav^ known an Ifle of Sky Scot, bought at two years and a half old for lefs than forty fliillings, reach, in about twenty months, to forty-five ftone *. At that ageiheir "growth" in England is afl:oni{hing ; owing, perhaps, not more to * But thi? was the head bullock of a lot of hajf a Xcoxe, and Is, perhaps, a lingular inftancc* Z 4 .their |44 C A T T L E, ^, their nature, than to a change of climature, and a change of food. Much, however, de- pends upon their age. If they be intended for immediate fatting, four years old is the pro- perefl: age. An Ifle of Sky or a Highland Scot at two or three years old will grow, but he will not fat; at five or fix he will fat, but he will r.ot grow, while fatting, equal to a four-ycar- pld bullopk. At this age the weight of lileof Sky Scots, when fat, varies, from twenty to forty ftone. Thefe are the four fpecies, or varieties, of cattle which are brought by the Scotch dro- vers to the Norfolk fairs, and which are boup^ht o up and fatted by the Norfolk farmers, under the foregoing names. There may be other breeds, and admixtures of cattle, propagated in Scotland ; but not being fent to this market, they are foreign to the prefent fubjed:. 2^ The method of obtaining bullock? ior fatting. — This is either by Rearing, or by Purchafe. Some farmers rear all their own fattingrftock i others purchafe the whole. But the more ge- neral practice is to rear part, and buy in parr. 36. NORFOLK. 34I Much depends upon fituation ; but more, per- haps, upon judgemcut : and ftill more, per- haps, upon an ample and regular fupply of the means of purchafe. — It is allowed that the af- fluent fortunes, which were formerly made by fome few Norfolk farmers, were chiefly ac- quired through a fuperior ik\\\ in the purchafe of ftock ; fcconded by a full fupply of money ; bv which means they were aKvays able to time their purchafe to the beft advantage. But in men of inferior judgement, and who have not money at their command to purchafe when the price of flock is low, it is undoubtedly prudent to rear the whole, or a principal part, of their own ftock ; for, in doing this, they travel a beaten track, and tread on fure ground, 'The purchafe of homebreds is chiefly at the fairs ;— or at the breeders houfes ; or on the ^' caftle hill" at Norwich, where there is a weekly market ;^-fometimes pretty full of different forts of livp ftock, The purchafe of Scots is, in this Diftrift, chiefly at the fair of St. Faith's, a village near Norwich -, to which the Scotch drovers bring annuallygreatnumbers.— rSecMiN. 27. and 134. Thefc :t4& cattle. 3§. Thefe Scotch dealers have a fucccflion of fairs, which keep them fome months in the tountry ; during which time a continued flrcarh of cattle is kept flowing from its various fourccs in Scotland to its general efflux : which is judi- cioufly removed from place to place, that the diffufion may be the more regular and eafy. The fale begins the 9th of September, at Harkfion, in South-Norfolk ; where its flay is about a fortnight. From Harlefton it moves on to Wolfpty in Suffolk ; and returns to Sechingy near Lynn in Norfolk, the loth of Odobcr. Prom Scchc it is removed to St, Faith's (its grand flation) near Norwich, the 17th of Oftobcr. Its flay, here, is uncertain : a fort- night, or three weeks, or as long as the de- mand lafls. There is a fair at Halsfworth, a few miles within Suffolk, the beginning of November ; but this feldom, I believe, clofes altogether St. Faith's fair. The 22d of November it recommences in Norfolk at Hemp ton-Green, in the northern part of Wefl- Norfolk : where continuing a week, or longer time, it is finally removed to Hoxone, on the borders of Suffolk, the beginning of Decem- ber • 36. NORFOLK. j^f ber; and there continues open until near Chriflmas. Eaft-Norfolk, as obferved above, is princi- pally fupplied at St. Faith's. The northern Hundreds fometimes draw an additional fupply from Hempton-Grccn ; and the fouthern ones from Halefworth and Hoxone ; which, with the other fair in Suffolk, lie within the reach of the Norfolk farmers. The Highlanders and lile-of-Skys are chiefly jor wholly oxen ; but the Galloway, and other Lowland Scots have a mixture of fpayed heifers ; a fpecies of fatting-cattle which is covetted by judicious graziers. The moft common age is four years old ; )but many of the Scotch cattle brought to thefe fairs are probably much older : fome of them have been worked : even fome of the " High- landers^' are faid to be worked at the collieries. There are alfo many three-year-olds, and Tome two vears old or under. Thefe are bought to be kept " over-year" in the meadows, marfhes, and grazing-grounds. For the fame purpofe, tworyear-old home- breds are alfo purchafed, the firil day of thefe and at other fairs. But, 34.S CATTLE. ^ .. But, for immediate fatting, the defired ages are three years old for homebreds, and four years old for Scots. 3. The method of fatting.— This has been already fpoken to in defer! bing the appli- cation of TURNEPS; to which the reader is referred ; as well as to the Minutes mentioned at the clofe of this article, for individual prac- tice. It will neverthelefs be proper in thi$ place to take a general view of the fubjed; thereby endeavouring to place it in a light as perfpicuous as may be. The firft thing to be coniidered js, lC\i^ proportion of bullocks to a given quan^ tity of turneps. This depends on the fize of the bullock, and the quality of the turneps. The general calculation is a middle-fized bul- lock to an acre of good turneps. Taking tur- iieps on a par, a fatting-bullock and a follower come, perhaps, nearer the real proportion. The time depends on the growth of the tur-. rveps and the pofTeffion of the bullocks : the hc^mebreds are ufually put to turneps about Michaelmas : the Scots as foon as they arc purchafed. It is obXervable, here, that not- ^i'ith Handing a Scorch bullock, efpecially of- th$ 3^. N O R F O L K. ^4$ thefmaller kind, never faw, perhaps, a turnepj yet, when thrown to abroad, in company with two or three homebreds, he generally foon learns to break his turneps. Some particular bullocks, however, will receive a check before they take to them. The place for fatting bullocks on turneps is either The field. The yard, ' i Sheds, or hovels. , The firft requires leaft attendance and atten- tion, and is highly beneficial to light land : the fecond makes a great quantity of manure, but a wafle of ftover : the laft requires lefs litter ; but incurs a greater portion of labour. In a dry, open feafon, bullocks at turneps do belt abroad : in wet, pinching weather, befl under cover. Out of thefe eflablifhed fads arifes an ob- vioully eligible plan of management, where circumftances will admit of it. In autumn, io long as the weather continues moderate, let bullocks remain abroad ; but, whenever it fets in very wet, or very fevere, take them up wnder cover ; — and there let them remain until 35* CATTLE. 3d. until they be finilhcd ; or until the warnnth of fpring calls them abroad again. But the moft eligible method of fatting depends on a variety of circumftances : The foil and (ituation ; The conveniencies in the yard ; The feafon ; and The fpecies of flock to be fatted. Cattle which have been accuftomed to lief abroad in a fevere climate, will ftand the winter in the field better than thofe which have been ufed to a Iheltered yard, in a warmer climate. No general plan of management can, there- fore, be laid down. All that can be done is, to point out the various modes in ufe, and leave every man to confider well his own par- ticular circumftances, and make his election accordingly. 4. The markets for bullocks. The con- fumption is divided between the metropolis and the county. The proportion I never heard gueffed at. Perhaps three-fourths, perhaps no more than two-thirds, of the bullocks fat- ted in Norfolk, are fcnt to the London market*^ Norfolk y 36. M O R F O L K. 3SI Norfolk is a populous county; not mor«5 through the Norwich manufadory, which difFules itfelf over a principal part of it, than from the circumllance of Norfolk being an arable country. The 'places of fale are, Smithfield ; St. Ives * ; The fairs ; and The farmer's yard. Bullocks for the London market are chiellj fent dired:ly to Smithfield : many, however, go by the way of St. Ives ; and fome few are bought up in the country by the Londoa dealers. Thofe fent to London and St. Ives are put under the care of drovers, and generally fold by the falefmen of the rcfpedive markets. Some farmers follow their bullocks to thcfc markets ; and fometimes, but very feldom, iland the market tRemfelves. The advantage of fending bullocks by the way of St. Ives is, that if that market prove a bad one, they are driven on to Stevenage ; and M this does notfuit, are driven through to the * St. Itcs, iR Huntino;donfliir2. London 354 C A t T L t. ^6i London market. But while they are thus driven from place to place, they are not only accumulating expences, but arc Ihrinking in carcafe. From the north-wefl quarter of the county coniiderable numbers of bullocks are^ 1 believe, driven to St. Ives, and there is one drover from the northern part of this diflridl. But the grand market for bullocks fatted in Eaft-Norfolk is Smithfield : to which, in the feafon, they are driven weekly, or twice a week ; according to the fupply, and the ftages of the feafon. Smith of Erpingham has long been the common drover of tMs Dillrid:. He generally begins, about Candlemas, to go once a fort- night : in the latter part of February, and the month of March, once a week : in April^ May, and June, generally twice a week : and in Auguft or September, he ufually makes one or two journies to takeoff the furplus of the home confumption, and the " harveft beef/* fatted in the marlhes, grazing-grounds, and lays, during the courfe of the iummer. His place of rendezvous is St. Faith's; where^ or in his road to it, the farmers meet him with their rcfpedlve lots. For 36. N O P. F O L K. 353 For the Monday's market, he fets out from St. Faith's on. Sunday, and reaches Londoiv the Sunday following. The diflanceone hun- dred and twelve miles. At Mile-End he is met by the falefmen ; who mark, and take, from that time, the charge of the lots which are refpedlively con- ligned to them. Sometimes the choice of a falefman may be left to the drover ; but, in general, every farmer has his ovv^n falefman. If the owners of the bullocks do not attend the market themfelves. It is the drover's duty to fee (were it poffible) that juftice be done to his employers ; and to receive the neat pro* ceeds from the falefmen ; who deliver ac- counts in this form : -" Three Tuns, Smithfield.. Seven bcafts fold for Mr. — the loth day of June 17S2. Selling (at IS. 6d.) o 10 6 Tell 6: expcaces 021 Help - - - 019 Grai's ---000 Drover, J. Smith, i 15 o Paid vourfelf - 86 o 8 I Waterman I Beeton I Andrews • I Sevvell I Alexander I Brown I Brown - 1+ 0 0 13 0 0 12 10 0 12 0 0 12 0 0 12 0 0 13 0 0 £^^ 10 0 ^88 10 o (Signed) S— 1 P-n, Beat]: and iheep falefman." Vol. I. A a The 354 CATTLE. 36* The cxpences are, and have been for many years, invariably the fame ; namely, feven fliil- lings and a penny half-penny a bullock, — oreat or fmall ; unlefs when very large heavy bul- locks are fent off, a day or two before the drove, as they fometimes are to cafe them on their journey ; in which cafe the expence of the drift is fomewhat more. Thefe accounts, which are payable at the falefmen's bankers, are delivered to the owners of the bullocks, if they attend ; if not, to the drover ; who formerly brought down the whole amount in money -, but now, princi- pally, in bills, at a fhort date, upon the Nor- wich bankers. The drover's place of payment in this neigh- bourhood is North-Wallham ; the firft market- . day after the fale^ The farmers go to his Inn,, where their accounts and eaih are ready for them. See Min. 117. Minutes on breed. For an inftance of the excellency of the JJlcof'Sky-Scois, fee Min. 40. For an opinion comparative between the Scoick and the Norfolk breeds, fee Min. 69. For 36. NORFOLK. 355 For an evidence in favour of the Suffolk breed, fee M in. 69. For an opinion that a three-ysar-old Norfolk will fat as kindly as a four-year-old Scot, fee MiN. 72. For an inftance highly in favour of the Irijb breed, fee Min. iio. For an inftance of the excellency of the Nor- folk breed, fee Min. 119. Minutes on general management. For an inflance of a grazing-ground being more friendly to heifers than to fleers, fee Min. 39. For reflecflions on the rearing of cattle, fee Min. 53. For obfervations on the pradtice of diftribut- Ing rubbing-pofts in paftured and teathed in- clofures, fee Mm. 66. For an inftance of the number and fpccies of cattle kept on a middle-lized farm, fee Min. 70. For general obfervations on the winter ma- nagement of ftore-cattie, fee Min. 74. A a -2 Mi- 356 CATTLE. j&. Minutes on cows and the dairy. For inflanccs of Iheep being unfriendly to cows, fee MiN. 8. For an opinion that turneps are an excellent food for cows in the fpting, fee Min. 8^. For general obfervations on cheefe-making, fee Min. io&. Fdr general obfervations on making butter, fee Min. 109. Minutes on rearing cattle. For an evidence that young flock will pay for good keep, fee Min. 46. For a method of rearing calves, fee Min. 53. For an evil effeft of not fpaying heifers clean, fee Min. 69. For various methods of rearing calves, fee Min. 70. For obfervations on the winter-management of young flock, fee Min. 74. Minutes on bullocks. Species. For the comparative value of different heids of cattle for fatting, fee Minutes on breed, above referred to. For 36. NORFOLK. 357 For obfervations on fatting the Norfolk breed at one-year-old, as " running calves," fee MiN. 69, For refleitions on fatting them at two-years- old, fee MiN. 112. Buying. For an account of the Scotch bullock-fair of St. Faith's, fee Min. 27. and 134. For an inftance of buying the Norfolk breed at Holt fair, fee Min. 0,1^. For general obfervations on buying bul- locks, fee Min. 1 10. For further information on this fubjcfl, fee Mjn. 113. Fatting. For a fingular circumftance of the grazing- grounds of Fouliham being more nutritious to heifers than to fleers, fee Min. 39. For an incident on the fatting of Ifle-of-Sky Scots with great fuccefs, fee Min. 40. For an incident on the quantity of turneps eaten, and the procefs of fatting bullocks in the yard, fee Min. ^6. For an incident on the proportion of bul- locks to turneps in the field, fee Min. p^j. A a 3 For 358 CATTLE. 36. For obfervations on flied and out-door bul- locks, fee MiN. 69. For various inftances of individual pradice, fee MiN. 6^. For a method of curing fufflation, fee MiN. 72. For the manner in which bullocks break their turneps, fee Min. 84. For obfervations on Ihed and out-door bul- locks, in fevere weather, fee Min. 93. For an incident of pradtice particularly at- tended to, fee Min. 97. For further obfervations on this incident, fee Min. 102. For fome account of the Fleg grazing, fee Min. 106. For further obfervations on the aboveinen- tioned incident of pradice, fee Min. iio. For a further progrefs in the fame incident, fee MiN. III. For an inftance of bullocks doing well at grafs, though the weather was wet, fee Min. For fome account of grazing in Blowfield Hundred, and in the Yarmouth marlhes, fee Min. 118. 35* NORFOLK. 359 Selling. For an inilance of fale at Smrthfield, fee MiN. 102. For an account of Walfliam bullock-fair, fee MiN. 105. For an account of Worflead bullock-fair, fee MiN. 107.. For another inflance of fale, and the uncer- tainty of Smithfield-marker, fee Min. hi. For an account of Ingham bullock-fair, fee Min. 112. Obfervations on a lot fent off to Smichfield, fee Min. 113. For the drover's method of paying the farmers^ ■with obfervations on that lot, fee Min. 117. Profit, For an inftance of great profit by the lile- of-Sky Scots, fee Min. 40, For calculations of profit, from the quantity of turneps eaten in the yard, fee Min. c^6. For a calculation on the quantity eaten in the field, fee Min. 57. For an inftance of low profit by Scots, fee Min. 102. For fundry inflances of great profit by Scots and Irilh cattle, fee Min. ho. A a 4 For 36o CATTLE. 36. For an evidence that profit depends chiefly on management, fee Min. iio. For another inftance of moderate profit by Scots, fee Min. hi. For an inftance of great profit by home- breds, fee Min. i 19. It may be proper to obferve, that the in- fbances of prcfit, which are here adduced, are, taken collectively, much above par. If, in a common year, a bullock, of forty (lone, pay half a crown a week for fatting, he is thought to have done tolerably well. Suppofing him to take fix months '* time j" and, in that time, to eat an acre of turneps ; the grofs produce, on this calculation, will be three pounds five ihiliings ; from which dedudl fifteen fhlUings for ftraw and attendance, the remainder is fifty iliillings for the neat produce of the tur- neps ; — exclufive of the value of the teathc, or the dung, ar.fing from the confumption. But it being evident (at leaft to my mind) that very much depends upon management, I am clearly of opinion, that, by a judicious attention to breeding, or a proper choice in purchafing;-*by laying-out farms convenient- 36. NORFOLK. 361 ly, and adapting the mode of fatting to the given foil and fituation ; — by finifhing the bul- locks highly, and condudling the fale judi- cloufly, the prefent par price of two fhil lings and fixpence a week, for a bullock of forty ftone, might be raifed without extraordinary exertion, to three Hiillings or three Hiillings and fixpence a week : — and, confequently, the neat par produce of an acre of turneps, on the above calculation, to three pounds, or three pounds ten fhillings an acre. To this muft be added the teathe, which, upon the lighter lands, is one of the main fupports of the Norfolk fyftem of hubandry. ZT^ SHEEP* 362 SHEEP. 36. SHEEP NO CIRCUMSTANCE in the Norfolk hulljandry furprized me more than that of find- ing the country in a manner deilitute of Iheep. In one of my journies to Gunton, I purpofely rode, on horfeback, through the center of the county — by Thetford, Watton, Dereham, Reepham, &c. in order that I might catch a general idea of its rural economy. From the nature of the foil, and from the prevalence of the turnep-hufbandry, I had conceived it to be the land of fheep : but from the time I crofled the river at Thetford, until I arrived within a few miles of the end of my journey, I did net fee onejheep ! In the north-weft quarter of the county, confiderable flocks are kept : but in the eaftern and fouthern divifions the number kept, in the fummer months, is trifling ; except upon commons, or about the refidences of gentle- rnen : and, except upon fome few capital farms. 316^. NORFOLK. 36$ farms, upon which over-year flocks are kept. But Eafl-Norfolk farms, in general, are, in the months of July, Auguft, and September, as free from fheep as elephants ; — except, per- haps, fome few kept on until harveft for, what is called, " harvefl-beef ;" namely, to be killed for the v/ork-people in harveft. In and round the park of Gunton, a confi- derable flock was kept ; and it is chiefly from obfervations on this flock, that I gained my information refpeding the Norfolk breed of flieep. The BREED of Norfolk horfes was not for- merly, nor its breed of cattle at prefent^ more Angular than is its breed of sheep j which, it is highly probable, has long been preferred in purity ; — ^-I mean without adventitious mix- ture of blood. There are two varieties of this species of flieep : the one larger (weighing from fif- teen to twenty-five pounds a quarter j which is the common flock of the county : — the other fmaller (from ten to fifteen pounds a quarter), which are bred chiefly upon the heaths in the neighbourhood of Brandon and Methwold, in the fouth-weil quarter of the county. Thefe go W 3.64 SHEEP. 36. by the name of " heath-lhcep ;" but differ in no refpcdt from the coaimon fort ; except in that of their being fmallcr, and in that of their wool being finer. The charadteriftics of a Norfolk Iheep arc thefe : The carcafe long and flender. The fleece fhort and fine. The legs long, and black, or mottled. The face black, or mottled. The horns — of the ewes and wedders, mid- dle-fized, and fomevvhat firaight : refemblins: thofe of the Dorfetfliire ewes, fo well known, now, in different parts of the kingdom, as the mothers of houfe-lamb ; — but thofe of the rams arc very large, long, and fpiral, like the horns of the Wihfhire ram. The loin of a Norfolk llieep, of the beft mould, is wide, and the hind-quarters fuf- ficientiy large for the general make ; but the fore-quart§4:s, in general, are very deficient. The fnoulders low, the back aukwardly high, and the chine fliarp, and unfightly. This is, at lead, too generally the cafe ; I have, however, feen fome of them with tole- rable backs ; and I am confidently of opinion, that ib, NORFOLK. 365 that if the Norfolk breeders of fhecp would pay lefs attention to their " countenances" (that is, the colour of their faces) and more to their carcafes, the prefent breed, viewed in a general light, might be very highly improved: not, however, by the introdudion of (trange breeds, and unnatural croffings ; but by a judicious choice of the males and females of their own breed ; — which, taken all in all, even at prefent, appears to be (ingularly well adapted to the foil and fyftem of management prevalent in this country. They may be bred, and will thrive, upon heath and barren fheep-walks, where nine- tenths of the breeds in the kingdom would flarve : they fland the fold perfectly w^ell : fat freely at two years old : bear the drift, remark-- ably well, to Smithfield, or other diflant mar- kets ; and the fuperior flavor of the Norfolk mutton is univerfally acknowledged. Therefore, the Norfolk huibandman, in their fheep, as well as in their cattle, have much. to lofe : and the almoft only thing they have to gain is a better chine; which, with a judi- cious attention to their own breed, might be- yond 366 SHEEP. 36. yond a doubt be obtained, without hazarding any of their prefent advantages. The long-wooled breeds of Lincolnfhire, Huntingdonfhire, and Leicefterfhire, have of late been attempted to be introduced, by gentle- men, in different parts of the county ; and mong-rels have been reared from a mixture of the two breeds : but neither the country, nor the gentlemen themfelves, are likely at prefcnr, to gain either advantage or credit from their experiments : faving that praife which is due to every experimentalifl in agriculture. It is far from being my intention to check the laudable fpirit of experimenting ; but in this, as in almoft every other cafe, I wilh that it ihould be condu6led with caution : a valu- able breed of flock, adapted to a given foil and lituation, is ati acquifition of ages ; but let their fuperior excellencies be what they may, a few years are fufficient to lofe them, perhaps, irretrievably. I am an admirer of the prefent beautiful breed of Leicefterfliire flieep ; which, as to form, are undoubtedly fuperior to any other breed in the kingdom, and are admirably adapted to the foil and fituation they are bred in ; 36. NORFOLK. 367 in ; as well as to every other rich inclofed grafs- land country ; and confequently may not be unfit for the paddocks of gentlemen in this or any other country ; nor, perhaps, altogether improper for the £^-Norfolk farmers, who keep only a few Iheep, for the purpofes above- mentioned. But, taken in a general light, as a breed for the county at large, they appear to me to be wholly unfit. — I believe they will not live upon the heaths, and open, extenfive, un- produdive Iheep-walks of Weft-Norfolk, {o well as the prefent breed of heath -Iheep of that country : / know they will not ftand the fold fo well, nor travel fo well to the London market, nor fell for fo much by the pound when they arrive there, as will the prefent breed of Nor- folk fheep in general ; which, aukward in form as they undoubtedly are at prefent, appear to me, from a knowledge of different breeds, to be better adapted to the foil, fituation and fyftemof management of the county at large, than any other breed at prefent exiiling in the Ifland. The general economy or fyftem of ma- nagement of Iheep in this country is mentioned in MiN. 122, on the Iheep -Ihow of Cawfton; in 368 SHEEP. 36. in which alio the particular practice of this Diftridt is lb far pointed out as relates to the lambs and crones bought at that fair ; which with thofe of Kenninghall and Kipping, alfo held in the fummer months, form the grand communication between the two (ides of the county. If a farmer do not lay in his intended ftock at thefe fairs, he buys hoggards at the fpring fairs ; letting them run in the fallovvs, lays, and ftubbles until autumn ; and finilhing them with turneps the enfuing winter. For the method of fatting them on turners, fee that article. For the admeafuremcnt of a Jljeep-JoU, fee MiN. I. For an evidence of Iheep being inimical to cows, fee MiN. 8. For an infcance of advantage oi jloeep-fold to barley, fee Min. it. For an experiment and obfervations on the time of putting the ram to the ewes, fee MiN. 17. For an experiment Wiih fieep-fold {ox wheat, fee Miyi. 18. For 37- NORFOLK. 369 For an incident of fheep-fold checking the turnep-fly, fee Mim. 21. For an evidence that different breeds o^ fheep afPedt different fpecies oi food, fee Min. 75. For obfervations on ewes lamhingj fee Min. 76. For an inftance of the effedt of good keep on young lambs, fee Min. 78. For an incident on crojpmg Leicefterfhire ewes with a Norfolk ram, fee Min. 82. For an inftance of prolificknefs in the Norfolk breed of Iheep, fee Min. '^6. For an inftance of cutting nV^zV-lambs, fee Min. 99. For a further evidence of an almoft total privation of ftieep in Eaft-Norfolk, fee AiiN. 106. For obfervations on Ca-jojion Jheep-Jhow, fee Min. 123. Vol. I. B b 38. RAB- ^Q R A B B I T 5. 38. 38. RABBITS, THE SOIL of this county, viewed at large, might be termed a rabbit-ibil ; and it is highly- probable that, before its prefent fyftem of buf- bandry took place, a confiderable part of it was occupied by this fpecies of live flock. Ac prefent, however, they are, in this DiA trid, wifely confined to the hcathlets, and the barren hills upon the coaft. A level country is unfit for rabbit-warrens, but convenient for the plow : on the contrary, rabbits delight in the fides of fandy hills ; which, where turn- wrift plows are not in ufe, are extremely incon- ven'ent for tillage ; and, when cultivated, are generally unprodu6tive. The rabbit, on level ground, finds it diffi- cult to make its burrow ; the excavated mould is all to be dragged upward to the furface : hence a piece o{ ground, altogether level, can feldom be {locked fuccefsfuUy with rabbits; unlef^ 3l^, ' NORFOLK. 371 unlefs it be firft laid up, by art, at a great ex- pence, into inequalities. On the contrary, againft the fide of a fteep hill, the rabbit has no difficulty to encounter : the declivity affords him a ready vent for his mould; his work \s dXX down-hill : and — unlefs the foil be too flubborn, or too rocky, for the rabbits to work freely among, — a broken hilly country may generally be flocked with advan- tage ; provided a tolerable market for the car- cafes can be had within reach. There are, perhaps, few fandy or other loofefoikd hills, which would not pay better in rabbit-warren than under any other courfe of hufbandry. For an inflance of an improvement by con- verting unproductive fandy hills into rabbit- warrens, fee Min. 79. B b 2 59. SWINE. 372 SWINE. 39. 39- S V/ I N E. THE NUMBER of fwlne reared and fat- ted in Norfolk is very confiderable : the dairy in fummer, the ftubbles in autumn, and the barns and ilables in winter, furnifh a conflant fupply of fuftenance ; while the great quanti- ties of buck raifed in this country furnilhes an ample fource of fatting. In Norfolk, however, as in other Diflridls, farmers differ widely about the proper number to be kept, upoa a given farm, under given circumflances. It may neverthelefs be faid that, ..i general, they are fully aware that a moderate number well-done-to, are more pro- fitable, in the end, than a greater number badly kept ; — yet there are fome few men, even in Norfolk, whofe half-ftarved herds are nuifances to the neighbourhoods they are kept in ; without affording either pleafure, or ex- traordinary profit, to their refpedive owners. The 39- NORFOLK. 373 The fpecles of fvvine, which formerly was iiniverfal throughout the countr}-, is, like the Iheep, a ilcnder long-legged animal; but, like thofe, is of quick growth, and prone to fat at an early age : I have feen them, at fix months old, near three quarters grown, and as fat as pigs in general are, at nine or twelve. Their fize is not large : fifteen to twenty ilone (four- teen pounds) is a good weight for a fat well- grown hoa;. But the '* old original fort" is now nearly lofl ; the Chinefe and Berkflilre breeds have of late been introduced ; fo that, at prefent, Nor- folk exhibits the fame motley mixture of breeds, which may be feen in almofl every other county in the kingdom. Farmers in general rear their own pigs : keeping, according to the fizc of their farms, one or more fows, which in general are fatted young, and /payed before they he fatted : through which means their flefh is thought to be much improved. They are fatted almoft univerfally on buck ; which is fometimes cruflied, and fometimes given to them whole. It is a quick good fat- B b 3 ting; 374 S W I N E, 39, ting ; fomewhat fimllar to barley ; not fo good as peas. The confuniptlon lies principally with the county : fome few, but I believe no great num- ber, are fent to the London market. They are in general killed as porkers, — and either carried to the ped- market, or pickled for family-ufe : not put down in tubs, for keep- ing, in the fouth-of England manner ; but only immerged in brine, for prefent ufe ; and in this manner are continued to be temporarily prefer- ved, from time to time, throughout the year : a fpecies of hou{hold management I have not met with elfewhere. For a fingular inftance of fatting hogs loofe in a yard, fee Min. 52. 41. POULTRY. 4P. NORFOLK. 37$ P O U L T Pv V NORFOLK. 13 celebrated, and juflly, for its TuRKiES. The fpccles is large ; their flefli, neverthelefs, fine ; and the number reared greater than that produced in any other Dif- trid: of equal extent ; owing, perhaps, to one circumftance. It is underftood, in general, that, to rear turkies with fuccefs, it is neceffary that a male bird fliould be kept upon the fpot, for the fame purpofe that a gander, a drake, or a male fowl is kept; namely, to impregnate the eggs individually. This deters not only cottagers, who are afraid of the expence of keeping a gluttonous turkpy-cock the year round, but many farmers, who diilike the noife and troublefomenefs of thefe animals, from breeding turkies. But the good houfewives of this country know that a daily intercourfe is unneceflary ; and that, if the hen be fcnt to a neighbouring cock previous to the feafon of exclufion, one aft of impregnation is fufficient B b 4 for 375 P O U L R Y. 4». for one brood. Thus relieved from the expence and difagrecablenefs of keeping a male bird, moil little farmers, and many cot- tagers, rear turkics. This accounts for the number : and the fpccies, and the food they are fatted with (which, I believe, is wholly buck) account for their fuperior fize and qua- lit,'. With refpe^t to geese, dltcks and fowls of this country, nothing is noticeable; ex- cept that they are, in general, below the common fize, and that it is a pradlice to put young goflings upon green wheat : a piece of houfewifery which perhaps is peculiar to the country. Poultry of every fpecies are fold, in the mar- kets, ready picked and ikewered fit for the fpit ; and are, in general, fo well fatted, and drciled up in fuch neatnefs and delicacy, as fhew the Norfolk-houfewives to be midreffes in the arc of managing poultry. 41. DECOY?. 41. NORFOLK. 377 41. DECOYS. THE LAKES, and large pools, which abound in the fouthern Hundreds of Eafl- Norfolk, are the nurferies of innumerable flights of wild-fowl, of various fpecies, but principally ducks ; which are taken in great numbers in decoys, formed on the margins of thefe waters ; and which, in eligible fituations, may well be coniidered as objedts of rural economy. Much judgment is requifite in forming and managing a decoy. A gentleman in this neighbourhood had a perfon out of Lincolnfhire to make one for him. But, after a great ex- pence of cutting pipes, fixiag fkreens, nets, &c. it proved unfuccefsful. The pipes were too ilraight, too clofe and confined, and too narrow at the mouth ; without any banks for the wild-fowl to baik upon. Upon the whole, it was too mu:h like a trap to be taken. The leading principles of a decoy are thefe. The 378 DECOYS. 4^ The wild-duck is a very fliy bird, and de- lights in retirement. The firft ftep, therefore, is to endeavour to make the given water a peaceful afylum, by fufFering the ducks to reft on it undifturbed. The fame love of con- cealment leads them to be partial to waters whofe margins abound with underwood and aquatic plants : hence, if the given water is not already furniflied with thefe appendages, they muCt be provided ; for it is not retire- ment, alone, which leads them into thefe rc- ceffes, but a fearch after food, alfo. Neverthelefs, at cci-tain times of the day, when wild-fowl are off their feed, they are equally delighted with a fmooth, grafly mar- gin, to adjull and oil their plumage upon. On the clofe-pallured margins of large wa- ters frequented by wild-fowl, hundreds may be ften amufing themfelves in this way : and, perhaps, nothing draws them fooner to a water than a conveniency of this kind : — hence it becomes effentially necelTary to fuc- cefs to provide a -graily, fhelving, fmooth- ihavcn bank at the mouth of the pipe, in order to draw the fowl, not onlv to the water at laroc, 1»ul to the dclired part of it. Having, 41. N O I?- F O 1^ K. 379 Having, by thefe means, allured them to the mouth of the pipe, or canal, leading from the water to a tunnel net, fixed at the head of it ; but hid from the fight, among trees and aquatic plants ; — the difficulties now re- maining are thole of getting them off the bank into the water, without taking wing • and of leading them up the pipe to the fnare which is fet for them. To get them off the bank into the water, a dog (the more he is like a fox the better) fleals from behind a fkreen of reeds, which is placed by the fide of the pipe to hide the de- coyman, as well as his dog, until the fignal be given. On feeing the dog, the ducks rufh into the water; where the ixjild-fowl confider themfelves as fafe from the enemy which had afTailed them. But among the wild-fowl, a parcel ('per- haps, eight or ten) of decoy-duds have mixed, and were,-probably, inftrumental in bringing them, with greater confidence, on to the bank. As fooH as thefe are in the water, they make for the pipe ; at the head of which they have been conilantly fed ; and in which they have al- ways found an afylum from jhe dog. The wild- S?o DECOY S. 41. wild-ducks follow; while the dog keeps dri- ving behind ; and, by that means, takes off their attention from the trap they arc en- tering. As foon as the decoyman, who is all the while obferving the operation through peep- holes in the reed-lkreen, fees the entire fhoal under a canopy net, which covers and inclofes the upper part of the pipe, he fhews himfelf ; v'hen the wild-fowl inftantly take wing ; but their wings meeting with an impervious net, mftead of a natural canopy formed of reeds and bullrufhes, they fall again into the water, and, being afraid to recede, the man being clofe behind them, pu(h forward into the tail of the tunnel-net which terminates the pipe *. This being the ufe of the pipe, its form be- comes obvious. It ought to refemble the out- let of a natural brook, or, a natural inlet or creek of the principal water. The mouth ought to be fpacious, and free from confine- * I was told by the proprietor of a decoy, who is him- felf fond of the diverlion, and whofe veracity I have no reafon to doubt, that he has, la this way, caught " nine dozen at a pufu." ment. 41' NORFOLK. 381 ment, that the wild-fowl, on their firft rufhing into the water, and while they have yet the power of recollecftion, may be induced to be- gin to follow the tame ducks; and for the fame purpofe it ought to be crooked, that its in- ward narrownefs, and nets, may not, in the firft inftance, be perceived. The lower part of a French horn is confidered as the beft form of the pipe of a decoy. One material circumftance remains yet to be explained. It is the invariable nature of wild- fowl to take wing with their heads toward the wind ; and it is always imprudent to attempt to take them in a decoy, unlefs the wind blow down the pipe : for, while their enemy is to leeward of them, they have lefs fcruple to go up the pipe, making fure of an efcape by their wings : but what is of flill more confequence, if the wind fet up the pipe, when they take wing under the canopy net, fome ef them would probably efcape (a circumftance always to be dreadedj, and thofe which fell again into the water would fall, of courfe, wdth their heads toward the wind, and would, with greater difficulty, be driven into the tunnel. This 3§2 DECOYS. 4^. This clrcnmftance is fo well known, by de- coymen in general, that every decoy is, vvheri circumftances will admit of it, furniftied with three or four different pipes, pointing to dif- tin6t quarters of the horizon, that no oppor- tunity may be loft on account of the wind. 42. BEES. 42. NORFOLK. 3^3 42. BEES. A CONSIDERABLE quantity of hone^^ Is colledlcd In Norfolk ; but, In general, it I5 of an Inferior quality : owing, as it is gene- rally believed, to the quantity of buck which is annually grown in this country, and which is highly grateful to bees j affording them an ample fupply of honey. It does not, however, appear clear to me, that the inferior quality of the Norfolk honey is owing to its being collected from this plant. It rcfembles, in colour and fmell, the honey of the north of England, colledted froni the heaths, moors, and fells, which abound In that part of the ifland : and It appears to me probable, that the brownnefs and ranknefs of the Norfolk honey is owing to the fame caufe ; namely, heath ; — which not only abounds on the little heathy wafics, which occur In ai- moft every part of the county ; but feems to be a natural production of the foil in p-eneral : fie^ 3S4 BEES. 42.. frequently nfing, even in good foil, on ditch- banks, and other uncultivated places ; fo that the evil, if not wholly, is, in part, occafioned by the heath -, which, it is a notorious fad, affords much honey, but of a bad quality. I will not, however, infer from this, that buck is produdive of fine honey, and that it has no fhare in the debafement of the Norfolk honey. The flowers of buck have no doubt ^pwerful, hifcious (mtW, which is difagreeahle to many people ; but are not thofe of beans equally powerful, equally lufcious, and to fome perfons equally difagreeable ? I only wifh that the evil effed of buck upon the quality of honey, may be doubted, until it be froved, by accurate experiments. For an inftance of a depopulated hive being taken poITcfiion of by a new colony, fee MiN. 126, LIST 1 s O F HATES AND PROPORTIONS I N NORFOLK, THE MOTIVE for forming a reglfler of rates and proportions was, principally, my own pradice. A man who fits down to pradtife in a Diftridt whofe cuftoms he is a ftranger to, has many difficulties to encounter. An ignorance bf the current prices of mate- rials, labour, and produce^ is not one of the leaft; and he finds it expedient to make him- felf acquainted with thefe particulars, as foon as pofiible. Vol. L C e Uy 386 L I S T O F R A T E S. My motive for endeavouring to pcrfcdt the lifi:, and for publifliing itj is three-fold. Firfl;, it will be a proper, and, in fomc mcafure, a neceflary, appendage to the prcfent volumes. Second, it may be a guide to the inexperienced: A gentleman, or any man, who undertakes the management of an eftatc, or a farm, with- out having been regularly initiated in the em- ployment, (lands, in his own country, in a iituation fnnilar to that v/hich a praftitioner finds himfelf in, when he firlt enters a frefh Diftrift : and the prefent lift may not be found ufeful to the inexperienced in Norfolk, only j but may ferve, in fome meafure, as a guid'e to thofe in other counties : for although the prices of labour and produce vary in every Diftrift ; yet an authentic regifter of thofe of any one, may ferve to lefTen the number of im- pofitions which gentlemen are liable to, on their firft entrance into the field of pradicc. And, laftly, a colleElion of regifters of rates of labour, in different and diftant Diftrifls, will not only be a flill better guide to the beginner ; but may be found ufeful to praditioners in general ; in afiifting them to regulate their refpedive liUs of prices. The NORFOLK. 387 The particulars which I coUefted In Nor- folk fall, aptly, under the following heads. I. Bricklayers work. 1. Materials. 2. Labour. 3. Proportions. II. Carpenters work. 1. Materials. 2. Labourers. III. Thatchers work. 1. Materials. 2. Labourers. 3. Proportions. * IV. Woodlands and Hedges. 1. Produce. 2. Labour. V. Husbandry. 1. Yearly-fervants. 2. Day-labourers. 3 Road team-work. 4. Soil-procefs. 5. Manurc-procefs. 6. Seed-procefs. 7. Vegetating-procefs. 8. Harveft-procefs. 9. Barn-management. 10. Markets. J I. Grafsland. C c 2 L ERICK- el . i; J 588 LIST OF RATES. I. BRICKLAYERS WORK. I. Materials. Common red bricks*, 15 to i6j. a thoufand. Hard-burned, 16 to 17J. a thoufand. Stone-coloured, 21 to 23^. a thoufand. Flooring-bricks, 9 inches fquare, %s. a hundred. 12 inches fquare, i8j. a hundred. iS inches fquare, 50;. 2 hundred. f! .^^^ Common pan- tiles, gos, a thoufand. ^•*<}lazed pan-tiles, 905". a thoufand. Plane-tiles, i6j. a thoufand. Ridge-tiles, 80J. a thoufand. Pipe-drain bricks, 14 to i8j. a hundred. *' Dreeps"— offset bricks, 20J. a thoufand. *' Lumps" — barn-floor bricks, 30J. a thou- fand. ■ — large ditto, 50J. a thoufand. Old bricks (half-bricks, half-bats), 12s. a thoufand. Old foundation-blocks (rough maffes of brick and lime cemented together^, 2j. 6^. a load. • Gage,— nine inches long ; four inches and a quarter wide ; and two inches and one-eighth thick. Calting NORFOLK. 389 / Cafling and carting the clay, and miking 'f^ and burning bricks, 7^. a thoufand. pantiles, '^os. a thoufand. Taking down brick walls, and cleaning the bricks, is. 6d. a thoufand ; reckoning two bats for one brick. Cleaning loofe bricks, 2S. 2. thoufand. Price of fea-Ilones, is. to is. 6d. a load. Pulling: down old fea-flone walls, and clear- ing and forcing the ftones, c^s. a fquare flatute rod (namely, about 30 fquare yards). Lime, 95. to los. 3^. a chaldron (of 32, bufhels). Calling and carting marl and burning it intcft lime, i8i. and beer, ov lod. a chaldron. One chaldron of coals (36 bufliels) burn 7 chaldron of lime (32 bufliels). Clay IS. a load. Hair, is. to 14^. a bufhel. Sap laths, 14^. a bundle. Pantile laths, 'js. a bundle. 2. Labour. Journeymen's wages, lod. and beer, or is. lid. a day. Labourer's wages, is. and beer, or is. ^d, a day. C c 3 Lay- t:' -'1 ^ 350 L I S T O F R A T E S. ^ #V Laying bricks, \od. a fquare yard, (of * ' 14 inch work; that is, one and a half brick thick). Foundation, \s. (the fame thicknefsj. Labour and linae, 20J. a yard. Laying pan-tiles on inter-laths and mortar, 4^. a fquare (of loo fquare feet). Plaiflering, id. a fquare yard. Ceiling, ^d. a fquare yard. Rendering (that is, one coat of plaiflering) between fpars, \d. halfpenny a yard. Laying brick floors in mortar, 3^. a yard. ) Q^ ^ '^ Laying barn-floors ^^ith clay, ^d. halfpenny to 6d. a yard. Laying hay-chamber-floors with ditto, ^d. / halfpenny to 6d, ■■'. • ^ ^> 4 Daubing on ftudwork, ^d. halfpenny a yard. , |i Stopping and plaiflering old daubing, id. a yard, 3. Proportions. A fquare yard of 9 inch work (that is, a brick in length thick) takes about one hundred and twenty bricks (the gage I'mall), One chaldron of Norfolk lime will lay about two thoufaiKi bricks. * Tcmi;ering the cby and drcflinj the floor incUided. Oft- NORFOLK. 391 / "^V ^ One load of fea-flones will pave about tea Iquare yards. One load of clay will lay (in the Norfolk manner^ about eight fquare yards of barn- floor. II. CARPENTERS WORK. I. Materials. .^ Oak timber as it (lands, 3/. 3^. to 4/. 2l 0^ {^ ^ toad fof forty feet). ^ Ditto in the flick, 50J. to 60s. a load. '' AHi as it (lands, 40^. to 50J. a load of 44 ^Uf . , feet ; allowing 4 feet for bark. f Ditto, in the (lick, 30J. to ^os. a load of 44 feet. Poplar, as it (lands^ 30;. to 40J. a load of 44 feet. Alder, as it (lands, 20J. to 30J. a load of ^ , / 2 "/ 44 feet. 2. Labour. Journeyman-carpenter's wages, iSi. and -< beer, or 11 d. a day, A foreman-carpenter's wages, 25. and beer, or IS. ^d. 2l day. A joiner's wages, is. 3^. and becr'T'or is. 6d. a dav. C c 4 IIL 39* L I S T O F R A T E 5. III. THATCHERS WORK. I. Materials. Reed, 3/. to 3/. 3J. a hundred fathom (oi' 6 feetj. Cutting and binding reed, 25J. a hundred. Cutting and binding gladdon, 30J. a hun- dred. Taking off old reed and binding it, los. a hundred. New " tar-rope" (three flrands), y, 6d, to 4J. a flone (of fourteen pounds). 2. Labour. Day's work of a man and boy, 2S. 6d. Laying reed, a halfpenny a foot ; or, 4J. 2 harvefl alfo board. * ** 3. Road Team-work. / O ^ Five horfeSjOne man and waggon, loj. a^day*". Teamer-man's road-allowance, 6d. a day's journey. 4. Soil-process. Plowing, — whether it be breaking up a fal- low or flirring it, is. 6d. an acre for man and horfcs. Seed-plowing (efpecially for wheat in nar- row ridges) feldom done by the acre. 5. Manure-process, 0* fj Caf^ing marl, 3^. to 6d. a load f . * Inftance cf four horfes one man and two waggons in Jiay time, for 75; ^d. a day. f One individual gives 4