The practical farmer: or, the Hertfordshire husbandman: containing many new improvements in husbandry. I. Of Meliorating the different Soils, and all other Branches of Business relating to a Farm. II. Of the Nature of the several Sorts of Wheat, and the Soil proper for each. III. Of the great Improvement of Barley, by Brineing the Seed, after an entire new Method, and without Expence. IV. Of increasing Crops of Pease and Beans by Horse-Houghing. V. Of Trefoyle, Clover, Lucerne, and other Foreign Graffes. VI. A new Method to Improve Land at a small Expence, with Burnt Clay. Vii. Of the Management of Cows, Sheep, Suckling of Calves, Lambs, &c. with Means to prevent, and Remedies to cure Rottenness in Sheep. Viii. How to keep Pigeons and Tame Rabbits to Advantage. IX. A new Method of Planting and Improving Fruit-Trees in Ploughed-Fields. By William Ellis, Of Little Gaddesden, in Hertfordshire.

  • Ellis, William, approximately 1700-1758.
Date:
M.DCC.XXXII. [1732]
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About this work

Also known as

Practical farmer. Part 1

Publication/Creation

London : printed for Weaver Bickerton, at Lord Bacon's Head, without Temple-Bar; Thomas Astley, at the Rose; and Stephen Austen, at the Angel and Bible, in St. Paul's Church-Yard, M.DCC.XXXII. [1732]

Physical description

171,[5]p. ; 80.

Edition

The second edition; with additions, which those who bought the former, may have gratis.

References note

ESTC T16818

Reproduction note

Electronic reproduction. Farmington Hills, Mich. : Thomson Gale, 2003. (Eighteenth century collections online). Available via the World Wide Web. Access limited by licensing agreements.

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