Full text: [A to Belgiojo'so] (Vol. 1)

    
  
    
     
   
    
  
   
  
  
  
   
  
  
   
     
  
  
  
   
  
  
  
   
   
  
  
   
  
  
  
    
      
   
   
  
   
     
    
     
   
    
   
  
  
  
    
  
  
   
   
   
   
   
  
    
   
   
   
    
    
   
    
    
  
      
    
     
    
      
  
ore generally 
rwhere spring- 
1y imitators. 
ures has con- 
o agricultural 
A\TOSE AIMONg 2 
¢ small farms, 
ent of which 
The faithful 
. towards the 
rkings of such 
of the potato, 
, enabled rents 
luce of grain, 
failure of the 
heart-rending 
nessed in our 
; was the com- 
, to take from 
ccession, after 
ate its powers 
ses. On the 
was better ; 
se of cropping 
rely cultivated 
n in the north 
d, the culture 
ture in the A. 
roe amount of 
’S preparation 
ve the cultiva- 
scale of social 
- general rule, 
most densely 
> in moderate- 
hitherto been 
nate is admir- 
in the south, 
Young’s time, 
“agriculturists 
exodus which 
s relieved the 
1t population, 
r no advance 
nning of the 
is Husbandry 
‘nion, affords 
s then prac- 
divided into 
er, which was 
bion consisted 
years in oats. 
d pease were 
Jure was com- 
> yield of corn 
ntity of seed. 
n, as no artifi- 
ragement was 
did not bring 
ket—scarcely 
hat time. At 
d free trade 
h flowed the 
h of industry 
_none more S0 
1 sending the 
ared on the 
- low country, 
n crops in the 
f stock soon 
ed improved 
rote a certain 
th of artificial 
ore grown pre- 
an fifty years 
o 
  
AGRICULTURE. 
  
  
  
afterwards, one farmer in Roxburghshire is said to 
have had 100 acres of turnips in one year. Towards 
the end of the century, turnips and artificial grasses 
formed the basis of improved A.in every county. 
A great rise in the value of land took place. The 
war-prices in the beginning of the present century 
gave a further stimulus to the reclamation of land. 
The improvements, however, were mnot effected 
without a great revolution in the state of the rural 
population. Formerly, the farms were small, and 
often laboured by the members of a single family. 
A consolidation of farms took place, which neces- 
sitated a great change in the social condition of 
employers and employed, producing often painful 
contrasts. Of late years, the commercial prosperity 
of the country has greatly helped to clevate the 
rural population, and necessitated improvements in 
cottage accommodation. 
Scottish A. is distinguished for great economy in 
labour, forming a contrast in this respect to that in 
the chief corn districts of England. Few farms are 
to be seen in the richer districts without having a 
fixed steam-engine for driving the barn and other 
machinery. Labour-saving machines have also been 
freely introduced. With soil, climate, and situation, 
the mode of cropping varies greatly over the country. 
In the Lothians, the six-course shift is common : 
namely, 1st, wheat ; 2d, beans or potatoes; 3d, wheat; 
4th, turnips; 5th, barley or wheat ; 6th, grass-seeds. 
In certain situations, the potato-crop has lately been 
still more extensively planted, occupying the place of 
the bean or the turnip. On secondary farms, the five- 
course rotation becomes more common: 1st, wheat, 
or barley; 2d, grass; 3d, grass; 4th, oats; 5k, 
turnips or potatoes. The larger proportion of the 
surface of Scotland, however, is devoted to pasture 
for sheep and cattle. The mountainous tracts are 
generally unfit for cultivation. Little else has been 
done in the way of improving them than digging a 
few surface-drains, and improving the breeds of the 
stock they feed. Sheep-farms vary in extent from 
1009 to 60,000 acres. A few of the best stock-farms 
may summer and winter a sheep to the acre, but 
most require three acres. The black-faced are reared 
upon the most elevated and exposed ground, while 
the Cheviots thrive on those parts that are less so. 
No other food is usually given in winter than what 
is left on the fields in autumn. Cross-breeds between 
the Cheviot and the Leicester are reared in the 
lower ranges, where a supply of turnips may be had 
to give to the ewes while suckling their offspring. 
When the sheep are to be fattened, they are taken 
to the arable districts. The opening of steam- 
navigation, and lately, the system of railways, have 
been of infinite benefit to Scottish A. in getting a 
market for fat animals. 
In North America, the same crops are raised as 
in corresponding latitudes in Europe. The winters 
in Canada and the United States are much more 
severe than those of Western Kurope, while the 
summers are quite as hot, and far more moist, 
and hence arise considerable variations in the 
practices of agriculture. In Canada and the 
northern states, wheat is the staple article of export. 
In all the chief exporting districts, wheat and red 
clover are grown as alternate crops. Betwixt 
latitudes 42° and 39°, wheat is often grown alter- 
nately with maize, after the land has been under 
pasture for some years. Again, betwixt latitudes 
39° and 35° the climate is better suited for 
maize than wheat, which becomes less productive. 
The best pastoral regions are in south Ohio and 
throughout Kentucky. Below latitude 35°, maize 
is much less productive, and the climate becomes 
suitable for cotton. This plant furnishes the 
staple article of production from latitude 35° to 
  
the shores of the Gulf of Mexico. Rice is the 
most profitable crop in the southern states; but its 
culture is chiefly confined to the tidal swamps, 
which can be flooded by fresh water. The sugar- 
cane is limited to the rich alluvial lands on the banks 
of the Mississippi as far north as latitude 31° 
Tobacco is a principal crop in Virginia and some 
other states. The West India Islands, surrounded 
by the warm waters of the gulf, are free from the 
cold north winds of the American continent. This 
circumstance favours the growth of the cane, which 
is so susceptible of injury from frosts. The rich 
lands of these islands produce large crops of sugar. 
Coffee is also grown to a considerable extent on 
several of the Antilles. On the Pacific coast, the 
climate is charvacterised by mild winters and dry 
summers, so that the methods of agriculture must 
conform to those of the countries bordering on the 
Mediterranean. 
The soil of South America appears to be much 
more fertile than that of North America. In the 
southern parts, the winters are comparatively mild, 
when contrasted with those on the same latitudes in 
the British possessions. The valley of the Rio de la 
Plata is admirably suited for rearing sheep and 
cattle, which are found in immense herds in the 
interior. Brazil is densely wooded, shewing the 
abundance of the rains, and the capabilities of the 
country for the growth of the sugar-cane. In the 
north, where the dry seasons are of longer duration, 
there are immense grassy plains called savannahs, 
covered with herds of wild-cattle. Though no cattle 
were found on the continent when discovered by 
Europeans, it has been asserted that more cattle 
are now running wild in South America than the 
whole domesticated cattle of Europe. 
Clina possesses a climate having a great simi- 
larity to that of the United States, cast of the 
Rocky Mountains. The winters are cold, and the 
summers moist and hot. Rice forms the great 
staple crop in the warmer regions of the south, 
wherever the land can be irrigated. This plant is 
also cultivated to a limited extent on dry lands, 
along with millet and maize. The density of the 
population in China, is an indication of the advanced 
state of its A. The careful manner in which all the 
refuse of the towns and villages is husbanded and 
applied to the land, while weeds are not suffered 
to grow among the crops, is the true secret of the 
productive A. of the Chinese. 
The condition of A. in China shews what we 
might expect from enlightened policy in the promo- 
tion of that of /ndia. The monsoons which prevail 
over Hindustan during summer cause a great luxuri- 
ance of vegetation while they last ; but the extreme 
droughts that precede and follow them parch and 
wither up the shallower-rooted plants. Over a large 
part of India, irrigation is required to produce many 
of the cropswith certainty. In the tropical latitudes, 
rice is the most abundant grain-yielding plant, and 
forms the chief food of the people. The numerous 
rivers of Northern India supply the means of irriga- 
tion, and the production of food then becomes a 
matter of comparative certainty. Where the winters 
are cool, wheat and barley are grown at that season, 
and rice, maize, millet, &c., in summer, just as we 
find in the irrigated valleys of the south of Spain. 
At the present time, the principal drawbacks to the 
better cultivation of land are the deficiency in the 
means of transporting the produce, and the tenure 
by which the land is held. The immense quantities 
of cotton and flax which are grown and literally lost 
for want of a market, is a subject that is beginning 
to attract attention, since our manufacturers are 
suffering from the scarcity of raw material. 
It would be out of place to give an outline of the 
  
   
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
 
	        
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