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observer, but the wood is very shaky, and towards the heart cup-shaky (that is to say, apt to separate in round pieces like cups), so that the inward parts are of no use. They are bought for the purpose of cooperage, but must make but ordinary barrels, buckets, etc. Chestnut sells for half the price of oak; but has sometimes been sent to the king's docks, and passed off instead of oak.-WHITE.

LIME BLOSSOMS.

Dr. Chandler tells that in the south of France an infusion of the blossoms of the lime tree, Tilia, is in much esteem as a remedy for coughs, hoarseness, fevers, etc., and that at Nismes he saw an avenue of limes that was quite ravaged and torn to pieces by people greedily gathering the bloom, which they dried and kept for these purposes.

Upon the strength of this information we made some tea of lime blossoms, and found it a very soft, well-flavoured, pleasant, saccharine julep, in taste much resembling the juice of liquorice.—WHITE.

BLACKTHORN.

This tree usually blossoms while cold north-east winds blow; so that the harsh, rugged weather obtaining at this season is called by the country people blackthorn winter. -WHITE.

IVY BERRIES.

Ivy berries form a noble and providential supply for birds in winter and spring; for the first severe frost freezes and spoils all the haws, sometimes by the middle of November. Ivy berries do not seem to freeze.-WHITE.

HOPS.

The culture of Virgil's vines corresponds very exactly with the modern management of hops. I might instance in the perpetual diggings and hoeings, in the tying to the stakes and poles, in pruning the superfluous shoots, etc., but lately I have observed a new circumstance, which was a neighbouring farmer's harrowing between the rows of hops with a small triangular harrow, drawn by one horse, and guided by two handles. This occurrence brought to my mind the following passage:

"ipsa

Flectere luctantes inter vineta juvencos.”—GEORG.

Hops are diœcious plants; hence perhaps it might be proper, though not practised, to leave purposely some male. plants in every garden, that their farina might impregnate the blossoms. The female plants without their male attendants are not in their natural state; hence we may suppose the frequent failure of crop so incident to hopgrounds; no other growth, cultivated by man, has such frequent and general failures as hops.

Two hop gardens much injured by a hailstorm, June 5th, show now (September 2nd) a prodigious crop, and larger and fairer hops than any in the parish. The owners seem now to be convinced that the hail, by beating off the tops of the binds, has increased the side-shoots, and improved the crop. Query. Therefore should not the tops of hops he pinched off when the binds are very gross and strong?-WHITE.

SEED LYING DORMANT.

The naked part of the Hanger is now covered with thistles of various kinds. The seeds of these thistles may

have lain probably under the thick shade of the beeches for many years, but could not vegetate till the sun and air were admitted. When old beech trees are cleared away, the naked ground in a year or two becomes covered with strawberry plants, the seeds of which must have lain in the ground for an age at least. One of the slidders or trenches down the middle of the Hanger, close covered over with lofty beeches near a century old, is still called "strawberry slidder," though no strawberries have grown there in the memory of man. That sort of fruit did once, no doubt, abound there, and will again when the obstruction is removed.-WHITE.

BEANS SOWN BY BIRDS.

As

Many horse-beans sprang up in my field-walks in the autumn, and are now grown to a considerable height. the Ewel was in beans last summer, it is most likely that these seeds came from thence; but then the distance is too considerable for them to have been conveyed by mice. It is most probable therefore that they were brought by birds, and in particular by jays and pies, who seem to have hid them among the grass and moss, and then to have forgotten where they had stowed them. Some pease are growing also in the same situation, and probably under the same circumstances.-WHITE.

CUCUMBERS SET BY BEES.

If bees, who are much the best setters of cucumbers, do not happen to take kindly to the frames, the best way is to tempt them by a little honey put on the male and female bloom. When they are once induced to haunt the frames, they set all the fruit, and will hover with impatience

round the lights in a morning, till the glasses are opened. Probatum est.-WHITE.

WHEAT.

A notion has always obtained that in England hot summers are productive of fine crops of wheat; yet in the years 1780 and 1781, though the heat was intense, the wheat was much mildewed, and the crop light. Does not severe heat, while the straw is milky, occasion its juices to exude, which being extravasated, occasion spots, discolour the stems and blades, and injure the health of the plants? -WHITE.

TRUFFLES.

August. A truffle-hunter called on us, having in his pocket several large truffles found in this neighbourhood. He says these roots are not to be found in deep woods, but in narrow hedgerows and the skirts of coppices. Some truffles, he informed us, lie two feet within the earth, and some quite on the surface; the latter, he added, have little or no smell, and are not so easily discovered by the dogs as those that lie deeper. Half-a-crown a pound was the price which he asked for this commodity. Truffles never abound in wet winters and springs. They are in season, in different situations, at least nine months in the year.WHITE.

TREMELLA NOSTOC.

Though the weather may have been ever so dry and burning, yet after two or three wet days this jelly-like substance abounds on the walks.-WHITE.

FAIRY RINGS.

The cause, occasion, call it what you will, of fairy rings subsists in the turf, and is conveyable with it:* for the turf of my garden-walks, brought from the down above, abounds with those appearances, which vary their shape, and shift situation continually, discovering themselves now in circles, now in segments, and sometimes in irregular patches and spots. Wherever they obtain, puff-balls abound; the seeds of which were doubtless brought in the turf.-WHITE.

YEW.

In the churchyard of this village is a yew-tree, whose aspect bespeaks it to be of a great age: it seems to have seen several centuries, and is probably coeval with the church, and therefore may be deemed an antiquity: the body is squat, short, and thick, and measures twenty-three feet in the girth, supporting a head of suitable extent to its bulk. This is a male tree, which in the spring sheds clouds of dust, and fills the atmosphere around with its farina,

As far as we have been able to observe, the males of this species become much larger than the females; and it has so fallen out that most of the yew-trees in the churchyards of this neighbourhood are males: but this must have been matter of mere accident, since men, when they first planted yews, little dreamed that there were sexes in trees.

In a yard, in the midst of the street, till very lately grew a middle-sized female tree of the same species, which commonly bore great crops of berries. By the high winds usually prevailing about the autumnal equinox these

*Fairy rings are caused by certain fungi which throw their seeds outwards, so that a gradually increasing circle is formed of greener and brighter vegetation.

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