The restraint involved in not mentioning the one legged flautist connection is
admirable!
And I see what you mean.
But did you know about the Spinning Jenny??!!! LOL
Jackie
--- On Wed, 1/4/09, John C. Newsome <cushyinireland@...> wrote:
From: John C. Newsome <cushyinireland@...>
Subject: Re: [SmallHolding] Now I didn't know that!
To: smallholding@...
Date: Wednesday, 1 April, 2009, 9:57 PM
Well I did know about Tull Jackie (notice I never mentioned Ian Anderson?), but
I'd never related the Irish interest in his methods..
John...
--- On Wed, 1/4/09, Jackie Bridgen <skewbaldpony@...> wrote:
From: Jackie Bridgen <skewbaldpony@...>
Subject: Re: [SmallHolding] Now I didn't know that!
To: smallholding@...
Date: Wednesday, 1 April, 2009, 9:52 PM
Lord, didn't you?
Jethro Tull was the mainstay of about two years of grammar school history, as
far as I recall. That and the Repeal of the Corn Laws!!!!!!!! !!!!!!!!! !!
And the spinning jenny, obviously.
Jackie
--- On Wed, 1/4/09, John <cushyinireland@ yahoo.co. uk> wrote:
From: John <cushyinireland@ yahoo.co. uk>
Subject: [SmallHolding] Now I didn't know that!
To: smallholding@ yahoogroups. co.uk
Date: Wednesday, 1 April, 2009, 9:45 PM
The planting of crops in long, straight, equidistant rows, was
believed by contemporaries to be one of the triumphs of 18th-century
improved agriculture. Drill cultivation allowed more systemic sowing, care,
management, and harvesting of crops than had been possible when there were sown
broadcast (scattered) or grown on ridges.
The Dublin Society strongly advocated the use of drill husbandry. One of its
earliest publications was an edition of Jethro TULL's treatise on drill
cultivation, and in 1771 the society grant-aided John Wynn BAKER's factory
near Cellbridge, Co. Kildare, which manufactured drill implements.
Mr. TULL (1674-1741), an English gentleman farmer, introduced many new
farming methods. In his day, farmers sowed the seed by throwing it by hand. He
regarded this practice as both wasteful and uncertain. So he invented a drill
for boring straight rows of holes into which he dropped the seed. He also
claimed that farmers could keep their soil fertile by frequent hoeing.
His ideas were slowly adopted. Born in Berkshire, and educated at St.
John's College, Oxford University, TULL traveled in France and Italy to
observe farming methods and wrote "Horse-hoeing Husbandry," which was
published in 1731.
In Ireland, the planting of cereals in drills was common only on large
farms, but by the 1830s the cultivation of potatoes in drills had become
widespread. In 1852, J. HANSON of Doagh, Co. Antrim, patented a mechanical
potato digger which operated by knocking potato tubers sideways out of raised
drills.
This was a major contribution to the mechanization of farming
during the 19th century.
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