July 30, 1770
Cut my little mead. Vines in bloom. Showers about.
Cut my little mead. Vines in bloom. Showers about.
Turneps begin to be hoed. Red-breast’s note begins to be distinguishable, other birds being more silent.
Swallows begin to feed yir young ones flying.
Wheat is very backward: hardly any ears appear. It is worthy of notice that on my clayey soils horses prefer grass that grows on a sand-walk, tho’ shaded & dripped by a tall hedge, to that which springs from the natural ground in a sunny & open situation.
Cut first melon. Apis longicornis carries wax on it’s thighs into it’s hole in the walks: in this wax it deposits it’s eggs. Cocked the hay in large cocks. Martins tread in their nest, & flie out one on the back of the other.
Spread the hay. Stopped & tacked ye vines. Cut the tall hedges.
First young swallows appear. Young Goldfinches. Turned the grass-cocks about the last week of June. Vine begins to blow very late! in good summers.
Heavy showers. Young frogs migrate from their ponds. Young partridges.
Cut my great mead, a good crop. Young bank-martins are flyers: this species every year is the first that brings forth it’s young. Quer: Do they feed their young flying, or not?
Vast showers about but no rain. Turn’d the St. foin twice, & cocked it in a small cock.