March 29, 1774
A fine regular bloom all over the apricot, peach, & nectarine trees. Sheltered the bloom with some ivy-boughs.
A fine regular bloom all over the apricot, peach, & nectarine trees. Sheltered the bloom with some ivy-boughs.
Hot sun. Great thunder-shower at Winton.
Peaches, nectarines, & apricots in fine bloom. No rain since the 9th: stiff ground still very wet. Thomas began to mow the grass plot. My new-laid turf, where not damaged by the continual standing of water after the vast rains, looks well.
This was the last day of the wet weather: but the waters were so encreased by this day’s deluge, that most astonishing floods ensued. This rain & snow, coming on the back of such continual deluges, occasioned a flood in the S. of England beyond anything ever remembered before. In the night between the 8th and 9th a vast fragment of an hanger in the parish of Hawkely slipped down; & at the same time several fields below were rifted & torn in a wonderful manner: two houses also & a barn were shattered, a road stopped-up, & some trees thrown-down. 50 acres of ground were disordered & damaged by this strange accident. The turf of some pastures was driven into a sort of waves: in some places the ground sunk into hollows.
Received as a present from Mr Hinton (to whom it was sent from Exeter, with many more) one of Mr William Lucombe’s new variety of oaks: it is said to be evergreen, tho’ raised at first from an acorn belong to a deciduous tree. They are all grafted on stocks of common oaks. My specimen is a fine young plant, & well-rooted. The growth of this sort is said to be wonderful. Vid: philosoph: transact: V: 62: for the year 1772.