Posted by sydney on Jun 10th, 1776
No one that has not attended to such matters, & taken down remarks, can be aware how much ten days dripping weather will influence the growth of grass or corn after a severe dry season. This present summer 1776 yields a remarkable instance: for ’til the 30th of May the fields were burnt-up & naked, & the barley not half out of the ground; but now, June 10t there is an agreeable prospect of plenty. A very intelligent Clergyman assured me, that hearing while he was a young student at the University, of toads being found alive in blocks of stone, & solids bodies of trees; he one long vacation took a toad, & put it in a garden-pot, & laying a tile over the mouth of the pot, buried it five feet deep in the ground in his father’s garden. in about 13 months he dug-up the imprisoned reptile, & found it alive & well, & considerably grown. He buried it again as at first, & on a second visit at about the same period found it circumstanced as before. He then deposited the pot as formerly a third time, only laying the tile so as not quite to cover the whole of its mouth: but when he came to examine it again next year, the toads was gone. he each time trod the earth down very hard over the pot.
Posted by sydney on Jun 9th, 1776
Forest-fly begins to appear. Grass & corn grow away.
Posted by sydney on Jun 8th, 1776
Elder begins to blow. Many hundreds of annuals are now planted-out, which have needed no watering. Wheat begins to shoot into ear. Hardly any shell-snails are seen; they were destroyed, & eaten by they thrushes last summer during the long dry season. This year scarce a thrush, they were killed by the severe winter.
Posted by sydney on Jun 7th, 1776
Fly-catcher builds. Farmers cut clover for their horses.
Posted by sydney on Jun 5th, 1776
Boys bring me female-wasps. Apis longicornis bores it’s nests & copulates.
Posted by sydney on Jun 3rd, 1776
Soft rain. Grass & corn improved by the rain already. The long-horned bees bore their holes in the walks.
Posted by sydney on Jun 2nd, 1776
Sultry, & heavy clouds. Smell of sulphur in the air. Paid for near 20 wasps: several were breeders; but some were workers, hatched perhaps this year.
Posted by sydney on Jun 1st, 1776
Dames violets, double, blow finely: roses bud: tulips gone: pinks bud. Bees begin to swarm. Tacked the vines the first time. Began to plant out annuals in the basons in the field. Ponds & some wells begin to be dry.