April 17
Posted by sydney on Apr 17th, 2009
- 1792: April 17, 1792 – Saw a pair of swallows at Alton.
- 1789: April 17, 1789 – Five gallons of french brandy from London. Cucumbers show fruit in bloom. Cuculus cuculat: the voice of the cuckoo is heard in Blackmoor woods. Sowed hollyhocks, columbines, snapdragons, stocks, mignonette, all from S. Lambeth, in a bed in the garden: also sweet williams, & Cantebury bells.
- 1787: April 17, 1787 – Pears, cherries, & plums in fine bloom along the road. Some hundreds of martins were seen to pass over Rolle towards Geneva, & two swifts; the day was wet & cold.
- 1786: April 17, 1786 – Sowed a box of polyanth seeds, of our own saving.
- 1784: April 17, 1784 – The buds of the vines are not swelled yet at all. In fine springs they have shot by this time two or three inches.
- 1783: April 17, 1783 – Tortoise weighs 6 ae 11 1/4 oun. He begins to eat.
- 1782: April 17, 1782 – Several Black-caps are heard to sing.
- 1780: April 17, 1780 – On this day Sir G: B: Rodney defeated the French fleet of Martinique.
- 1779: April 17, 1779 – Rain greatly wanted. No spring corn comes up. The dry weather has now lasted four months; from the 15th of Decemr 1778. Apple-trees blow this year a full month soon than last year. The hanger is pretty well in full leaf: last year not ’til May 15. Musca meridiana.
- 1775: April 17, 1775 – Mrs Snooke’s tortoise came out of the ground the second time, for the summer.
- 1774: April 17, 1774 – The middle willow wren sings a plaintive, but pleasing note.
- 1773: April 17, 1773 – Bank martin appears. House martin appears. Many swallows. Grass grows very fast. Ring-ouzels are first seen on their spring migration. They are very late this year.
- 1772: April 17, 1772 – Regulus non cristatus a pretty paintive note. Chilly air. Ice. Martins appear.
- 1771: April 17, 1771 – Snow on the ground. No oedicnemus (land curlew) has been heard yet.
- 1770: April 17, 1770 – Averdavines in Oxfordshire. These were passeres torquati, or reed-sparrows.
- 1768: April 17, 1768 – Rooks have young. Young ravens fledged. Forked-tailed kite lays three eggs. Redstart sings for the first time.