February 3, 1786
The marsh-timouse begins his two harsh, sharp notes.
The marsh-timouse begins his two harsh, sharp notes.
The hazels are finely illuminated with male bloom. Female bloom of hazels appears, & the male-bloom sheds it’s farina.
Covered the spinage-bed with straw: the celeri & winter-lettuces are also covered.
Sowed 36 bushels of peat-ashes on part of my farthest field, which has never been ashed since it was laid-down to grass. Qu: if it be right to sow ashes amidst so much rain & snow? So much moisture must probably dilute the ashes too much, & render them of no effect. Much snow on the ground. These ashes did no manner of good.
The fierce drifting of wednesday proved very injurious to houses, forcing the snow in to roofs, & flooding the ceilings. The roads also are so blocked with drifting snow that the coaches cannot pass. The Winton coach was overturned yesterday near Alresford.
One of the most severe days that I ever remember with a S. wind. The snow on wednesday [today] proved fatal to two or three people who were frozen to death on the open downs about Salisbury. Much damage happened at sea about that time. In particular the Halsewell outer-bound India-man was wercked, & lost on the shore of Purbeck.
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