November 18, 1772
Nasturtiums blow yet some few leaves are decayed. Grapes delicate, but many bunches decay. Paths dry.
November 16, 1772
Appears in my fields: Elvela pileo deflexo, adnato, lobato, difformi: Linn. flo Suec: Elvela petiloata, lamina in formam capituli deorsum plicato-laciniata & crispa; petiolo fistuloso, striato, & rimoso: Gleditsch methodus fungorum.
November 12, 1772
Oenas, sive vinago. The stock-dove, or wood-pigeon appears. Where they breed is uncertain. They leave us in spring, & do not return ’til about this time. Before the beechen woods were so much destroyed we had every winter prodigious flocks, reaching for a mile together as they went out from their roost of a morning. Hartley-wood used to abound with them. They were considerably less than the ring-dove, or queest, which breeds with us, and stays the whole year round.
November 11, 1772
Nasturtiums and other Indian flowers are still in bloom: a sure token that there has been no frost.
November 7, 1772
Warm air. Flesh-flies blow the meat in the larder still.
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