August 23, 1789

Posted by sydney on Aug 23rd, 1789

Boy brought me the rudiments of a hornet’s nest, with some maggots in it.  Every ant-hill is in a strange hurry & confusion; & all the winged ants, agitated by some violent impulse, are leaving their homes; &, bent on emigration, swarm by myriads in the air, to the great emoulment of the hirundines, which fare luxuriously.  Those that escape the swallows return no more to their nests, but looking out for new retreats, lay a foundation for future colonies.  All the females at these times are pregnant.  The males that escape being eaten, wander away & die.

August 22, 1789

Posted by sydney on Aug 22nd, 1789

Mr Ben White came to us from Newton.

August 19, 1789

Posted by sydney on Aug 19th, 1789

Timothy Turner’s brew-house on fire: but much help coming in & pulling off the thatch, the fire was extinguished, without any farther damage than the loss of the roofing.  The flames burst thro’ the thatch in many places.  We are this day annoyed in the brown parlor by multitudes of flying ants, which come forth, as usual, from under the stairs.

August 18, 1789

Posted by sydney on Aug 18th, 1789

Many pease housed.  Harvest-scenes are now very beautiful!  Turnips thrive since the shower.

August 17, 1789

Posted by sydney on Aug 17th, 1789

Cool air.  Wheat gleaned.

August 12, 1789

Posted by sydney on Aug 12th, 1789

The planters think these foggy mornings, & sunny days, injurious to their hops.

August 11, 1789

Posted by sydney on Aug 11th, 1789

Got-in forest-fuel in nice order.  Farmer Knight begins wheat harvest.  Lovely weather.

August 10, 1789

Posted by sydney on Aug 10th, 1789

Monotropa Hypopithys abounds in the hanger beyond Maiden dance, opposite to coney-croft hanger.

August 9, 1789

Posted by sydney on Aug 9th, 1789

The country people have a notion that the Fern-owl or Churn-owl, or Eve-jarr, which they also call a Puckeridge, is very injurious to weanling calves by inflicting, as it strikes at them, the fatal distemper known to cow-leeches as Puckeridge. Thus does this harmless, ill-fated bird fall under a double imputation, which it by no means deserves; in Italy, of sucking the teats of goats, whence it is called Caprimulgus; & with us, of communicating a deadly disorder to cattle. But the truth of the matter is, the malady above-mentioned is occasioned by the Oestrus bovis, a dipterous insect, which lays it’s eggs along the backs (chines) of kine, where the maggots, when hatched, eat their way thro’ the hide of the beast into the flesh, & grow to a very large size. I have just talked with a man, who says he has, more than once stripped calves who have died of the puckeridge; that the ail, or complaint lay along the chine, where the flesh was much swelled, & filled with purulent matter. Once myself I saw a large rough maggot of this sort taken (squeezed) out of the back of a cow. These maggots in Essex are called wornils. The least observation & attention would convince men, that these birds neither injure the goatherd, nor the grazier, but are perfectly harmless, & subsist alone, being night birds, on night-insects, such as scarabaei & phalaneae; thro’ the month of July mostly on the scarabaeus solstitialis, which in many districts abounds at that season. Those that we have opened, have always had their craws stuffed with large night-moths & their eggs, & pieces of chafers: nor does it anywise appear how they can, weak & unarmed as they are, inflict any harm upon kine, unless they possess the powers of animal magnetism, & can affect them by fluttering over them. Mr Churton informs me “that the disease along the chine of calves, or rather the maggots that cause them, are called by the graziers in Cheshire worry brees, & a single one worry-bree.” No doubt them mean a breese, or breeze, one name for the gad-fly or Oestrus, which is the parent of these maggots, & lays it’s eggs on the backs of kine. Dogs come into my garden at night, & eat my goose-berries. Levant weather.

August 8, 1789

Posted by sydney on Aug 8th, 1789

Two poor, half-fledged fern-owls were brought me: they were found out in the forest among the heath.  Farmer Hewet of Temple cut 30 acres of wheat this week.  This wheat was lodged before it came into ear, & was much blighted.  It grew on low grounds: the wheat on the high malms at Temple is not ripe.

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