January 14, 1791

Posted by sydney on Jan 14th, 1791

Ivy berries swell, & grow: there have been no frosts to check them.

January 13, 1791

Posted by sydney on Jan 13th, 1791

The earth is glutted with water: rills break out at the foot of every little hill: my well is near half full.  The wind in the night blew down the rain-measurer.

January 12, 1791

Posted by sydney on Jan 12th, 1791

Mr Churton left us.

January 5, 1791

Posted by sydney on Jan 5th, 1791

The great oak in Harteley avenue, just as you enter the pasture-field, measures in girth 14 feet.  It is a noble tree, & if sound worth many pounds.  Why it was left at the general sale does not appear.  The girth was taken at four feet above the ground.

January 1, 1791

Posted by sydney on Jan 1st, 1791

Many horse-beans sprang up in my field-walks in the autumn, & are now grown to a considerable height.  As the Ewel was in beans last summer, it is most likely that these seeds came from thence; but the distance is too considerable for them to have been conveyed by mice.  It is most probably therefore that they were brought by birds, & in particular, by jays & pies, who seem to have hid them among the grass, & moss, & then to have forgotten where they had stowed them.  Some pease are also growing in the same situation, & probably under the same circumstances.  Mr Derham has recorded that mice hide acorns one by one in pastures in the autumn; & that he has observed them to be hunted-out by swine, who discovered them by their smell.

December 31, 1790

Posted by sydney on Dec 31st, 1790

Total of rain in 1790, 32 inch. 27 h.

December 29, 1790

Posted by sydney on Dec 29th, 1790

On this day Mrs Clements was delivered of a boy, who makes my nephews & nieces again 57 in number.  By the death of Mrs Brown & one twin they were reduced to 56.

December 25, 1790

Posted by sydney on Dec 25th, 1790

H. & Ben Woods left us.

December 23, 1790

Posted by sydney on Dec 23rd, 1790

Thunder, lightening, rain, snow!  A severe tempest.  Much damage done in & about London: damage to some ships at Portsmouth. Vast damage in various parts!  Two men were struck dead in a wind-mill near Rooks-hill on the Sussex downs: & on Hind-head one of the bodies on the gibbet was beaten down to the ground.  Harry & Ben Woods came.

December 16, 1790

Posted by sydney on Dec 16th, 1790

Thatch torn by the wind.

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