June 13, 1790
Aritchokes, & chardons, come into eating. Cucumbers abound.
June 12, 1790
Cauliflowers abound. Pease sold for ten pence the peck.
June 7, 1790
Went to London by Guilford & Epsom. Spring-corn & grass look well. Hay making near town.
June 6, 1790
After ewes & lambs are shorn there is great confusion & bleating, neither the dams nor the young being able to distinguish one another as before. This embarassment seems not so much to arise from the loss of the fleece, which may occasion an alteration in their appearance, as from the defect of that notus odor, discriminating each individual personally: which also is confounded by the strong scent of the pitch & tar wherewith they are newly marked; for the brute creation recognize each other more from the smell than the sight; & in matters of Identity & Diversity appeal much more to their noses than to their eyes. Thus dogs smell to persons when they meet, when they want to be informed whether they are stranger or not. After sheep have been washed, there is the same confusion, for the reason given above.
May 31, 1790
Bottled-out the port-wine which came here in October, but did not get fine.
May 30, 1790
John Carpenter brings home from the Plashet at Rotherfield some old chest-nut trees which are very long. In several places the wood-peckers had begun to bore them. The timber & bark of these trees are so very like oak, as might easily deceive an indifferent observer, but the wood is very shakey, & towards the heart cup-shakey, so that the inward parts are of no use. They were bought for the purpose of cooperage, but must make but ordinary barrels, buckets, &c. Chestnut sells for half the price of oak; but has some times been sent into the King’s docks, & passed off instead of oak.
May 25, 1790
Sowed a specimen of some uncommon clover from farmer Street. Sowed a pint of large kidney beans, white: also Savoys, Coss lettuces, & bore-cole.
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