December 30, 1788
Ice within doors. Rime. Snow on the ground.
Ice within doors. Rime. Snow on the ground.
Many wild geese in the moors of the forest.
A considerable flight of wood-cocks around the Barnet.
Most of the wells in the street are dry! Among the rest my own is so shallow as not to admit the bucket to dip! Moved some apples & pears into the kitchen-closet. The horse-roads are dusty.
Thermr 20, 23, 17. Many have been disordered with bad colds & fevers at Oxford. The water in the apparatus for making mineral water froze in the red room. The wind is so piercing that the labourers cannot stand to their work. Ice in all the chambers. The perforated stopple belonging to the apparatus broke in two by the frost. Apples preserved with Potatoes & carrots in the cellar. Shallow snow covers the ground, enough to shelter the wheat.
The navigation of the Thames is much interrupted thro’ the want of water occasioned by the long dry season.
The Stag seen again about Oakhanger. He some times haunts about Hartley wood, & some times about the Holt.
Great complaint for want of rain, & water, round Dublin in Ireland.