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Hill Grazing Improvement in Montgomeryshire
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 06 May 2016
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I feel that I have rather a difficult task this afternoon, because there are not many things that I can disagree with in Mr. Moses Griffith’s paper, since we in Montgomeryshire learnt the fundamental things of land reclamation from Cahn Hill, although we think of course that we improved on them in some detail! However, our general methods were what Mr. Griffith finally put into practice at Cahn Hill.
In Montgomeryshire we tackled about 6,000 acres. It was not all directly reseeded, but all was hill land classified as rough grazing. The land fell into three types: Molinia, Nardus and Bracken. Each of these types of vegetation clearly relate to three different soil types. Molinia is wet, heavy clay; Bracken is dry, loam overlying shale; while Nardus comes somewhere between the two.
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- Research Article
- Information
- Proceedings of the British Society of Animal Production , Volume 1947 , Issue 2: Eighth Meeting , 24 June 1947 , pp. 60 - 65
- Copyright
- Copyright © The British Society of Animal Production 1947
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