Contents
- CHAPTERThe NEW ZEALAND JOURNAL OF AGRICULTURE
- CHAPTERControl of Feed-flavour by Herd Management.
- GROUPING_NODEPage 97 Advertisements
- ADVERTISEMENTPage 97 Advertisement 1
- GROUPING_NODEPage 98 Advertisements
- ADVERTISEMENTPage 98 Advertisement 1
- GROUPING_NODEPage 99 Advertisements
- ADVERTISEMENTPage 99 Advertisement 1
- CHAPTERControl of Facial Eczema by Farm Management.
- ILLUSTRATIONFig. 1.—Field 1 being topped high with the mower. Parts of this field had sufficient clippings to warrant raking.
- ILLUSTRATIONFig. 2—Field 1, closed on 9th December, 1938, and photographed on 11th January, 1939. The field had a dense bottom gr...
- ILLUSTRATIONFig. 3—Field 2, closed on 16th December, 1938, and photographed on 11th January, 1939. The field had a 3 in. to 4 in....
- ILLUSTRATIONFig. 4—Field 3, closed on 23rd December, 1938, and photographed on 11th January, 1939. Growth just freshening.
- ILLUSTRATIONFig. 5-Field 4, closed on 30th December, 1938, and photographed on 11th January, 1939. Field had made practically no ...
- ILLUSTRATIONFig. 6—Field 2 being topped high with the mower. No raking was necessary in this field. [J. F. Louden, photos.
- GROUPING_NODEPage 102 Advertisements
- ADVERTISEMENTPage 102 Advertisement 1
- CHAPTERInternal Parasites in Sheep.
- GROUPING_NODEPage 103 Advertisements
- ADVERTISEMENTPage 103 Advertisement 1
- GROUPING_NODEPage 104 Advertisements
- ADVERTISEMENTPage 104 Advertisement 1
- GROUPING_NODEPage 105 Advertisements
- ADVERTISEMENTPage 105 Advertisement 1
- GROUPING_NODEPage 106 Advertisements
- ADVERTISEMENTPage 106 Advertisement 1
- CHAPTERWinter Pasture-management on Dairy Farms.
- ILLUSTRATIONUntitled
- ILLUSTRATIONUntitled
- ILLUSTRATIONUntitled
- ILLUSTRATIONUntitled
- ILLUSTRATIONUntitled
- ILLUSTRATIONUntitled
- ILLUSTRATIONUntitled
- ILLUSTRATIONUntitled
- ILLUSTRATIONUntitled
- ILLUSTRATIONUntitled
- ILLUSTRATIONUntitled
- ILLUSTRATIONUntitled
- ILLUSTRATIONUntitled
- ILLUSTRATIONUntitled
- ILLUSTRATIONUntitled
- ILLUSTRATIONUntitled
- ILLUSTRATIONUntitled
- ILLUSTRATIONUntitled
- ILLUSTRATIONUntitled
- ILLUSTRATIONUntitled
- ILLUSTRATIONUntitled
- ILLUSTRATIONUntitled
- GROUPING_NODEPage 108 Advertisements
- ADVERTISEMENTPage 108 Advertisement 1
- CHAPTERDestruction of Gorse and Blackberry.
- ILLUSTRATIONFig. 1.—A tractor and scrub bar cutting gorse.
- ILLUSTRATIONFig. 2.—The result of the use of the flame – thrower. Twelve years ago the area beyond the fence was gorse and blackb...
- ILLUSTRATIONFig. 3.—A close-up of a portion of the ground in Fig. 2. The white object is a handkerchief.
- ILLUSTRATIONFig. 4.—A flame-thrower at work.
- ILLUSTRATIONFig. 5.—Blackberry destroyed by three sprayings with sodium chlorate on a farm at Glenbrook.
- ILLUSTRATIONFig. 6.—Goats eating down blackberry on an infested farm at Paerata. The gorse is practically untouched.
- ILLUSTRATIONFig. 7.-A close-up of the blackberry showing how the goats keep the plants defoliated and thereby let in light and en...
- ILLUSTRATIONFig. 8: A tethered goat patrols the roadside of her owner’s property. Note the infestation of blackberry on the neigh...
- GROUPING_NODEPage 112 Advertisements
- ADVERTISEMENTPage 112 Advertisement 1
- GROUPING_NODEPage 114 Advertisements
- ADVERTISEMENTPage 114 Advertisement 1
- GROUPING_NODEPage 116 Advertisements
- ADVERTISEMENTPage 116 Advertisement 1
- CHAPTERlodine Naturally Available To Live-stock.
- GROUPING_NODEPage 117 Advertisements
- ADVERTISEMENTPage 117 Advertisement 1
- GROUPING_NODEPage 118 Advertisements
- ADVERTISEMENTPage 118 Advertisement 1
- CHAPTERConverting Surplus Potatoes Into Valuable Stock Feed.
- GROUPING_NODEPage 120 Advertisements
- ADVERTISEMENTPage 120 Advertisement 1
- GROUPING_NODEPage 121 Advertisements
- ADVERTISEMENTPage 121 Advertisement 1
- GROUPING_NODEPage 122 Advertisements
- ADVERTISEMENTPage 122 Advertisement 1
- CHAPTERDon’t Gamble With Your Pastures.
- ILLUSTRATIONFig. 1.-Certified white clover gives vigorous growth and persists in a permanent pasture.
- ILLUSTRATIONFig. 2.—Uncertified white clover sown with the same mixture as Fig. 1. [H. Drake, photo.
- ILLUSTRATIONFig. 3.—Certified rye-grass forms the basis of high-producing swards. [E. R. Marryatt, photo.
- ILLUSTRATIONFig. 4.—Uncertified rye-grass; sward open, and rye-grass is being replaced by weeds and volunteer clover. [E. R. Marr...
- GROUPING_NODEPage 125 Advertisements
- ADVERTISEMENTPage 125 Advertisement 1
- GROUPING_NODEPage 126 Advertisements
- ADVERTISEMENTPage 126 Advertisement 1
- CHAPTERExport of Apples and Pears During 1939 Season.
- GROUPING_NODEPage 127 Advertisements
- ADVERTISEMENTPage 127 Advertisement 1
- CHAPTERCattle Poisoned by Garden Shrubs.
- GROUPING_NODEPage 129 Advertisements
- ADVERTISEMENTPage 129 Advertisement 1
- GROUPING_NODEPage 130 Advertisements
- ADVERTISEMENTPage 130 Advertisement 1
- CHAPTERStock Prefer Sensation Swedes.
- GROUPING_NODEPage 132 Advertisements
- ADVERTISEMENTPage 132 Advertisement 1
- GROUPING_NODEPage 133 Advertisements
- ADVERTISEMENTPage 133 Advertisement 1
- GROUPING_NODEPage 134 Advertisements
- ADVERTISEMENTPage 134 Advertisement 1
- GROUPING_NODEPage 135 Advertisements
- ADVERTISEMENTPage 135 Advertisement 1
- GROUPING_NODEPage 136 Advertisements
- ADVERTISEMENTPage 136 Advertisement 1
- CHAPTERPig Census Returns.
- GROUPING_NODEPage 137 Advertisements
- ADVERTISEMENTPage 137 Advertisement 1
- ADVERTISEMENTPage 137 Advertisement 2
- CHAPTERCertificate-of-Record Testing.
- GROUPING_NODEPage 139 Advertisements
- ADVERTISEMENTPage 139 Advertisement 1
- GROUPING_NODEPage 140 Advertisements
- ADVERTISEMENTPage 140 Advertisement 1
- CHAPTERFarming in the Catlins District.
- GROUPING_NODEPage 142 Advertisements
- ADVERTISEMENTPage 142 Advertisement 1
- GROUPING_NODEPage 143 Advertisements
- ADVERTISEMENTPage 143 Advertisement 1
- GROUPING_NODEPage 144 Advertisements
- ADVERTISEMENTPage 144 Advertisement 1
- CHAPTERCitrus Pests: (6) Scale Insects.
- CHAPTERDeveloping Farm Land In The Tuatapere District.
- GROUPING_NODEPage 147 Advertisements
- ADVERTISEMENTPage 147 Advertisement 1
- GROUPING_NODEPage 148 Advertisements
- ADVERTISEMENTPage 148 Advertisement 1
- GROUPING_NODEPage 149 Advertisements
- ADVERTISEMENTPage 149 Advertisement 1
- CHAPTERObituary. Mr. W. C. Robinson, Former Secretary of the Department of Agriculture.
- ILLUSTRATIONMr. W. C. Robinson.
- GROUPING_NODEPage 150 Advertisements
- ADVERTISEMENTPage 150 Advertisement 1
- CHAPTERCocksfoot on Light Land.
- GROUPING_NODEPage 151 Advertisements
- ADVERTISEMENTPage 151 Advertisement 1
- GROUPING_NODEPage 152 Advertisements
- ADVERTISEMENTPage 152 Advertisement 1
- CHAPTERNew Zealand Fruit Cool Stores.
- CHAPTERProfitable Crops for Pigs.
- CHAPTERVeterinary Notes for the Farmer.
- GROUPING_NODEPage 158 Advertisements
- ADVERTISEMENTPage 158 Advertisement 1
- CHAPTERFarm Practice and Management.
- ILLUSTRATIONFig. 2.—Showing the iron placed in position with battens between the sheets directly over the purlins.
- ILLUSTRATIONFig. 1.—A good standard class of farm shed
- ILLUSTRATIONFig. 1.—A general view of the isolation plot of Iron Duke potatoes. [A. F. Greenall, photo.
- ILLUSTRATIONFig. 2.—The isolation plot of Iron Duke potatoes, showing the stage of development at which the second roguing was do...
- ILLUSTRATIONFig. 3.-The isolation crop as it appeared after the final roguing. Note the extensive nature of the roguing. [A. F. G...
- ILLUSTRATIONFig. 1.—A view of the sweep attached to the lorry, which is ready to commence work.
- ILLUSTRATIONFig. 2.—The sweep in operation clearing a paddock of grubbed gorse,
- ILLUSTRATIONA line of wind-swept pines only too typical of general plantings. Close, dense shelter, obtained by underplanting the...
- ILLUSTRATIONBlue wheat grass, agropyron scabrum, growing under hard conditions on a bank where stock and rabbits cannot easily ob...
- ILLUSTRATIONThe Whangarei High School students who attended the special farm school at Ruakura. [E. R. Marryatt, photo.
- GROUPING_NODEPage 160 Advertisements
- ADVERTISEMENTPage 160 Advertisement 1
- GROUPING_NODEPage 162 Advertisements
- ADVERTISEMENTPage 162 Advertisement 1
- GROUPING_NODEPage 164 Advertisements
- ADVERTISEMENTPage 164 Advertisement 1
- GROUPING_NODEPage 165 Advertisements
- ADVERTISEMENTPage 165 Advertisement 1
- CHAPTERHorticultural Instruction.
- CHAPTERVegetables, Small Fruits, and Flowers.
- CHAPTERWork for the Month in the Apiary.
- GROUPING_NODEPage 173 Advertisements
- ADVERTISEMENTPage 173 Advertisement 1
- CHAPTERPoultry-keeping Section.
- CHAPTERN.Z. Federation of Young Farmers' Clubs.
- ILLUSTRATIONUntitled
- ILLUSTRATIONNorth Canterbury Club members assembled on the lawn at Mr. J. Bowker’s farm, “Claremont,” Waipara.
- ILLUSTRATIONFig. 1.—A general view of the Young Farmers’ Club National Shearing Competition in progress.
- ILLUSTRATIONFig. 2.—A close-up of two of the competitors at work.
- ILLUSTRATIONMembers of the Gisborne Club with the Poverty Bay Efficiency Shield and Football Cup. Back row: O. Phillips, Morris, ...
- ILLUSTRATIONUntitled
- ILLUSTRATIONMembers of the Waimana Club taking part in the judging competition at the field-day on Mr. T. W. Wardlaw’s farm. [C. ...
- GROUPING_NODEPage 184 Advertisements
- ADVERTISEMENTPage 184 Advertisement 1
- CHAPTERHealth Notes for the Farm.
- ILLUSTRATIONA branch of the tutu plant.
- ILLUSTRATIONLeaves and berries of the karaka.
- CHAPTERThe Farm Home and Kitchen.
- GROUPING_NODEPage 189 Advertisements
- ADVERTISEMENTPage 189 Advertisement 1
- CHAPTERFounders of Modern Agriculture, No. 14.
- ILLUSTRATIONThomas Brydone.
- GROUPING_NODEPage 191 Advertisements
- ADVERTISEMENTPage 191 Advertisement 1
- TABLE_OF_CONTENTSTable of Contents—February, 1939.
- GROUPING_NODEPage 192 Advertisements
- ADVERTISEMENTPage 192 Advertisement 1
- ADVERTISEMENTPage 192 Advertisement 2