OCR Text |
Show PASTURES One may travel hundreds and hundreds of miles into any of the valleys of Utah, but he will fail to find summer pastures superior to the Beaver Valley. But these pastures pas-tures can still be improved. Large numbers of cattle have been kept tin the pastures late into the fall, and in some throughout the winter. The droppings are very noticeable. It left untouched. the grass undior these heaps is killed, and around them it grows high and greein, biu nothing will touch that lucious grass unless starved to it. A harrow run over the pasturu while those droppings are yet wet and soft from the spring moisture and thaws will pulverize and scatter them so that the pasture will be fertilized fer-tilized uniformly instead of menaced men-aced by them, consequently all the grass will be better. Til's is equally true in many meadows mea-dows and other hay fields whero stock have been wintered. A few hours or a day now with the harrow will save innumerable stops with the mowing machine when the hay is being be-ing cut. ! |