A Journey through the Kingdom of Oude, Volumes I & II eBook

William Henry Sleeman
This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 902 pages of information about A Journey through the Kingdom of Oude, Volumes I & II.

A Journey through the Kingdom of Oude, Volumes I & II eBook

William Henry Sleeman
This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 902 pages of information about A Journey through the Kingdom of Oude, Volumes I & II.

In a few years the bamboos became independent of irrigation, and no outlay has since been incurred upon them.  The bamboos are now between forty and fifty feet high, and between four and five inches in diameter.  They are used by the commissariat and ordnance departments at Saugor, but are not, I believe, required for yokes for the artillery bullocks.

There is a grove of sesum trees near the Lucknow cantonments formed in the same way, but with little or no outlay in irrigation.  The trees were planted, and all the cost incurred has been in the people employed to protect them from trespass.  In a dryer climate they might require irrigation for a few years.  Groves of saul, alias sukhoo trees, might be formed in the same manner in the vicinity of all stations where there are artillery bullocks; and the bullocks themselves would benefit by being employed in the irrigation.  The establishments kept up for the bullocks would be able to do all the work required.

The complement of bullocks for a battery of 6 guns, 6 waggons, and 2 store carts, is 106.  The number yoked to each gun and waggon is 61, [transcriber’s note, should be 6], and to each cart 4, leaving a surplus of 26 for accidents.  There would, therefore, be always a sufficient number of bullocks available for the irrigation of such groves where such a battery is kept up.  These bullocks are taken care of by 4 sirdars and 59 drivers; and an European sergeant of artillery is appointed as bullock-sergeant to each battery, to superintend the feeding, cleaning, &c. &c.  The officer on duty sees the bullocks occasionally, and the commanding officer sometimes.  Such groves might be left to the care of the commandant of artillery at small stations, and to the commissariat officer at large ones.

At every large station there might be a grove of sesum, one of sakhoo, and one of bamboos, each covering a hundred acres; and at all stations with a battery, three groves of the same kind, covering each twenty acres or more.  For the convenience of carriage by water, such groves might be formed chiefly in the vicinity of rivers, or in that of the places where the timber is most likely to be required; but no battery should be without such groves.  The men and bullocks would both benefit by the employment such groves would give them.  The men, to interest them, might each have a small garden within the grove which he assists in watering.

Such groves would tend to improve the salubrity of the stations where they are formed, and become agreeable and healthful promenades for officers and soldiers.  In most stations, kutcha-wells, formed at a cost of from 20 to 50 rupees, would suffice for watering such groves.  They might be lined, like those of the peasantry, by twisted cables of straw and twigs; and the men who attend the bullocks might be usefully employed in weaving them, as all should learn to make fascines and gabions.  Willows should be planted near all the wells, to supply twigs for making the cables for lining the wells, and the manure of the artillery draft-bullocks should be appropriated to the groves.

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A Journey through the Kingdom of Oude, Volumes I & II from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.