✨ Miscellaneous Notices
men duly elected Highway Trustees for that District:—
Mr. James Giver.
Mr. James Hamilton.
Mr. Peter McIntyre.
Mr. William Douglas.
Mr. Joshua Waterworth.
J. Williamson,
Superintendent.
CULTURE OF SILK.
[Republished from the New Zealand Gazette
No. 55, dated 20th September, 1869, page 493.]
Colonial Secretary’s Office,
Wellington, 18th September, 1869.
The following letter, with enclosure, from Mr. T. C. Batchelor, of Nelson, on the subject of the Culture of Silkworms, is published for general information.
W. Gisborne.
Nelson, 27th August, 1869.
Sir,—In consequence of the steps taken by the Silk Society of Great Britain for the encouragement of Sericulture in the Colonies, has induced me to forward the enclosed circular of my proceedings in Sericulture for general information; and should you consider the culture of Silk of any worth to New Zealand, I should feel most happy to render any information in my power as to silkworms and mulberry trees, the more especially as per next mail I shall be in direct communication with the above Society.
I remain, &c.,
T. C. Batchelor.
The Hon. W. Fox.
CULTURE OF SILK.
Wakapuaka, 17th March, 1869.
Sir,—I will thank you to bring under the notice of the Acclimatisation Society the following particulars concerning my attempt at cultivating the silkworm in this Province, which I have reasons for believing possesses some interest. Of my previous labour little need be said, beyond that for three seasons my cocoons have all been obtained from worms fed upon the broad-leaved Tuscan mulberry.
I commenced hatching the worms last season on the 1st November, and the greater portion were in cocoons by the end of January, which was from ten to fifteen days over the proper time. The number of worms hatched was above 3,000, and the time occupied in feeding and otherwise attending to them I estimate at two hours daily. Were a person during the season to devote his whole time to sericulture, after a little experience and with proper appliances, the number of worms he could attend to would be almost incredible.
Through ignorance of the quantity of food the worms would consume I did not attempt a succession of hatchings, but I found my trees would have fed a second lot; and with a greater number of trees, four if not five hatchings of worms might be fed in a season.
In Persia, it is not uncommon to raise eight, or even ten lots of worms in a summer; in Italy and the South of France, the number is five or six; and in St. Petersburg, short as the summer is, four hatchings of worms have been obtained. As the mulberry flourishes remarkably well here, I see no reason why sericulture should not be quite as successful in Nelson as in France or Italy; and, as the worms are fed indoors, artificial heat could be supplied if necessary. In several of the States of America sericulture is becoming a common industry, one person keeping a million worms, and purposing to double the number as soon as he can raise sufficient food for the increase.
In a communication I made some time ago to one of the local newspapers, I over-estimated the number of trees required to feed a given number of worms. I have now twenty mulberry trees five years old, and from the manner they stood stripping this past season, I am satisfied I could have fed three times the number of worms I did, by extending time and labour. I had also stated that after the trees had been planted three years, £15 per annum might be netted for every acre of ground planted with the mulberry. This was taking the price of raw silk at 20s. per lb., but the price has since risen to 70s. per lb., so that something like £50 a year might be got from an acre of mulberry trees. Once the trees are planted they require little trouble and each year their value increases, as the silk improves with the age of the trees the worms are fed upon.
A parcel of cocoons, weighing two pounds, raised by me last season, will be taken to England by J. R. Dodson, Esq., who will hand it to J. Morrison, Esq., London Agent for New Zealand. A letter from his Honor the Superintendent will accompany the parcel, requesting Mr. Morrison to submit the cocoons to the trade, ascertain the value of the silk, and transmit back to his Honor all the information he can obtain concerning sericulture in general, and the best kind of worms to be used.
I may observe that I have kept a stock for supplying me with eggs next summer.
I remain, &c.,
T. C. Batchelor.
To F. Huddlestone, Esq.,
Hon. Secretary of the
Nelson Acclimatisation Society.
[Re-published from the New Zealand Gazette,
No. 60, dated 16th October, 1869, page 547.]
Government Printing Office,
Wellington, 12th October, 1869
It is hereby notified for public information, that
Next Page →
✨ LLM interpretation of page content
🏘️
Highway Trustees Elected for Omaha District
(continued from previous page)
🏘️ Provincial & Local Government23 October 1869
Highway Trustees, Election, Omaha District
- James Giver (Mr), Elected Highway Trustee
- James Hamilton (Mr), Elected Highway Trustee
- Peter McIntyre (Mr), Elected Highway Trustee
- William Douglas (Mr), Elected Highway Trustee
- Joshua Waterworth (Mr), Elected Highway Trustee
- J. Williamson, Superintendent
🌾 Culture of Silk Information
🌾 Primary Industries & Resources18 September 1869
Silkworms, Sericulture, Mulberry Trees, Nelson
- T. C. Batchelor (Mr), Provided information on silkworms
- W. Gisborne
🌾 Culture of Silk in Nelson
🌾 Primary Industries & Resources17 March 1869
Silkworms, Sericulture, Mulberry Trees, Nelson
- T. C. Batchelor (Mr), Reported on silkworm cultivation
- J. R. Dodson (Esquire), Transported cocoons to England
- J. Morrison (Esquire), London Agent for New Zealand
- F. Huddlestone, Hon. Secretary of the Nelson Acclimatisation Society
📰 Notification of Re-published Gazette
📰 NZ Gazette12 October 1869
Re-published, Gazette, Notification
Auckland Provincial Gazette 1869, No 82