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GORSE See also: species, confined to west and central See also: Europe and See also: north-west See also: Africa
.
See also: Common See also: furze, U. europaeus, is found on heaths and See also: commons in western Europe from See also: Denmark to See also: Italy and See also: Greece, and in the Canaries and See also: Azores, and is abundant in nearly all parts of the See also: British Isles
.
It grows to a height of 2–6 ft.; it has hairy stems, and the smaller branches end each in a spine; the leaves, sometimes lanceolate on the lowermost branches, are mostly represented by spines from 2 to 6 lines long, and branching at their See also: base; and the See also: flowers, about three-quarters of an inch in length, have a shaggy, yellowish-See also: olive calyx, with two small ovate bracts at its base, and appear in early spring and See also: late autumn
.
They are yellow and sweet-scented and visited by bees
.
The pods are few-seeded; their crackling as they burst may often be heard in hot weather
.
This species comprises the varieties vulgaris, or U. europaeus proper, which has spreading branches, and strong, many-ridged spines, and strictus (Irish furze), with erect branches, and slender 4-edged spines
.
The other British species of furze is U. nanus, dwarf furze, a native of Belgium, See also: Spain and the west of See also: France; it is a procumbent plant, less hairy than U. europaeus, with smaller and more orange-coloured flowers, which spring from the See also: primary spines, and have a nearly smooth calyx, with minute basal bracts
.
Furze, or gorse, is sometimes employed for fences
.
Notwithstanding its formidable spines, the See also: young shoots yield a palatable and nutritious winter See also: forage for horses and cattle
.
To See also: fit it for this purpose it must be chopped and bruised to destroy the spines
.
This is sometimes done in a See also: primitive and laborious way by laying the gorse upon a See also: block of See also: wood and beating it with a mallet, flat at one end and armed with crossed knife-edges at the other, by the alternate use of which it is bruised and chopped
.
There are now a variety of See also: machines by which this is done rapidly and efficiently, and which are in use where this kind of forage is used to any extent
.
The agricultural value of this plant has often been over-rated by theoretical writers
.
In the See also: case of very poor, dry soils it does, however, yield much valuable See also: food at a season when See also: green forage is not otherwise to be had
.
It is on this account of importance to dairymen; and to them it has this further recommendation, that cows fed upon it give much See also: rich milk, which is See also: free from any unpleasant flavour
.
To turn it to See also: good account, it must be sown in drills, kept clean by hoeing, and treated as a See also: regular green crop
.
If sown in See also: March, on
See also: land fitly pre-pared and afterwards duly cared for, it is ready for use in the autumn of the following See also: year
.
A succession of cuttings of proper age is obtained for several years from the same See also: field
.
It is cut by a
See also: short stout See also: scythe, and must be brought frpm the field daily; for when put in a heap after being
chopped and bruised it heats rapidly
.
It is given to horses and cows in combination with chopped See also: hay or See also: straw
.
An See also: acre will produce about 2000 faggots of green two-year-old gorse, weighing 20 lb each
.
This plant is invaluable in See also: mountain See also: sheep-walks
.
The rounded See also: form of the furze bushes that are met with in such situations shows how diligently the See also: annual growth, as far as it is accessible, is nibbled by the sheep
.
The food and shelter afforded to them in snowstorms by clusters of such bushes is of such importance that the wonder is our sheep farmers do not bestow more pains to have it in adequate quantity . Young See also: plants of whin are so kept down by the sheep that they can seldom attain to a profitable See also: size unless protected by a fence for a few years
.
In various parts of See also: England it is cut for fuel
.
The ashes contain a large proportion of See also: alkali, and are a good manure, especially for peaty land
.
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