TY - BOOK AU - Knapp,J.L. AU - Cooper,Susan Fenimore TI - Country rambles in England AV - QH PY - 2026/// CY - Salt Lake City, UT PB - Project Gutenberg KW - Natural history -- Outdoor books KW - Natural history -- England N1 - Earlier published under title: The journal of a naturalist; Release date is 2026-02-03; Richard Tonsing and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team at https://www.pgdp.net (This file was produced from images generously made available by The Internet Archive); Originally published; Buffalo: Phinney & Co., 1852 N2 - "Country rambles in England" by J. L. Knapp is a natural history journal written in the early 19th century. It offers attentive field observations from the English countryside—its landscapes, geology, plants, birds, insects, farm practices, and rural characters—told with reflective, companionable prose. Readers interested in Selborne‑style nature writing and the textures of everyday country life will find a gentle, learned tour rather than a story-driven work. The opening of this work begins with an American editor’s introduction that pairs it with Selborne, locates the scene on the Severn in Gloucestershire, and explains its appeal—and contrasts—for American readers. Knapp then sets his village on a limestone ridge above the river, notes Roman roads and an encampment, and moves into the ground beneath: varied soils, abundant limestone (often of coral origin), lime‑burning and its uses, and minor minerals, including a striking kiln accident anecdote and thoughts on healthfulness in limestone districts. He sketches the local economy—lime, potatoes, teasels, winter stone‑breaking—celebrates an industrious cottager, and questions the practical value of chemical soil analysis. He describes pastures where certain grasses dominate by soil preference, a pragmatic method of saving hay and wheat in wet seasons, and then dwells on potatoes: how they are planted, rented, harvested, and eaten; their social benefit; and a brief history and varieties. He follows with teasel cultivation—its labor, volatility, and indispensable textile use—criticizes wasteful manure‑picking, and closes this initial stretch with a defense of natural history as a worthy study and a first look at a venerable local oak. (This is an automatically generated summary.) UR - https://archive.org/details/countryramblesin00knapuoft UR - https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/77852 ER -