Page 316 - Travels in Arabis (Vol I)
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XVIII.]           TRAVELS IN OMAN.                      279


            wheat yields an increase from fifteen to
            twenty fold : barley nearly the same : dhurrah
            (Holcus Sorghum) from thirty to forty fold.

            The singular appearance which these groves
            present during the various stages of their ve­

            getable produce, I have noticed elsewhere.
               From the elevated position of the Jebel

            Akhdar, many of the valleys formed by the
            upper ranges differ from the plains below, both

            in their soil and mode of cultivation. The
            ground there is usually terraced, as in Pales­
            tine and China, and produces a great variety

            of trees and fruits not reared in other parts.
               Agriculture has made but small progress in

            Oman. It has been already noticed that the
            prolific soil of the oases requires but small

            assistance; for where men fear nothing from
            the vicissitudes of the season, little manage­

            ment in the process of husbandry is required.
            But on the arable land in the open plains,
            where the earth, though of indifferent quality,

            is yet susceptible of considerable improve­
            ment, the natives bestow neither labour nor

            expense to remedy the defect. I must, how­
            ever, except the country in the vicinity of

            Minn& and Neswah, which, in place of barren
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