DRY-FARMING
A SYSTEM OF AGRICULTURE
FOR
COUNTRIES UNDER LOW RAINFALL
BY
JOHN A. WIDTSOE, A.M., Ph. D
PRESIDENT OF THE AGRICULTURAL COLLEGE OF UTAH

Jethro Tull
Born 1674; died 1741. His methods of soil tillage lie at the foundation of the modern
system of dry-farming.
NEW YORK
THE MACMILLAN COMPANY
1920
All rights reserved
T0
LEAH
THIS BOOK IS INSCRIBED
JUNE 1, 1910
PREFACE
Nearly six tenths of the earth's land surface
receive an annual rainfall of less than twenty inches, and can be reclaimed for agricultural
purposes only by irrigation and dry-farming. A perfected world-system of irrigation
will convert about one tenth of this vast area into an incomparably fruitful garden,
leaving about one half of the earth's land surface to be reclaimed, if at all, by
the methods of dry-farming. The noble system of modern agriculture has been constructed
almost wholly in countries of abundant rainfall, and its applications are those demanded
for the agricultural development of humid regions. Until recently irrigation was
given scant attention, and dry-farming, with its world problem of conquering one
half of the earth, was not considered. These facts furnish the apology for the writing
of this book.
One volume, only, in this world of many books,
and that less than a year old, is devoted to the exposition of the accepted dry-farm
practices of to-day.
The book now offered is the first attempt to
assemble and organize the known facts of science in their relation to the production
of plants, without irrigation, in regions of limited rainfall. The needs of the actual
farmer, who must understand the principles before his practices can be wholly satisfactory,
have been kept in view primarily; but it is hoped that the enlarging group of dry-farm
investigators will also be helped by this presentation of the principles of dry-farming.
The subject is now growing so rapidly that there will soon be room for two classes
of treatment: one for the farmer, and one for the technical student.
This book has been written far from large libraries,
and the material has been drawn from the available sources. Specific references are
not given in the text, but the names of investigators or institutions are found with
nearly all statements of fact. The files of the Experiment Station Record and Der
Jahresbericht der Agrikultur Chemie have taken the place of the more desirable original
publications. Free use has been made of the publications of the experiment stations
and the United States Department of Agriculture. Inspiration and suggestions have
been sought and found constantly in the works of the princes of American soil investigation,
Hilgard of California and King of Wisconsin. I am under deep obligation, for assistance
rendered, to numerous friends in all parts of the country, especially to Professor
L. A. Merrill, with whom I have collaborated for many years in the study of the possibilities
of dry-farming in Western America.
The possibilities of dry-farming are stupendous.
In the strength of youth we may have felt envious of the great ones of old; of Columbus
looking upon the shadow of the greatest continent; of Balboa shouting greetings to
the resting Pacific; of Father Escalante, pondering upon the mystery of the world,
alone, near the shores of America's Dead Sea. We need harbor no such envyings, for
in the conquest of the nonirrigated and nonirrigable desert are offered as fine opportunities
as the world has known to the makers and shakers of empires. We stand before an undiscovered
land; through the restless, ascending currents of heated desert air the vision comes
and goes. With striving eyes the desert is seen covered with blossoming fields, with
churches and homes and schools, and, in the distance, with the vision is heard the
laughter of happy children.
The desert will be conquered.
JOHN A. WIDTSOE.
June 1, 1910.