CHAPTER X
PLOWING AND FALLOWING
THE soil treatment prescribed in the preceding
chapters rests upon (1) deep and thorough plowing, done preferably in the fall; (2)
thorough cultivation to form a mulch over the surface of the land, and (3) clean
summer fallowing every other year under low rainfall or every third or fourth year
under abundant rainfall.
Students of dry-farming all agree that thorough
cultivation of the topsoil prevents the evaporation of soil-moisture, but some have
questioned the value of deep and fall plowing and the occasional clean summer fallow.
It is the purpose of this chapter to state the findings of practical men with reference
to the value of plowing and fallowing in producing large crop yields under dry-farm
conditions.
It will be shown in Chapter XVIII that the first
attempts to produce crops without irrigation under a limited rainfall were made independently
in many diverse places. California, Utah, and the Columbia Basin, as far as can now
be learned, as well as the Great Plains area, were all independent pioneers in the
art of dry-farming. It is a most significant fact that these diverse localities,
operating under different conditions as to soil and climate, have developed practically
the same system of dry-farming. In all these places the best dry-farmers practice
deep plowing wherever the subsoil will permit it; fall plowing wherever the climate
will permit it; the sowing of fall grain wherever the winters will permit it, and
the clean summer fallow every other year, or every third or fourth year. H. W. Campbell,
who has been the leading exponent of dry-farming in the Great Plains area, began
his work without the clean summer fallow as a part of his system, but has long since
adopted it for that section of the country. It is scarcely to be believed that these
practices, developed laboriously through a long succession of years in widely separated
localities, do not rest upon correct scientific principles. In any case, the accumulated
experience of the dry-farmers in this country confirms the doctrines of soil tillage
for dry-farms laid down in the preceding chapters.
At the Dry-Farming Congresses large numbers of
practical farmers assemble for the purpose of exchanging experiences and views. The
reports of the Congress show a great difference of opinion on minor matters and a
wonderful unanimity of opinion on the more fundamental questions. For instance, deep
plowing was recommended by all who touched upon the subject in their remarks; though
one farmer, who lived in a locality the subsoil of which was very inert, recommended
that the depth of plowing should be increased gradually until the full depth is reached,
to avoid a succession of poor crop years while the lifeless soil was being vivified.
The states of Utah, Montana, Wyoming, South Dakota, Colorado, Kansas, Nebraska, and
the provinces of Alberta and Saskatchewan of Canada all specifically declared through
one to eight representatives from each state in favor of deep plowing as a fundamental
practice in dry-farming. Fall plowing, wherever the climatic conditions make it possible,
was similarly advocated by all the speakers. Farmers in certain localities had found
the soil so dry in the fall that plowing was difficult, but Campbell insisted that
even in such places it would be profitable to use power enough to break up the land
before the winter season set in. Numerous speakers from the states of Utah, Wyoming,
Montana, Nebraska, and a number of the Great Plains states, as well as from the Chinese
Empire, declared themselves as favoring fall plowing. Scareely a dissenting voice
was raised.
In the discussion of the clean summer fallow
as a vital principle of dry-farming a slight difference of opinion was discovered.
Farmers from some of the localities insisted that the clean summer fallow every other
year was indispensable; others that one in three years was sufficient; and others
one in four years, and a few doubtful the wisdom of it altogether. However, all the
speakers agreed that clean and thorough cultivation should be practiced faithfully
during the spring, and fall of the fallow year. The appreciation of the fact that
weeds consume precious moisture and fertility seemed to be general among the dry-farmers
from all sections of the country. The following states, provinces, and countries
declared themselves as being definitely and emphatically in favor of clean summer
fallowing:
California, Utah, Nevada, Washington, Montana,
Idaho, Colorado, New Mexico, North Dakota, Nebraska, Alberta, Saskatchewan, Russia,
Turkey, the Transvaal, Brazil, and Australia. Each of these many districts was represented
by one to ten or more representatives. The only state to declare somewhat vigorously
against it was from the Great Plains area, and a warning voice was heard from the
United States Department of Agriculture. The recorded practical experience of the
farmers over the whole of the dry-farm territory of the United States leads to the
conviction that fallowing must he accepted as a practice which resulted in successful
dry-farming. Further, the experimental leaders in the dry-farm movement, whether
working under private, state, or governmental direction, are, with very few exceptions,
strongly in favor of deep fall plowing and clean summer fallowing as parts of the
dry-farm system.
The chief reluctance to accept clean summer fallowing
as a principle of dry-farming appears chicfly among students of the Great Plains
area. Even there it is admitted by all that a wheat crop following a fallow year
is larger and better than one following wheat. There seem, however, to be two serious
reasons for objecting to it. First, a fear that a clean summer fallow, practiced
every second, third, or fourth year, will cause a large diminution of the organic
matter in the soil, resulting finally in complete crop failure; and second, a belief
that a hoed crop, like corn or potatoes, exerts the same beneficial effect.
It is undoubtedly true that the thorough tillage
involved in dry-farming exposes to the action of the elements the organic matter
of the soil and thereby favors rapid oxidation. For that reason the different ways
in which organic matter may be supplied regularly to dry-farms are pointed out in
Chapter XIV. It may also be observed that the header harvesting system employed over
a large part of the dry-farm territory leaves the large header stubble to be plowed
under, and it is probable that under such methods more organic matter is added to
the soil during the year of cropping than is lost during the year of fallowing. It
may, moreover, be observed that thorough tillage of a crop like corn or potatoes
tends to cause a loss of the organic matter of the soil to a degree nearly as large
as is the case when a fallow field is well cultivated. The thorough stirring of the
soil under an arid or semiarid climate, which is an essential feature of dry-farming,
will always result in a decrease in organic matter. It matters little whether the
soil is fallow or in crop during the process of cultivation, so far as the result
is concerned.
A serious matter connected with fallowing in
the Great Plains area is the blowing of the loose well-tilled soil of the fallow
fields, which results from the heavy winds that blow so steadily over a large part
of the western slope of the Mississippi Valley. This is largely avoided when crops
are grown on the land, even when it is well tilled.
The theory, recently proposed, that in the Great
Plains area, where the rains come chicfly in summer, the growing of hoed crops may
take the place of the summer fallow, is said to be based on experimental data not
yet published. Careful and conscientious experimenters, as Chilcott and his co-laborers,
indicate in their statements that in many cases the yields of wheat, after a hoed
crop, have been larger than after a fallow year. The doctrine has, therefore, been
rather widely disseminated that fallowing has no place in the dry-farming of the
Great Plains area and should be replaced by the growing of hoed crops. Chilcott,
who is the chief exponent of this doctrine, declares, however, that it is only with
spring-grown crops and for a succession of normal years that fallowing may be omitted,
and that fallowing must be resorted to as a safeguard or temporary expedient to guard
against total loss of crop where extreme drouth is anticipated; that is, where the
rainfall falls below the average. He further explains that continuous grain cropping,
even with careful plowing and spring and fall tillage, is unsuccessful; but holds
that certain rotations of crops, including grain and a hoed crop every other year,
are often more profitable than grain alternating with clean summer fallow. He further
believes that the fallow year every third or fourth year is sufficient for Great
Plains conditions. Jardine explains that whenever fall grain is grown in the Great
Plains area, the fallow is remarkably helpful, and in fact because of the dry winters
is practically indispensable.
This latter view is confirmed by the experimental
results obtained by Atkinson and others at the Montana Experiment Stations, which
are conducted under approximately Great Plains conditions.
It should be mentioned also that in Saskatchewan,
in the north end of the Great Plains area, and which is characteristic, except for
a lower annual temperature, of the whole area, and where dry-farming has been practiced
for a quarter of a century, the clean summer fallow has come to be an established
practice.
This recent discussion of the place of fallowing
in the agriculture of the Great Plains area illustrates what has been said so often
in this volume about the adapting of principles to local conditions. Wherever the
summer rainfall is sufficient to mature a crop, fallowing for the purpose of storing
moisture in the soil is unnecessary; the only value of the fallow year under such
conditions would be to set free fertility. In the Great Plains area the rainfall
is somewhat higher than elsewhere in the dry-farm territory and most of it comes
in summer; and the summer precipitation is probably enough in average years to mature
crops, providing soil conditions are favorable. The main considerations, then, are
to keep the soils open for the reception of water and to maintain the soils in a
sufficiently fertile condition to produce, as explained in Chapter IX, plants with
a minimum amount of water. This is accomplished very largely by the year of hoed
crop, when the soil is as well stirred as under a clean fallow.
The dry-farmer must never forget that the critical
element in dry-farming is water and that the annual rainfall will in the very nature
of things vary from year to year, with the result that the dry year, or the year
with a precipitation below the average, is sure to come. In somewhat wet years the
moisture stored in the soil is of comparatively little consequence, but in a year
of drouth it will be the main dependence of the farmer. Now, whether a crop be hoed
or not, it requires water for its growth, and land which is continuously cropped
even with a variety of crops is likely to be so largely depleted of its moisture
that, when the year of drouth comes, failure will probably result.
The precariousness of dry-farming must be done
away with. The year of drouth must be expected every year. Only as certainty of crop
yield is assured will dry-farming rise to a respected place by the side of other
branches of agriculture. To attain such certainty and respect clean summer fallowing
every second, third, or fourth year, according to the average rainfall, is probably
indispensable; and future investigations, long enough continued, will doubtless confirm
this prediction. Undoubtedly, a rotation of crops, including hoed crops, will find
an important place in dry-farming, but probably not to the complete exclusion of
the clean summer fallow.
Jethro Tull, two hundred years ago, discovered
that thorough tillage of the soil gave crops that in some cases could not be produced
by the addition of manure, and he came to the erroneous conclusion that "tillage
is manure." In recent days we have learned the value of tillage in conserving
moisture and in enabling plants to reach maturity with the least amount of water,
and we may be tempted to believe that "tillage is moisture." This, like
Tull's statement, is a fallacy and must be avoided. Tillage can take the place of
moisture only to a limited degree. Water is the essential consideration in dry-farming,
else there would be no dry-farming.