CHAPTER XI
HOTBEDS AND GREENHOUSES
Whether to get an early start on the garden or for raising
plants for field crops, a hotbed is all but indispensable. In making a hotbed what
we seek to do is to imitate Nature at her best, so get the best soil and the sunniest
spot you can find.
In all hotbeds the underlying principle is the same: They
are right-angled boxes covered with glass panes set in movable frames and placed
over heated excavations. The bed may be of any size or shape, but the standard one
is six feet wide, since the stock glass frames are usually six feet long by three
feet wide. You can have any length needed to supply your requirements. "Tomato
Culture," by A. J. Root, tells us that the cheapest plan is to get some old
planks, broken brickbats or stone, and piece together a box-like affair in proper
shape: to provide drainage, the front should be at least ten inches above the ground
and the rear fourteen inches. A hotbed knocked together in this way is all right
to start with, if you cannot do any better, but will last only two or three seasons.
For a permanent bed, probably the best way is to make cement walls extending to the
bottom of the manure. The bed ought to face south or southeast and be well protected
on the north. It should be banked all around with earth or straw to keep out the
cold, and mats or shutters should be provided for extra cold weather. The best material
for heating the bed and the most easily obtained, is fresh horse manure in which
there is a quantity of straw or litter. This will give out a slow, moist heat and
will not burn out before the crops or the plants mature. Get all the manure you need
at one time. Pile it in a dry place and let it ferment; every few days work the pile
over thoroughly with a dung fork; sometimes two turnings of the manure are enough,
but it is better to let it stand and heat three or four times.
"You can make a hotbed also on top of the ground without
any excavation. Spread a layer of manure evenly one foot in depth and large enough
to extend around the frame three feet each way. Pack this down well, especially around
the edge, put on a second and third layer until you have a well-trodden and compact
bed of manure at least two and one half feet in depth. Place the frame in the center
of this bed and press it down well." A two-inch layer of decayed leaves, cut
straw, or corn fodder, spread over the manure in the frame and well packed down,
will help to retain the heat. Ventilate the bed every day to allow steam and ammonia
fumes to pass off.
"The soil inside should be equal parts of garden loam
and well-rotted barnyard manure. Tramp well the first layer of three inches. To make
it entirely safe for the plant seeds in the hotbed, add another layer of the same
depth. Use no water with garden loam and manure if you can possibly help it."
"Before sowing any seeds put a thermometer in the bed
three inches deep in the soil. If it runs over 80 degrees Fahrenheit, do not sow.
If below 55 degrees it is too cold; you will have to fork it over and add more manure.
If the bed gets too hot, you can ventilate it with a sharp stick by thrusting it
down into the soil."
Another way that the old gardeners have to make a hot bed
is with fire. On a large scale this is cheaper, though more complicated than the
fermentation of manure. In making this kind choose your location and build the frames
as before. "Cut a trench with a slight taper from the east end of the plot to
the end of the hotbed, and on under the ground to about four feet beyond the end
of the bed. This taper to the outlet will create a draught and so keep a better fire.
Arch this over with vitrified tile. The furnace end where the fire is should be about
six feet away from the bed. When the trenches are completed, cover over with the
dirt that was taken out of them. Two such trenches under the frames will make a good
hotbed. Anyone can do this sort of work."
A hotbed can also be heated by running steam pipes through
the ground, but unless you happen to be where exhaust steam could be used, this method
is not economical except for big houses. The care and expense of a separate steam
plant would be too great to pay, unless for growing winter vegetables for market
or flower culture. If you go into that on a scale large enough to pay, new problems
at once demand solution.
Vegetables under glass have kept pace with other crops. Within
fifteen miles of Boston are millions of square feet of glass devoted to vegetables,
chiefly lettuce. There are more than five million feet in the United States used
for other crops. Ordinarily, under favorable conditions, glass devoted to this work
will yield an average of fifty cents per year per square foot.
About the lowest estimate of cost per sash is five dollars;
this amount includes the cost of one fourth of the frame and covers. There are usually
four sashes to one frame. A well-made mortised plank frame costs four to six dollars.
A sash, unglazed, costs from one to two dollars. Glazing costs seventy-five cents.
Mats and shutters cost from fifty cents to two dollars per sash, depending upon the
material used. Double thick glass pays better in the end as being less liable to
breakage. These prices vary greatly, however.
The following sample estimate by a gardener is for a market
garden of one acre, in which it is desired to grow a general line of vegetables.
It supposes that half of the acre is to be set with plants from hotbeds.
One eighth acre to early cauliflower and cabbage, about 2000
plants, if transplanted, would require two 6 X 12 frames, from two hundred to two
hundred and fifty plants being grown under each sash.
These frames may be used again for tomato plants for the
same area, using about 450 plants. This will allow a sash for every 55 plants.
One frame should be in use at the same time for eggplants
and peppers, two sashes of each, growing fifty transplanted plants under each sash.
Two frames will be required for cucumbers, melons, and early
squashes; for extra early lettuce, an estimate of sixty to seventy heads should be
made to a sash. It is assumed that celery and late cabbages are to be started in
seed beds in the open.
In the fashionable suburbs of Boston "one hotbed 3 X
6 feet was used in which to start the seeds of early vegetables. Plantings were made
in the open ground as soon as the weather permitted, and were continued at intervals
throughout the season whenever there was a vacant spot in the garden. The following
varieties of vegetables, mostly five- and ten-cent packets, were planted: Pole and
wax beans, beets, kale, cabbage, carrots, cauliflower, celery, corn, cucumbers, corn
salad, endive, eggplant, kohlrabi, lettuce, muskmelon, onions, peppers, peas, salsify,
radish, spinach, squash, tomatoes, turnips, rutabagas, escarole, chives, shallot,
parsley, sweet and Irish potatoes, and nearly a dozen different kinds of sweet herbs."
"In the larger garden, tomatoes followed peas, turnips
the wax beans, early lettuce for fall use took the place of Refugee beans. Corn salad
succeeded lettuce."
"The spinach was followed by cabbage, while turnips,
beets, carrots, celery, and spinach gave a second crop in the plot occupied by Gardus
peas and Emperor William beans."
" Winter radishes came after telephone peas, Paris Golden
celery was planted in between the hills of Stowell's blanching. The plot of early
corn was sown to turnips. The hotbed was used during the late fall and winter to
store some of the hardy vegetables, and the latter part of October there was placed
in it some endive, escarole, celeriac, and the remaining space was filled up by transplanting
leeks, chives, and parsley." (Bailey, "Principles of Vegetable Gardening,"
page 38.)
"If spinach is grown in frames, the sash used for one
of the late crops above may be used through the following winter.
"This, like the last case, makes a total of five frames,
the cost, depending on make and material, from one to five dollars; twenty sash and
covers, at, say, $2.75, $55; manure at market price, calculating at least three or
four loads per frame. This is a liberal estimate of space, and should allow for all
ordinary loss of plants, and for discarding the weak and inferior ones. It supposes
that most or all of the plants are to be transplanted once or more in the frames.
Many gardeners have less equipment of glass." (Same, pages 49- 50 )
Growing vegetables under glass gives smaller returns than
flowers; as, for instance, a head of lettuce brings much less than a plant of carnations,
and suffers more from the competition of southern crops. Nevertheless, the greenhouse-grown
vegetables have come into prominence lately because they can be raised in houses
that are not good enough for flowers. Lettuce and tomatoes are the principal crops;
some growers raise thousands of dollars' worth each year. The greenhouse is also
used for forcing plants which are afterwards transplanted to the open air. This develops
them at a time when they could not grow outdoors and gives them such a start that
they are very early on the market, thereby realizing the highest prices.
"Nearness to market is the most important feature in
a greenhouse. In large cities, manure, which is the chief fertilizer, can be had
in most cases for the hauling. The short haul is an important item, and, most important
of all, the gardener who is near the market can take advantage of high prices, if
the grower is near enough to the city to make two or three trips; in such a fluctuating
market as New York, it is to his advantage."
Some kind of a greenhouse is necessary, but one large enough
to produce a living would cost a very large sum. Vegetable raising under glass has
been made profitable in special localities where nearly the whole community gives
its time to building up the industry, but complete success can be attained only by
having absolute control of all the conditions entering into production, and giving
assiduous and undivided attention to detail.
Leonard Barron, in the Garden Magazine, says: "The
best type of greenhouse for all-round purposes is unquestionably what is known as
the even span--that is, a house in which the roof is in the form of an inverted V,
so as to be exposed as much as possible to sunlight, and having the ridge-pole in
the center. All other types of houses are modifications from the simplest form, and
are designed in some way or other to fit some special requirements. These requirements
may be: the cultural necessities for some particular crop; a desire to have the atmospheric
conditions inside more or less abnormal at given seasons (as in a forcing house);
or an adaptation to some peculiarity of the situation, as when a greenhouse is built
as an adjunct to other buildings."
"It is plain common sense that the ideal greenhouse
is one in which the light is most nearly that which exists outside, and in which
the heat is as evenly distributed. It is practical experience that a structure with
as few angles and turns m it as possible and with a minimum of woodwork in its superstructure,
best answers these conditions.... Greenhouse building has developed into a special
industry, and the modern American greenhouse is the highest type of construction.
It is built with as careful calculation to its situation and its requirements as
is the country dwellinghouse. Such a thing naturally is not cheap."
"The low-priced 'cheap greenhouse' is a makeshift of
some sort. Perhaps its roof is constructed of hotbed sash, a perfectly feasible method
of construction, which for ordinary, commonplace gardening will answer admirably.
Or, its foundation is merely the plain earth. Such a building does admirably in the
summer time, and even in the late spring and early autumn; but woe betide the enthusiastic
amateur in winter, who, being possessed of one of these light greenhouse structures,
has indulged in a few costly, exotic plants. They will be frozen, to a certainty!
It is economy to pay a fair price in the beginning to secure a properly built greenhouse
that will withstand the trials of winter."
" If iron frame is used instead of wood there is greater
durability, and the structure being more slender, will admit more light, but the
cost will be increased."
" It makes very little difference in cost what shape
of house is to be erected. The cost per lineal foot for an even span is practically
the same as for a lean-to of the same length and width. In the lean-to, in order
to get the sufficient bench and walk space inside, it is necessary to carry the roof
to a point much higher than in the even span. The extra framework and material for
the roof cost a good deal, yet add practically nothing to the efficiency of the house."
"Heating of greenhouses is best done by hot water, and
in a small house the pipes may well be connected with the heating system used for
the dwelling, if the greenhouse and the home are within any sort of reasonable distance
from each other. For large houses, or ranges of several houses together, the independent
heating plant is necessary. Steam is used for heating by commercial florists, but
it is economical only on a large scale."
"As a uniform temperature must be maintained in the
house, the fires, where steam is used, need watching continuously during cold weather,
for the moment the water ceases to boil, the pipes cool off and a considerable time
is consumed in starting the heat running again. With hot water there is much more
latitude in attention, for though the fires dwindle' the water which fills the pipes
will carry heat for a long time, and it will circulate until the last degree is radiated.
But a hot-water system costs in the installation about one fourth more than steam.
Very small houses may be successfully heated by kerosene stoves, which may be placed
inside the house. A much better way would be to use oil heaters for an inside water
circulation, carrying off all products of combustion by means of a flue. Coal stoves
should never be installed inside the house. It has been done successfully by some
amateurs, but the danger of coal gas being driven back into the house by a down draft
in the chimney is too great a risk. Coal gas and illuminating gas are two virulent
poisons to plants."
It is obvious that the amateur must proceed with great caution
in undertaking intensive cultivation under glass. Build at first the simplest and
least expensive kind of hotbeds or greenhouses. It takes three to five seasons to
train even an experienced farmer along these special lines. Separate crops require
special treatment. Do not experiment, but follow well-tried procedure. It is comparatively
easy to farm an acre under glass, but it should be worked up to, each step being
taken only after a solid foundation is ready to build on. Learn by your mistakes.
Don't get discouraged by failure. By not making the same mistake twice, you will
soon learn by experience just what is essential to production. The more you learn
about the way nature does things, the more likely you will be to succeed when you
seek to imitate her.
CHAPTER XII
OTHER USES OF LAND
We had intended to write an interesting chapter on the use
of a few acres of land for poultry, and another on raising a vast drove of rabbits,
both from practical men, but a good average man, just such as this book is written
for, sent the following:
"I am very sorry that I cannot comply with your request
to write a chapter on poultry for your new book. It is true that I am physically
and mentally capable of performing that feat, and it would be possible for me to
prepare an essay that might entertain the reader, and even make him believe that
there is money in commercial poultry. I prefer, however, to leave that sort of romancing
to the poultry journals who, by much practice, are adepts in the art. The fact is,
I did not make poultry raising pay, and had I remained on my chicken ranch, I would
have gone broke. I do not mean to say, however, that there is no money in poultry,
but merely that I could not get it out. Perhaps others who are better equipped for
the work can make a success of such an undertaking, but I could not. The numerous
poultry journals are filled with instructions how to do it and with letters from
people who assert that they have done well with poultry; but, really, during the
four years that I was in the business I cannot recall a single case of success, and,
on the other hand, I learned of failures without end. I had the reputation of having
the best planned and most completely equipped in this part of Washington, and perhaps
in the entire state. My stock was thoroughbred and healthy, and they seemed to attend
to business strictly. I devoted about all my waking hours to them, did everything
that seemed necessary that was suggested by my own success, and yet I could not make
it go, am glad I am clear of it, and have no desire to try it again. I am perfectly
willing to admit my possible unfitness for the business, but I am also compelled
to admit that I could not succeed and that no advice of mine could help others.''
Although many, either under exceptional circumstances or
because of exceptional ability, have made a success of wholesale poultry raising,
it seems on reflection that Mr. Wolf 's ideas are in the main correct.
The price of chickens is fixed, like all other prices, by
supply and demand, and toward the supply every farmer contributes his chickens and
their eggs which cost him practically nothing; at least he counts that they cost
him nothing.
Now it is clear that if you considerably increase the supply
at any place, the price will fall, and the farmer, whose chickens and eggs cost him
almost nothing in money, will sell them low enough to command a market and will continue
to raise them, however little he gets for them.
So you are against inexhaustible competitors who can neither
be driven out nor combined with. It is worse than competing with bankrupt dealers.
To make much money you must have at least some monopoly, and even a little bit of
the earth that is well suited to your purpose where there is no unreasonable and
unreasoning competition, will give you a chance.
But while it is true that the farmer's subsidized hens have
a very disastrous effect at times upon the market, the fact is that, notwithstanding
the tariff, we import millions of dozens of eggs laid each year by the pauper hens
of Canada and often of Denmark.
Another fact to be considered is, that it is when eggs are
most plentiful that the farmers depress the market. With their ways of handling their
poultry, their hens lay only when conditions are most favorable, and in the winter
when eggs are as high as fifty cents a dozen in cities, they have no eggs to market.
Like the market gardener, to be timely in market is to succeed. A week may mean an
annihilation of profits.
It is a different proposition to raise a few chickens as
a side line as the farmers do.
A workman at the Connecticut place of one of the experts
who has revised this book had a bit of land not more than l00 X 200 feet, and for
several years cleared $100 a year by raising eggs and broilers, doing the work together
with that of a little garden of small fruits before and after working hours The chickens
fed largely on green food in summer.
In selling your surplus at a profit, the same principles
apply as in raising a surplus to sell at a profit.
While poultry and egg raising does not require that you must
be first, it does require that you market your produce at a time when the prices
are highest.
You must hatch at a time which will allow the young hens
to begin laying as winter approaches; the food must keep up animal heat and the house
must be warm enough to make the hens comfortable, and the conditions must be such
as to keep them laying.
As an experiment, we once raised six pullets. They were hatched
in May, and in December they began laying. All during the winter they laid never
less than four and some times six eggs a day, and kept this up until spring.
They were fed on wheat and corn and plenty of meat scraps
and green food. They were kept in what was practically a glass house, receiving the
benefit of the sun during the day, and were protected from the winds. The effect
was to bring as near as possible the condition of the warm months; these paid very
well.
Ducks are less frequently raised than chickens and often
realize good returns.
The popular fallacy that ducks require a stream or pond is
gradually passing away. There was a time when nearly all ducks were raised in this
way, feeding on fish as the principal diet, but experience has proved that ducks
raised without a stream or pond tend to put on flesh instead of feathers, and they
have not the oily, fishy flavor of those raised on the water. Nearly all of the successful
duck raisers now use this method.
This is bringing the duck more into prominence as an article
of food; as James Rankin says in "Duck Culture," "People do not care
to eat fish and flesh combined. They would rather eat them separate."
The white pekins are the popular birds, because they are
larger, have white meat, and are splendid layers. They lay from 100 to 165 eggs in
a season and are the easiest to raise. They can do entirely without water; and Rankin
tells of selling a flock to a wealthy man, who afterwards wrote asking him to take
them back, because he had bought them for an artificial lake in front of his house,
so that his wife and children could watch them disporting in the water. He complained
that they would not go into the water unless he drove them in and would remain only
so long as he stood over them.
Ducks are easier to raise than any other fowl and are freer
from disease. They are ready for market when eight weeks old.
The industry is assuming large proportions, and ranches are
now raising ducks by the tens of thousands and are finding better markets each year.
In starting any poultry business, it is better to begin with
twenty-five fowls and master details with those, then double the number as fast as
they have been made to return profits.
The Atlantic Squab Company, of Hammonton, N. J., says "it
is a simple matter for the beginner to figure out on paper net profits of four or
five dollars per year from each pair of breeders, but we doubt if it can be made.
It is, however, 'pigeon nature' to lay ten or eleven times a year, but hardly natural
to presume that each and every egg will ultimately mean a Jumbo squab in the commission
man's hands.
"A loft [that is, a pair] of high-class Homers, properly
mated, should average six pair of squabs per year. For one year our squabs averaged
us a fraction over 60¢ per pair; say $3.60 has been the returns from each pair
of breeders. It has cost us 90¢ per pair to feed for twelve months; remember,
we buy in large quantities; it would cost the small breeder $1 a year per pair to
feed. It would be well to allow 60¢ a pair for labor and supplies, such as grit,
charcoal, tobacco stems, etc., although the bird manure, which we find ready sale
for at 55¢. per bushel, has covered these incidental expenses for us. The inexperienced
beginner, with good management and close attention to details, should clear $2 a
year from each pair of birds, provided he starts with well-mated pure Homer stock."
Pigeons are particular about their mates, and will rather go single than take a disagreeable
partner.
Raising Belgian hares at one time promised to be a most profitable
industry. The Belgian hare is a distant relation of the ordinary rabbit. Its flesh
is white, close-grained, and tender, resembling the legs of the frog, and has a very
savory flavor. It is considered by many superior to poultry, and the rapidity with
which they breed gave promise of fortunes. The doe brings forth a litter of about
eleven every sixty days, and with prices ranging from $1.50 to $2.50, as they were
about the year 1900, with the cost of raising from thirty to forty cents, the reason
for this promise is evident. In Southern California thousands turned their attention
to it, and some firms entered the business with equipment to the value of fifty thousand
dollars.
Besides the ordinary market prices realized for the hares,
some went extensively into breeding fancy stock, and realized from $50 to $250 apiece
for them.
This industry had indications of becoming extensive and enduring,
but by 1900 so many went into the business that the markets became glutted and prices
fell with disastrous effect.
Whether it will pay you depends largely on the attitude of
your customers toward the hare as a food product.
Bee-keeping offers an interesting and remunerative field
of employment. More than the average living awaits those only who will make a careful
and intelligent study of bees and their habits and will give them the proper care
and attention.
One need not be a practical bee-keeper to enter this field.
He can purchase even one hive and, while increasing from this, he can gain an experience
that he could get in no other way.
How shall one start bee-keeping?
Get one hive or a few hives. If you have no room in the yard,
put them upon the roof. One man in Cincinnati, Ohio, makes his living from bees kept
on the roof of his house.
Wm. A. Selzer, a large dealer in bee-keepers' supplies, in
Philadelphia, established many colonies on the roof of his place right in the heart
of the business district, where it would seem impossible for bees to find a living.
Very little space is required for bee-keeping; hives can
be set two feet apart in rows, and the rows six to ten feet apart. No pasture need
be provided for them. There are always fields of flowers to supply the nectar.
White clover produces a large yield of nectar of very fine
flavor. The basswood or linden tree blossom produces a fine nectar which some consider
better than white clover. Buckwheat also gives a good yield of nectar, but it is
dark in color and brings a lower price for that reason. There are other plants which
yield large quantities of nectar, and it would be necessary to know the locality
to say what would be the best plants; but as white clover is found almost everywhere
in the northern states, it is safe to say this will be the best producer in the spring,
and goldenrod, where found, the best for the fall supply.
Frank Benton, in United States Department of Agriculture
Bulletin 59, says: "It may be safely said that any place where farming, gardening,
or fruit raising can be successfully followed is adapted to the profitable keeping
of bees."
There is always a farmer here and there who keeps a few hives
of bees. These often can be purchased at a very reasonable price, but unless they
are Italian bees and are in improved hives, it would be better to purchase from some
dealer. He may sell you a very weak colony, but after the first year these ought
to be as strong as any. Start in the spring; when you have your bees, read good literature
on the subject. A. I. Root's "A B C of Bee Culture" is good for beginners;
subscribe for the American Bee Journal, of Chicago, or Gleanings in Bee
Culture, Medina, Ohio. They are full of the latest ideas on the subject.
A yield of fifty pounds of honey in a season can be obtained
from one hive of bees in almost any locality. In fact, this is often done where bees
are kept in built up cities. One hundred pounds would be considered a very small
yield by many apiarists, and twice this amount is often gathered in favored localities
where up-to-date methods are followed.
One man can take care of two hundred hives or colonies, as
they are termed, if he is working for comb honey, and perhaps twice that number if
for extracted honey.
Comb honey is stored usually in one-pound boxes set in a
super or small box over the main hive body, which is itself a box about seventeen
inches long, eleven inches wide, and ten inches deep into which frames of comb are
slid side by side. These combs are accessible and can be lifted out, exposing to
view the inner workings of the hive. It is in these combs that the queen lays as
many as three thousand eggs some days, and in which the young bees are hatched. They
are also used for storing honey for winter use.
The extractor has been invented to remove this honey without
damaging the comb. The economy of this can readily be seen, as ten pounds of honey
can be stored while one pound of comb is being built.
This leaves the bees free to gather honey instead of using
a portion of their force to build comb, as is necessary when comb honey is desired.
The extractor is a round tin can on a central pivot with
a revolving mechanism. Into this the full combs of honey are placed and are whirled
around, throwing the honey out into the can by centrifugal force. It is then run
out at the bottom into bottles or barrels, and the empty combs are replaced in the
hive for the bees to fill again.
Twice as many pounds of honey can be produced by this method;
but the price of extracted honey is much less than that of comb honey. Adulteration
of extracted honey with glucose is becoming so prevalent that it threatens to ruin
this branch of the industry. But there will always be a good market for honey sold
direct by the producer to residents, or even through storekeepers, in medium size
towns, where customers can be sure that the honey is pure.
The average wholesale prices of honey are about fifteen cents
a pound for extracted and twenty cents for fancy comb, so if the apiarist with two
hundred hives produces the small average of fifty pounds of comb honey and sells
it at fifteen cents a pound, he will receive $1500 for his season's work. If he goes
in for extracted honey and produces one hundred pounds per hive, he will receive
even more. Of course, expenses will have to come out of this.
That this has been done over and over again is proved by
men who started in with only a few hives and have accumulated considerable property
from the business.
But no one need expect to do this unless he is willing to
give the bees the attention which they will require. To neglect them once means often
a total loss. Most of the work will have to be done during the swarming season in
May, June, and July. There has been so much written on the subject and so many inventions
and improvements made in the hives that bee-keeping more than any other branch of
similar employment has been reduced to a science, and any one can thoroughly master
it in two or three years. It is because its possibilities are not generally recognized
that so few are now engaged in it.
The fear of stings will always deter many from entering this
business and so check competition from forcing prices down.
The price of honey makes it a luxury, and there will be an
unlimited opportunity in the crop as long as the price does not get near the cost
of producing, which is far below the present prices.
To use land directly is to open almost infinite opportunities.
Department of Agriculture, Farmers' Bulletin 204, says: "In the United States
the term 'mushroom' refers commercially to but a single species (Agaricus Campestris)
of the fleshly fungi, a plant common throughout most of the temperate regions
of the world, and one everywhere recognized as edible."
It is unfortunate that the commercial use of the term "mushroom"
restricts it to a single species. There are about twenty-five common varieties of
edible fungi in the Northern states.
The successful cultivation of mushrooms in America has not
been so general as in most European countries. It is in France and in England that
the mushroom industry has been best developed. France is the home of the industry.
Unusual interest has been shown in the United States in the growth of mushrooms within
the past few years, and it is to be hoped and expected that within the next ten years
the industry will develop to the fullest limit of the market demands. The demand
will, of course, be stimulated by the increasing popular appreciation of this product.
In some cities and towns there is already a good market for mushrooms, while in others
they may be sold directly to special customers. This should be borne in mind by prospective
growers.
While many American growers have been successful, a much
larger number have failed. In most cases their failures have been due to one or more
of the following causes:
(1) Poor spawn, or spawn which has been killed by improper
storage.
(2) Spawning at a temperature injuriously high.
(3) Too much water either at the time of spawning or later.
(4) Unfavorable temperature during the growing period. It
is therefore important to the prospective grower that careful attention be given
to the general discussion of conditions which follow.
Mushrooms may be grown in any place where the conditions
of temperature and moisture are favorable. A shed, cellar, cave, or vacant space
in a greenhouse may be utilized to advantage for this purpose. The most essential
factor, perhaps, is that of temperature. The proper temperature ranges from 53°
to 60° F., with the best from 55° to 58° F. It is unsafe to attempt
to grow mushrooms on a commercial basis, according to our present knowledge of the
subject, in a temperature much less than 50° or greater than 63° F.
Any severe changes of temperature would entirely destroy
the profits of the mushroom crop. From this it is evident that in many places mushrooms
may not be grown as a summer crop. With artificial heat they may be grown almost
anywhere throughout the winter. Moreover, it is very probable that in this country
open-air culture must be limited to a few sections.
A second important factor is moisture. The place should not
be very damp, or constantly dripping with water. Under such conditions successful
commercial work is not possible. A place where it is possible to maintain a fairly
moist condition of the atmosphere, and having such capability for ventilation as
will cause at least a gradual evaporation, is necessary. With too rapid ventilation
and the consequent necessity of repeated applications of water to the mushroom bed,
no mushroom crop will attain the highest perfection.
Even a little iron rust in the soil is reported as fatal
to the Campestris, the only fungus so far successfully propagated.
If other fungi than the Campestris come up wild, don't throw
them away as worthless. Many are better eating than the one you seek, and you can
avoid the risk of poisonous ones by learning to recognize the dangerous family--
send for the Agricultural Department's Bulletin No. 204. Meanwhile, (1) all mushrooms
with pink gills, (2) all coral-like fungi, (3) all that grow on wood, and (4) all
puffballs, are good to eat if they are young and tender--only don't mistake an unspread
Aminita for a puffball.
An ingenious person may find other sources of income in the
country. A young hotel porter in Ulster County, New York, bought seventy acres of
mountain woodland four miles from the railroad for two hundred and fifty dollars,
and puts in his winters cutting barrel hoops, at which he makes two dollars a day.
Meanwhile the land is maturing timber. That is hard work, but to gather wild mushrooms
or to cut willows, or sweet pine needles to make cushions, or to catch young squirrels
for sale, is lighter, if less steady employment.
And with all our uses of land, we must not forget a little
corner for the hammock and the croquet hoops for the wife and the children. In the
Province of Quebec, where the land is held in great tracts under the Seigniors, I
have seen croquet grounds no bigger than a bed quilt in front of the little one-room
cottages.
The Frenchman knows the importance of such things as that,
has meals out of doors in fine weather, goes on little picnics, and keeps madame
contented in the country.
A swing, or a seesaw, and a tether ball (a ball swinging
from the top of a pole eight feet high) for the children will help to keep the family
peace.
CHAPTER XIII
FRUITS
Fruit raising can succeed in either of two ways. Either planting
the orchard in some one fruit and specializing thereon, or diversifying the operation
to cover many varieties. In the first way it is usual to establish orchards in favorable
localities without special regard to nearness to market; because in these days of
refrigerator car lines the product of an orchard in any part of the country can be
sent to market quickly enough to avoid loss. Where many varieties are grown, the
best site is usually near a large city where the grower can market his own product
on wagons and get the benefit of retail prices.
Remember that it is far more profitable to raise twenty baskets
of fine, well-shaped, clean, handsome apples or peaches or any other hand-eaten fruit,
than to raise a hundred barrels of stuff that is good only for the common drier or
for the mill or hogpen.
Care and common sense are the jackscrews to use in raising
fine fruit.
The apple is the great American fruit for extensive orcharding.
The question is whether there is a profit in apple growing. The answer is, where
the conditions are favorable and when the business is well conducted there is. Under
average conditions, with poor business management, there is little or none.
As Professor S. T. Maynard in Suburban Life tells
us, "In a suburban garden of one of our Eastern cities are seven Astrachan trees,
about twenty years old, from which have been sold in a single season over one hundred
dollars' worth of fruit. A friend near Boston put three thousand barrels of picked
Baldwins into cold storage. None of the fancy apples sold for less than three dollars
a barrel, and the others netted more than two dollars. They were the product of less
than forty acres of trees which had been planted about twenty-five years. Another
fruit grower showed me several returns of commission men of five, six, and even seven
dollars a barrel for fancy Baldwins. At such prices, and under such conditions, there
is a large profit in apple growing."
"The other side of the picture, however, is the more
common one. A friend sent fifty barrels of fancy Baldwins to a commission house,
to be shipped to European markets, the returns for which were just enough to pay
for the barrels. The majority of apples grown in the United States are sold to buyers,
one buyer in each section, for a dollar to two dollars for No. 1 quality, and a dollar
for No. 2. With the cost of barrels at about forty cents, labor for picking, sorting,
and packing, these prices leave little or nothing for the use of the land, cost of
fertilizers, spraying, thinning, etc., all of which are necessary for growing fruit
of the best quality."
Holmes further says, in substance, that we must make the
trees grow vigorously, whether upon poor or good soil. Growth is the first requirement.
To do this, we need a strong, deep, moist soil,--good grass land well underdrained
makes the best. If this is on an elevation with a northern or western exposure, it
will be better than a southern or an eastern one. While apple trees will grow on
a thin soil, so much care and fertilizing is required that the crop will be of little
or no profit upon such land. Lastly, we must protect our fruit from insect and fungous
pests.
On land that is free from stones and not too steep, thorough
and frequent cultivation will give the quickest and largest returns. On such land,
hoed garden or farm crops may be profitable while the trees are small, but after
five or six years it will generally be found best to cultivate it entirely for the
growth of trees. Organic matter in the form of stable manure or cover crops will
be needed, and must be applied in the fall or very early in the spring to keep up
the supply of humus in the soil.
Stony land that cannot be plowed or cultivated except at
a great cost may be made to grow good crops of fruit.
While the trees are young, the soil should be worked about
them for the space of a few feet and then the moisture retained by a mulch system,
making use of any waste organic matter like straw, leaves, meadow hay, brush, and
weeds cut before they seed. Most of the first prize apples at the Pan-American Exposition
at Buffalo were grown under the turf-culture" system.
Unless you have trees already on your land, it is too long
to wait six or seven years for a crop. We can graft good fruit on almost any tree,
though the new dwarf trees will bear much sooner, and if we have trees we need not
even wait for the harvest of our crop, since the windfalls will keep us in apple
sauce, jellies, and pies, for no apple is too green for apple sauce, not even the
ones that the boys can't bite.
The greatest difficulty in the profitable growth of the apple
is the market. Much of the profit in apple growing, whether in the East or the West,
will depend upon the extent of the business done, especially if one is a considerable
distance from markets. The above are the essentials noted by this practical scientist.
Next to the apple crop, perhaps the most important fruit crop for shipping is the
peach. The locality is perhaps the most important consideration in a peach orchard.
In the Eastern and Southern states, and in Connecticut, Delaware, New Jersey, Maryland,
and Virginia, and, of late years, Georgia, peaches flourish and produce enormous
crops. As a general rule, the nearer the orchard is to large bodies of water, the
more likely one is to get a crop, as the temperature of the water prevents a too
early budding out in the spring and delays killing autumn frosts.
Generally speaking, a sandy, porous soil is best for peaches,
but they may be raised on clay lands if provided with plenty of humus.
Another fruit which is profitable in districts suited to
its growth is the grape. Bulletin No. 153, Cornell Experiment Station, says: "Grapes
are a dessert fruit. They are not used to a large extent in the kitchen (though they
might be), so there are few incidental or secondary products; that is, they are not
dried, canned, made into jellies, and the like, to any extent, that is, in the United
States.
The grape is peculiarly a sectional product. Central New
York has a large area devoted to it. In northern Ohio, a strip along Lake Erie, and
some of its islands, are devoted almost exclusively to grape vineyards. In districts
where grapes are intensively grown, a great part of the crop is used for wine, and
American wine is extensively sold m our home markets, although it frequently has
foreign labels.
Any one purchasing a farm should plant some grapevines for
home use. Grape juice is easily made and kept and is a pleasing beverage. Grape jelly
is excellent and could be readily marketed in any nearby town, since there is very
little, comparatively, on sale. A grape arbor gives shade, needs little care, and
can be planted near the house where it will not interfere with the crops. For you
cannot cultivate all of your land; some grassy space must be left around the house
if only for drying clothes. But if ground is scarce, vines or lima beans can be trained
up the back porch or up the sunny side of the house; or a few climbing nasturtiums
will give decorations without care, while the young leaves make a good salad.
Of home orchard fruits, the plum, pear, and quince are all
profitable specialties, especially for intensive acre raising. In general, the same
remark may be made of them as of the other fruits, that they need careful selection
of land to get the best results. The cherry has recently come to be recognized as
a good commercial specialty. Mr. George T. Powell, in The American Agriculturist,
says: "The crop is a precarious one to market.... The risk and loss may
be largely reduced by making a proper selection of site for the orchard. This should
be on high ground where the air generally circulates freely. This is especially necessary
for sweet varieties. The soil should be rich, with naturally good drainage."
He says: "I have had Rockport trees produce four hundred
pounds each and the fruit net ten cents a pound for the entire crop. The English
Morello trees may be grown fifteen feet apart each way, which will allow two hundred
trees to the acre. The larger trees ought to be planted somewhat thinner.... Cherries
are packed largely in eight-pound baskets and in strawberry quarts. Each basket is
filled with carefully assorted fruit, every imperfect specimen being taken out, after
which they are faced by placing the stems downward so that the cherry shows in regular
rows upon the face. Girls and women do this work. The Eastern fruit grower must bear
in mind that he has to meet in his market the competition of the Pacific coast growers,
who excel in fine packing; and although our Eastern grown cherries are of a finer
flavor, they are sent to the market in such a crude manner and in such unattractive
condition that they sell for much less than the California fruit."
Regarding bush berries, he says, you will get a small crop
the second year after planting and for the third and subsequent years a full crop.
The important thing is to keep the dead canes well pruned out, as the cane borer
is one of the worst insect pests. When they appear they can be stopped by cutting
off the shoot several inches below the puncture as soon as it begins to droop, and
burning the part cut off. Again, Mr. Powell says, " Currants require rich soil.
A clay or heavy loam is better than a heavy dry soil. They should be planted in the
fall. The average from ten thousand bushes should be about four quarts each. The
cherry currant is perhaps the largest in size, but not so prolific as some others.
Currants are shipped and sold in thirty-two quart crates and have to be carefully
packed to get to market in good condition."
Gooseberries are raised by the acre. Mr. A. M. Brown, Kent
County, Delaware, in The American Agriculturist, tells of a plantation in
Central Delaware where over twenty four thousand pounds were gathered from a scant
four acres. The product was sold to the Baltimore canners for six cents a pound,
making $1440 in all. In addition to the gooseberries grown on six acres, a large
crop each of apples and pears were grown on the same ground. Like currants, the gooseberry
must be sprayed to destroy the worms, and cut back and burnt to destroy the cane
borer.
There is little special knowledge required, however, in raising
this fruit, and it is well adapted for growers with small acreage and little money.
In going into the cultivation of bush fruits, it is usually
best to grow them in great variety near the market where they are to be sold. The
bush fruits are then uniformly profitable. In Suburban Life Mr. E. C. Powell
tells us that the spring is the best time for planting raspberries and blackberries,
just as soon as the ground is dry enough to work. The first season the plots should
be well tilled. It is possible to grow vegetables between the rows the first year
before the berries begin to bear, but unless pressed for space, it probably doesn't
pay.
Perhaps the best of small fruits, however, and most largely
used is the strawberry. The strawberry can be planted by the acre. The ground must
be rich loam and plenty of humus, well drained, with a southern exposure. Well-grown
plants set out in the open will bear a small crop the first season, but will not
become of maximum bearing till the second year. After the crop is taken off in the
fall a mulch of straw or leaves should be placed over the plants to protect them
during the winter. The strawberries are picked by boys and girls.
The strawberry is an exceedingly profitable crop if properly
handled, and is one of the best small fruits for people with little capital. While
the price in the general market varies from fifteen to thirty cents per quart, they
sometimes run as high as fifty in the early spring; yet it is possible to grow strawberries
worth six dollars a quart by intensive culture in greenhouses. Mr. S. W. Fletcher,
in Country Life in America, says: " The forcing of strawberries is a
specialized industry of the highest type. Everybody cannot make it pay everywhere....
Strawberries are forced in pots or in benches. The pot method is preferred by those
who find a demand for the highest quality of fruit regardless of expense.... If fruit
is desired for Christmas, the plants are not checked to any extent, but are kept
in continuous growth. The conditions of springtime are simulated as far as possible.
At Christmas time a quart box of forced Marshall strawberries sells at from one-fifty
to eight dollars per quart, averaging about four dollars."
Our most valuable allies against the insect armies are toads,
bats, wasps, dragon flies, and birds; they enjoy the battle.
There cannot be too many toads or bats. Toads will eat all
sorts of flies, potato bugs, squash bugs, rose bugs, caterpillars, and almost anything
that crawls.
If the wasps become a nuisance, it is easy to poison them;
but the birds are often a nuisance--the robins eat the strawberries and cherries
the instant they are ripe. They soon get used to scarecrows; and to cover the fruit
with nets gives the insects a free hand. Some growers raise sweet cherries or other
fruits specially to feed up the birds so that they will let the rest alone. Early
rising and a plenty of cats is about the best remedy. A man, or even a woman, working
on the land is the best scarecrow.
There are a few other fruits that grow wild in certain sections
and are gathered and sent to market. Among these the cranberry is the most important.
It grows in nearly inaccessible bogs, principally in New Jersey, and the usual custom
is for owners of land on which there are cranberry bogs to let out the bog to pickers
on a percentage basis. Cranberries can be cultivated, and there is a considerable
profit in the business. The swampy nature of the ground needed, however, will deter
all except the most persistent from this industry. Some cranberry bogs bring as high
as a thousand dollars an acre.
The blueberry or huckleberry, or, as we call it in Ireland,
the bilberry, or frohen, grows wild in the northerly states, and is much sought after
in the market. Many efforts have been made to grow the blueberry commercially; but,
as is well said by Mr. J. H. Hale in the Rural New Yorker, "The blueberry
proved to be a good deal like Indians--it would not stand civilization, and was never
satisfactory, although I monkeyed with it for a period of about ten years."
Mr. Fred W. Card, of Rhode Island, in the same issue reports a similar experience.
With our present knowledge of the blueberry, it is doubtful if it can be made a commercially
cultivated crop. Lately, however, it is claimed that it can be grown in very poor,
non-nitrogenous soil.
A variety, however, called the Garden Blueberry, gives almost
incredible yields, five bushels being reported from sixty plants. It keeps all winter
on the branches, if stored in a cellar, and is of fine flavor and especially
good for preserves. A little frost improves it.
But wild berries, crab apples, and elderberries and others,
are good to preserve and find a ready sale if attractively put up; they also help
out tile table greatly. Then think of the fun!
In recent years, certain varieties of nuts, like the English
walnut, the pecan, and the hickory nuts have been grown commercially. In the South
particularly, the pecan has been found a good crop to plant on cotton plantations
which have been overworked. In the Rural New Yorker, Mr. H. E. Vandevan gives
an account of an old cotton plantation of 2250 acres Iying on the west bank of the
Mississippi River in Louisiana. The pecan tree was indigenous to the land, and the
wooded portion of the plantation has thousands of giant pecan trees growing on it.
The previous owners of this plantation had done all in their power to destroy these
trees, but they flourished in spite of that. Mr. Vandevan, however, saw in the pecan
a large profit, and he has planted ten thousand trees on six hundred acres, all in
a solid block. The trees are set fifty feet apart both ways, except where a roadway
is left. Between the pecan trees Mr. Vandevan has planted fig trees for early returns,
with the intention of canning the fruit.
The English walnut is grown principally in California. Its
value has been recognized only recently, as all of the nut crops take a good many
years before the trees begin to bear. Nut growing on a small scale is not of much
value to a man with a little bit of land, except as an additional source of income.
If you find a sweet chestnut tree or a shell-bark hickory
or two in your wood lot, they will well repay protection and careful cultivation.
If you don't, why--there are great promises in quick maturing
nut trees. There is now an English walnut which is claimed to bear the third or even
the second year after setting out. My own small experience with these in New Jersey,
however, has not been a success.
CHAPTER XIV
FLOWERS
Every city in the United States affords an opportunity for
flower gardening and nurseries, but a study must be made of the market in order to
know what is best to raise and where to raise it.
The choice of crops depends on the popular taste. The flowers
which are now in greatest demand are the rose, carnation, violet, and chrysanthemum.
Near every large city there are hundreds of florists with
glass houses, some covering twenty acres or more. There were over 2000 acres of flower
land under glass reported at the last census. As almost all industries to-day are
specialized, so is floriculture; in one place we see ten acres of glass given over
to the rose, in another thousands of dollars devoted to the carnation or the violet,
while one grower in Queens, Long Island, has 75,000 square feet of glass for carnations.
The specialist who devotes his thoughts and energies to raising
one flower can produce better results than if he raised a variety. He has only one
crop to market, and can do it more successfully than with a number of crops. If he
raises enough to make himself a factor in the market, he can sell direct instead
of sending his product to a commission man, thereby receiving better prices.
Little capital is required to start; intelligent effort is
the road to success. Very few, indeed, who are now leaders in floriculture, started
with more than $500 capital, and many with much less. One of the largest growers
of roses in the United States, whose plant covers more than ten acres, did not have
$500 when he started, and many others not so well known are making handsome livings
and have accumulated thousands of dollars of property from a start of less than $500.
But practical knowledge is much more necessary than in raising
vegetables, as small mistakes will have more serious results. Therefore, if you have
some capital and wish to go into flower raising, it will pay you, if circumstances
permit, to hire out to a florist, even at small wages, till you have learned the
business--even though you have raised flowers successfully in a home garden.
Mr. Frank Hamilton, manager of C. W. Ward's of Queens, tells
of at least a dozen men, who have been in their employ during his twenty-five years'
experience, some of whom got only twenty dollars a month at first, and afterwards
started in a small way for themselves, who are now making a substantial living.
Although the market depends largely on the wealthy class
in the large cities, many florists devote considerable time and space to flowers
which are bought by the poorer class of city dwellers who have no space or time to
raise their own.
There are always good markets somewhere for the crop, and
it is not an uncommon thing to ship flowers from New York to Chicago, Buffalo, Boston,
Philadelphia, Baltimore, and Washington, or vice versa. The chances of success for
a lover of flowers are better in this business than in any in which one with a like
amount of capital can engage. If the business at first is not large enough to use
all his time he will find no trouble in securing employment in his immediate vicinity.
There are always some who want such a person to care for their lawns or to give some
time to their conservatories.
In the last ten years the business has doubled, and while
many have gone into it, the profit they are making indicates that supply has not
kept pace with demand, and that it is not likely to be overdone the near future.
Professor B. T. Galloway, in an article in The World's
Work, says, "An acre of soil under glass pays fifty times as much as an
acre outdoors. There are annually sold in this country six to seven million dollars'
worth of carnation flowers There are no less than eight to ten million square feet
of glass in the United States devoted to this flower alone."
Although Mr. Rockefeller's place at Tarrytown is the largest
competitor in the New York market for violets, there is no local monopoly in that,
and the local producer with personal attention can do well.
In the Country Gentleman an account is given of a
violet farm on the north shore of Illinois, where two women are supplying local florists..
One of them says: "We started our farm last spring in the face of most discouraging
prophecies from our friends and the keenest competition of violet growers of New
York. But we believed we could be successful. We had studied the best scientific
methods of growing the plants, had imported the best soil obtainable, and built a
greenhouse fully adapted to our needs, so we just went ahead and we found it to be
a paying proposition.
"Our first experiment was in using cuttings from the
violet farm of a lady at Lansing, Michigan, who has been a most successful grower.
These did not thrive, and we next imported 3000 cuttings from the Tarrytown neighborhood,
where violet culture has been most successful.
"The first rule is to keep the temperature of the greenhouse
between forty-five and fifty degrees. Violets are spring flowers, and wither and
droop if the temperature is not at the right degree. Most people think the double
violets have no fragrance because most of those that we get lose their fragrance
in transit.
"We supply 2000 flowers a week, and as they reach our
patrons within two or three hours at the most from the time of cutting, they retain
their fragrance. They are also larger and of a deeper color than the New York flowers.
Next year we hope to go in on a much larger scale.
"While the work is not hard, it requires infinite care
and vigilance when the little plants are growing. As a career for a woman, violet
growing offers greater inducements than anything I can think of."
Then, surely, others can succeed in other flowers at other
places. While there is little choice between the standard styles of greenhouses for
violets, there should be abundant provision for supplying fresh air, either from
the sides or top, whichever is chosen. The system of ventilation should admit of
operation either from the inside or the outside of the house, as fumigation with
hydrocyanic acid gas is sometimes necessary, in the fumes of which it is impossible
to enter, unless with a gas mask.
The arrangement of the house should secure the greatest possible
supply of sunshine in December and January, and the least possible during the growing
season, when, as Miss Howard points out, it is necessary to secure as low a temperature
as possible, so as to obtain good, vigorous, healthy-growing plants. The best site
is a level piece of ground, or one sloping gently to the south.
Of the diseases to which cultivated violets are subject Mr.
P. H. Dorsett, of the Department of Agriculture, names four as especially dangerous:
Spot disease, producing whitish spots on the foliage; root rot, apt to attack young
plants transplanted in hot, dry weather; wet rot, a fungus apt to appear in too moist
air or where ventilation is insufficient; and yellowing, of the cause of which little
is known. Any of these diseases is difficult to exterminate when it once gains a
foothold. The best thing to do is to get strong, vigorous cuttings, and then to give
careful attention to watering, cultivation, and ventilation, and the destruction
of dead and dying leaves and all runners as fast as they appear.
Among insect enemies, the aphids, red spiders, eel worms,
gall flies, and slugs may be mentioned. Most of these can be easiest controlled by
hydrocyanic acid gas treatment.
Chrysanthemums, especially of preternatural size and bizarre
colors--the college colors at football games, for instance--are in great demand.
They are extremely decorative, and their remarkable lasting quality insures their
permanent popularity. I have heard that the unexpanded bud can be cooked like cauliflower
for the table; but we have not learned to use them in that way. In Japan and China
the leaves of the chrysanthemum are esteemed as a salad. One attempt has been made
by English gardeners to introduce this use of them into England, but it was unsuccessful.
The annual shows of chrysanthemums and of roses indicate
the importance of the business.
It is not generally known, but the poppies are coming into
favor for cut flowers in spite of the fact that they do not keep very well. Miss
Edith Granger avoids this difficulty, as she explains in the Garden Magazine,
"by picking off all blooms that have not already lost their petals in the
evening, so that in the morning all the open flowers will be new ones. These are
cut as early as possible, even while the dew is still upon them, and plunged immediately
into deep water."
You need not be discouraged by the low prices at which flowers,
especially violets and roses, are often offered in the streets. Those flowers are
the discarded stock or delayed shipments of the swell florists. You will find that
those flowers are fading, or revived with salt, and will not keep.
That they are so peddled, shows that everybody, at hotels,
dinners, funerals, weddings, in the home, and the young men for the young women,
want flowers, the loveliest things ever made without souls. We have only to supply
such a want to find our place in life.
As a side line the common flowers will bring good prices;
mignonette, bachelor buttons, cosmos, and even nasturtiums, which you can't keep
from growing if you just stick the seed in the ground, or lilies of the valley, which
you can hardly get rid of once they start, never go begging, if they are fresh.
A favorite flower with many is the sweet pea, which can be
grown out of doors in the summer time where you have a good depth and quality of
soil.
I have seen May blossoms and autumn leaves on the branch
and even goldenrod brought into town and sold at good prices.
Enterprises often look attractive at a distance; for instance,
raising orchids, especially as some of the flowers remain on the plants ready for
market for weeks and bring high prices. But to ship flowers at a profit they must
be in quantities, else the expenses eat up the returns, and they must be shipped
with considerable regularity, else you lose your customers. To get such a supply
of orchids would take a very large capital and involve so much labor that it is doubtful
if more than good interest could be realized on it.
Many florists make money by keeping constantly on hand ferns,
palms, and other plants like rubber trees, which they rent out for social functions,
weddings, and other occasions. Most florists in the larger cities have also quite
a thriving business in tree planting, which is everywhere on the increase. A highly
specialized department of horticulture is that of raising young trees and plants
to sell for improving grounds, planting orchards, or similar uses. The nursery business
bears much the same relation to the commercial florist or orchardist as seed growing
does to the market gardener.
Certain communities, through favorable soil or climate, are
best adapted to the production of nursery stock. Consequently, one finds this industry
most highly developed in scattered localities. It is true that people with small
capital should not tackle a business so technical as this.
The business of bulb production is another highly specialized
department. In certain sections of Holland large areas of the rich lowlands are given
over to bulbs of various kinds of lilies, nearly all of which are propagated in that
manner. To attain perfection, at least in the North, most bulbs require deep, rich,
warm, and highly manured soils; and assiduous attention at every stage. In many plant
specialties, the gardeners of Europe still far surpass our own, because conditions
there have forced them to make use of every available means to increase production.
The immense price that European gardeners have to pay for land has been a most potent
factor in forcing them to seek out and apply the most ingenious forcing methods.
The time is upon us here in America also when we must find out the highest use of
land and apply it to that use.
As the aesthetic qualities of our people become more highly
developed, the business of raising flowers must become of increasing importance,
and will readily reward any one who goes into it conscientiously. Flower growing
is peculiarly adapted to women, since the work is light There are few disagreeable
features, unless it be the handling of the manure incidental to the best results.
Still, the enjoyments of agriculture depend upon individual
tastes. I have seen "lady gardeners" picking strawberries with the footman
holding up an umbrella to screen them from the sun.
Some women would like that, some not.
CHAPTER XV
DRUG PLANTS
A source of profit from land to which little attention has
been given in the United States is collecting or raising plants, some part of which
may be used for medicinal purposes. We condense from Farmers' Bulletin No. 188, United
States Department of Agriculture:
Certain well-known weeds are sources of crude drugs at present
obtained wholly or in part from abroad. Roots, leaves, and flowers of several of
the species most detrimental in the United States are gathered, cured, and used in
Europe, and supply much of the demands of foreign lands. Some of these plants are
in many states subject to anti-weed laws, and farmers are required to take measures
toward their extermination.
The prices paid for crude drugs from these sources save in
war time are not great and would rarely tempt any one to this work as a business.
Yet if in ridding the farm of weeds and thus raising the value of the land the farmer
can at the same time make these pests the source of a small income instead of a dead
loss, something is gained.
One rather alluring fact contained in an article by Dr. True,
is that a shortage has become keenly felt in "Golden Seal," which the early
American settlers learned from the Indians to use as a curative for sore and inflamed
eyes, as well as for sore mouth. The plant grows in patches in high open woods, and
was formerly found in great abundance in Ohio, Indiana, Kentucky, and West Virginia,
but is now so rare that its price has risen from thirty-five cents wholesale in 1898
to over seventy-five cents a pound. Persons in different parts of the country have
undertaken the production of Golden Seal on a commercial scale. More than six hundred
dollars' worth can be grown on an acre: so a crop this year would be a fortune. The
methods of raising it can be ascertained upon application to the Department of Agriculture.
Ginseng is one of the drug crops which paid handsome returns
a few years ago, perhaps because it takes from five to seven years to grow from seeds;
but so many went into that line that few men to-day make anything at it. Furthermore,
the Chinese, who use a large part of it, will buy only the wild roots--and they know
the difference. Those who control the trade have burned quantities in the effort
to keep up the price.
There are some drug plants which might be raised with success
by those who would specialize in one plant, but the lesson we learn from ginseng
should act as a warning.
Raising drugs is one of those things that seems to be more
profitable to teach others to do than to do yourself. A well known Professor said
to me: " If I were twenty-five and knew what I know about drugs and the market
for them, I should go into the drug-raising business. But I should expect to lose
money for some years. If I were a small clerk, say, or an old man who wanted to get
out of city life, and I had $500 I really wanted to venture in drug raising, I should
divide it in half--half I should put in the bank and the other half I should throw
into the Hudson River. Then I should be sure of $250 instead of being drawn on to
spend it all."
"Most of the people who have been in the business, notably
the Shakers, who used to do the most of it, are gradually getting out of it. The
few men who make money raising drugs keep it to themselves."
In many cases when weeds have been dug the work of handling
and curing them is not excessive and can readily be done by women and children.
Too much emphasis cannot be placed upon the importance of
carefully and thoroughly drying all crude drugs, whether roots, herbs, leaves, barks,
flowers, or seeds, and putting them under cover at nightfall. If poorly dried, they
will heat and become moldy in shipping, and the collector will find his goods rejected
by the dealer and have all his trouble for nothing. Leaves, herbs, and flowers should
never be washed.
It is important also to collect in proper season only, as
drugs collected out of season are unmarketable on account of inferior medicinal qualities,
and there will also be a greater shrinkage in a root dug during the growing season
than when it is collected after growth has ceased.
The roots of annual plants should be dug in the autumn of
the first year just before the flowering period, and those of biennial and perennial
plants in the fall of the second or third year, after the tops have dried.
After the roots have been dug the soil should be well shaken
from them, and all foreign particles, such as dirt, roots, and parts of other plants,
should be removed. If the roots cannot be sufficiently cleared of soil by shaking,
they should be thoroughly washed in clean water. Drugs must look wholesome at least.
It does not pay to be careless in this matter. The soil increases the weight of the
roots, but the purchaser is not willing to pay by weight for dirt, and grades the
uncleaned or mixed drugs accordingly. It is the bright, natural looking root, leaf,
or plant that will bring a good price.
After washing, the roots should be carefully dried by exposing
them to light and air, on racks or shelves, or on clean well-ventilated barn floors,
or lofts. They should be spread out thinly and turned occasionally from day to day
until completely cured. When this point is reached, in perhaps three to six weeks,
the roots will snap readily when bent. If dried out of doors they should be placed
under shelter at night and upon the approach of rain.
Some roots require slicing and removing fibrous rootless.
In general, large roots should be split or sliced when green in order to facilitate
drying.
Barks of trees should be gathered in spring, when the sap
begins to flow, but may also be peeled in winter. In the case of the coarser barks
(as elm, hemlock, poplar, oak, pine, and wild cherry) the outer layer is shaved off
before the bark is removed from the tree, which process is known as "rossing."
Only the inner bark of these trees is used medicinally. Barks may also be cured by
exposure to sunlight, but moisture must be avoided.
Leaves and herbs should be collected when the plants are
in full flower. The whole plant may be cut and the leaves may be stripped from it,
rejecting the coarse and large stems as much as possible, and keeping only the flowering
tops and more tender stems and leaves.
Both leaves and herbs should be spread out in thin layers
on clean floors, racks, or shelves, in the shade, but where there is free circulation
of air, and turned frequently until thoroughly dry. Moisture will darken them.
Flowers are collected when they first open or immediately
after, not when they are beginning to fade. Seeds should be gathered just as they
are ripening, before the seed pods open, and should be winnowed in order to remove
fragments of stems, leaves, and shriveled specimens.
The collector should be sure that the plant is the right
one. Many plants closely resemble one another, and some "yarbs," contrary
to the popular impression, are deadly poison--nightshade (belladonna) and the wild
variety of parsnips, for instance. Therefore, where any doubt exists, send a specimen
of the entire plant, including leaves, flowers, and fruits, to a drug dealer or to
the nearest state experiment station for identification.
Samples representative of the lot of drugs to be sold should
be sent to the nearest commission merchant, or drug store, for inspection and for
quotation on the amount of drug that can be furnished, or for information as to where
to send the article.
In writing to the different dealers for information and for
prices, which vary greatly, it should be stated how much of a particular drug can
be furnished and how soon this can be supplied, and postage should always be inclosed
for reply. The collector should bear in mind that freight is an important item, and
it is best, therefore, to address the dealers accessible to the place of production.
The package containing the sample should be plainly marked with contents and the
name and address of the sender. When ready for shipment crude drugs may be tightly
packed in burlap or gunny sacks, or in dry, clean barrels.
Burdock root brings from three to eight cents per pound,
and seed five to ten cents. About fifty thousand pounds of the root is imported annually,
and the best has come from Belgium. Of dock roots, about 125,000 pounds are imported
annually, at from two to eight cents.
The field for the sale of dandelion root is large.
Of couch grass, the roots of which cause much profanity in
this country, there are some 250,000 pounds annually imported at from three to seven
cents per pound.
A common weed with which there is a considerable trouble
is the pokeweed, the root of which brings from two to five cents per pound and the
dried berries five cents per pound.
Forty to sixty thousand pounds of foxglove are imported from
Europe. Analysis has shown that the leaves of the wild American foxglove are as good
as the European article, the price of which per pound ranges from six to eight cents.
Of mullein flowers about five thousand pounds used to be
imported, chiefly from Germany. The leaves are also imported.
Dried leaves and tops of lobelia bring from three to eight
cents per pound, while the seed commands fifteen to twenty cents per pound.
Of tansy about thirty-five thousand pounds have been imported
annually at a price rallying from three to six cents.
The flowering tops and leaves of the gum plant are used as
drug. They bring from five to twelve cents per pound.
Boneset leaves and tops bring from two to eight cents per
pound. Catnip tops and leaves two to eight cents per pound.
Of horehound about 125,000 pounds are imported annually,
prices being three to eight cents per pound.
Blessed thistle is cultivated in Germany, and it is imported
to a limited extent.
Yarrow is a weed common from the New England states to Missouri.
It is imported in small quantities, and brings from two to five cents per pound.
Canada fleabane brings from six to eight cents per pound.
Of jimsonweed, leaves are imported, from 100,000 to 150,000 pounds annually, and
10,000 pounds of seed. Leaves bring two and one half to eight cents per pound, and
seeds from three to seven cents per pound.
Of poison hemlock, seeds are imported from ten to twenty
thousand pounds annually. Price for the seed is three cents per pound, for the leaves
about four cents. The flowers are also used.
The American wormseed has been naturalized from tropical
America to New England; the seed commands from six to eight cents per pound; the
oil distilled from this seed brings one dollar and a half per pound.
Black mustard, which is a troublesome weed in almost every
state in the Union, is nevertheless imported in enormous quantities, the total imports
of the seeds of the black and white mustard amounting annually to over five million
pounds, the prices being from three to six cents per pound. All these prices and
quantities were before the war and may greatly change after it.
In studying the wild drug plants, one may learn the immense
variety of field salads and greens. On a visit to the Spirit Fruit Society at Ingleside,
Illinois, one of the girls took me out to gather wild vegetables for dinner. We pulled
up about a dozen varieties out of the corners of a field; two or three of the nice
looking ones that I gathered the young lady threw out, saying she did not know them;
but it seemed to me that she took almost anything that was not too tough. The following
are commonly used as salads: Dandelion, yellow racket, purslane (pusley), watercress,
nasturtium; and the following as greens for cooking: narrow or sour dock, stinging
nettle, pokeweed, pigweed or lamb's quarters, black mustard. Young milkweed is better
than spinach, and also makes an excellent salad. Probably all the salad leaves could
be cooked to advantage. Rhubarb leaves and horseradish tops are garden greens usually
neglected most unfairly
Osage Orange (maclura aurantiaca) s generally supposed
to be poison, and is described in Webster's dictionary as "a hard and inedible
fruit," but I have found one kind, at least, superior to quinces.
Capsicum or red pepper, licorice (the imports of which have
all been in the hands of one person), camphor, belladonna, henbane, and stramonium
are possible fields for culture; but they are all experiments.
If you are growing poppies for the flowers it might be worth
while to gather some opium, especially if the new process succeeds in separating
morphine directly from the plant.
Caraway seeds, anise, coreander, and sage are common garden
plants that may be sold as drugs.