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CHAPTER VI
WHAT AN ACRE MAY PRODUCE
We have shown what an acre has produced. You must figure
out for yourself what you can make your acres produce and what the product can be
sold for.
All progress in agriculture has come heretofore through experiments,
made mostly by uninformed and untrained men. What may not be done by practical learning
and applied intelligence?
The wonderful recent advances have been made in just that
way.
"The modern improved methods in agriculture, known collectively
as intensive farming, have nearly all had their origin in the hands of truck farmers
and market gardeners. No class of the rural population is more alert in utilizing
the newest researches and discoveries in all lines of agricultural science, and none
keeps in closer touch with the agricultural colleges and experiment stations."
("Development of the Trucking Interests," by F. S. Earle.)
Still, it is not advisable for the ordinary city dweller,
however intelligent, without other means and without either experience or study,
to cast himself upon a small patch of ground for a living; but if he can give it
most of his time mornings and evenings, or if he sees, as many do, that he will be
forced out of a position, it would be well for him seriously to consider intensive
cultivation as a resource.
It would be the greatest blessing to our day laborers if
they could secure an acre of land which they could till in conjunction with their
other labor. If time and change 90 works upon society as to put the laborer out of
a job, he will be safe in his acre home and can live from it and be happy and contented.
The time required to cultivate an acre is much less than
is generally supposed.
The maximum time required seems to be that given in the University
of Illinois Experiment Station at Urbana, Bulletin 61, by J. W. Lloyd, at the rate
of 140 hours (say 14 days) with one horse and 250 hours (say 25 days) for hand labor.
With a great variety of crops, or with poor labor add one half to this time allowance.
The results vary greatly.
An acre of northeastern Long Island will produce 250 to 400
bushels of potatoes at a selling price of fifty to seventy five cents per bushel,
which wholesale, at those figures much below present prices, bring an income of $125
to $300 to the grower. The actual cash outlay in one instance was:
| Seed Potatoes |
$10.00
|
| Commercial Fertilizer |
13.00
|
| Spraying for blight and pests |
4.00
|
| TOTAL |
$27.00
|
| 250 bu. selling at the minimum price |
$125.00
|
| Less the cash outlay |
27.00
|
| Income to the grower from an acre |
$98.00
|
A production of 400 bushels costs no more cash outlay per
acre, while the income is big wages to the farmer.
(If but one acre be grown and hand labor
is used, the labor might cost an average of $40 per acre, with wages at $1.35 to
$1.50 per day, and if the produce is shipped any distance by rail and consigned,
it would cost $40 to $50 to pay selling charges, leaving you a profit of about $30
per acre on this crop. Other crops in the rotation might not be so profitable, hence
it is not fair to figure an income on one. But, of course, in the above estimate,
we are considering mainly the cases where the gardener does the work and earns the
wages himself.
An acre will bear if devoted to each crop, of:
| Blackberries, 10,000 qt., which at 7¢ a qt., would bring |
$700.00
|
| Dewberries, 9,000 qt., say at 7¢ a qt. |
630.00
|
| Gooseberries, 250 bu. at $2.00 a bu. |
500.00
|
| Strawberries, 8,000 qt. at 5¢ a qt. |
400.00
|
| Currants, 3000 plants yield 6000 bu. |
200.00
|
| Raspberries, per acre |
200.00
to 600.00
|
| Peaches, per acre |
200.00
to 400.00
|
| Pears, per acre |
200.00
to 500.00
|
| Apples, per acre |
100.00
to 500.00
|
| Grapes |
100.00
|
Five, or even three acres will give a good living if this
can be approximated:
An acre will produce in vegetables--either
| Asparagus, 3000 bunches at 20¢ a bunch, would be |
$600.00
|
| Cauliflower, 100 to 300 bbl. at $1.50, say |
450.00
|
| Onions, 600 bu. at 75¢ per bu. |
450.00
|
| Cabbage Seed, 1000 lb., at 40¢ a lb. |
400.00
|
| Brussels sprouts, 3000 qt. at 10¢ a qt. |
300.00
|
| Celery, 600 bunches at 5¢ a bunch |
300.00
|
| Parsnips, 300 bu. at 1.00 a bu. |
300.00
|
| Lettuce, 9000 heads at 3¢ a head |
270.00
|
| Lima Beans, 50 bu. at $5.00 a bu. |
250.00
|
We may hope to get from an acre, respectively in
| Potatoes, 300 bu. at 75¢ a bu, would be |
$225.00
|
| Cabbages, 20 tons at $10.00 a ton |
200.00
|
| Carrots and Beets, 200 to 400 bu |
150.00
|
| Tomatoes, 200 crates at 75¢ a crate |
150.00
|
| Early Peas, 50 bu. at $2000 a bu. |
100.00
|
| Turnips, 400 bu. at 25¢ a bu |
100.00
|
| Spinach, 100 bbl. at 50¢ a bbl. |
50.00
|
Mr. D. L. Hartman, whose experience in the North is given
on a later page, has since moved to Little River, Florida. He writes in 1917:
"I have recently sold the last strawberries of a small
plot. Owing to a combination of circumstances it produced, I think, the largest value
per area of any crop I have ever cultivated. The main factors were high prices realized
and heavy yield.
Area of plot, a trifle over one fifth acre. Total yield,
2295 quarts, total receipts, $ 4703.80.
First berries picked January 2nd; last berries picked June
26th; Variety, Brandywine.
"This shows a yield of 11,107 quarts per acre worth
at the same rate, $3398.00.
"The fruit was all sold to stores in Miami (five miles
distant) and brought an average you notice of 30-2/3 cents per quart for the crop,
the highest bringing fifty cents per quart. The average price during the ordinary
seasons is about twenty cents per quart. My ordinary average yield is less than half
of this yield or about 5000 quarts per acre, and that is much above the average of
most yields of other growers. The crop was started with northern plants, set just
as for matted rows in the North, then early in November plants were dug up and set
out in order in rows 12 inches apart and 8-1/2 inches apart in the row, leaving every
fifth row vacant for paths. It is super close culture; one plant per square foot
for the total area or a little more.
"I often think that if I were operating in the North
again I would like to try strawberries the same way, except that I would do the transplanting
September 1st instead of November 1st as here, since I would expect them to grow
larger and of course I would plan to mulch them during the winter. It would take
a lot of planting but I think it would insure a tremendous yield. I find that the
digging and planting including watering of 1500 plants makes ten hours' work with
elimination of all waste motion."
You will not get as good results as Mr. Hartman's average,
unless you learn as much as he has learned; he has succeeded by well-directed work
in different places and circumstances
The South and West are not the only places in the United
States where a man can live on one acre of ground, by intensive culture and with
irrigation. The Eastern and Middle States can present just as good, if not better,
opportunities, especially where land in small tracts is available near the large
cities.
(The Farmers' Advocate (Topeka,
Kansas) says of lands which ten years ago were among the much advertised "abandoned
farms" of the eastern states: "All over the eastern states where farming
twenty years ago was pronounced a failure under Western competition there has sprung.
up this intensive cultivation. Violets are grown in one place and tuberoses by the
acre in another. Celery is making one man's large profit near Williamsburg. Special
fruits are cultivated. Currants are grown by the ton and sold by the pound, yielding
a profit. This is in progress over the entire range of farming."
At Hyde Park, a little village three miles north of Reading,
Pa., there is a small farm owned by Oliver R. Shearer, who may be said to be one
of the most successful farmers in the United States. This farm contains 3-1/2 acres,
only 2-1/2 of which are cultivated, but they yield the owner annually from $1200
to $1500. From the profits of his intensive farming, Mr. Shearer has paid $3800 for
his property, which, besides the land, consists of a modern two-story brick house,
with barn, chicken-yard, and orchard, the whole surrounded by a neat fence. He has
also raised and educated a family of three children.
There are no secrets, Mr. Shearer says, about his method
of farming. A study of conditions, the application of common-sense methods and untiring
energy, he asserts, will enable others to do what he has done, but that most men
would kill themselves with the work.
In an agricultural exchange a small farmer tells that he
makes a living and saves some money from a ten-acre farm. Before he was through paying
for his land, which cost $100 an acre, building his house, fences, and outbuildings,
he went in debt $1300, having about the same amount to start with. He is near a good
market, and in five years has paid off the debt, and has been getting ahead ever
since. He raises poultry and small fruits, and says that it is a good combination,
as most of the work with poultry comes in winter, while he can do nothing out of
doors. He maintains that a ten-acre farm rightly managed will bring a good living,
including the comforts and some of the luxuries of life, and says: "This I have
fully demonstrated, and what I have done others may do."
Maxwell's Talisman says:
"E. J. O'Brien of Citronelle, Alabama, received $170
clear from an acre of cucumbers shipped to the St. Louis market. He was two weeks
late in getting them on the market. He says those two weeks would have meant nearly
double the net returns. He does not consider this an extraordinary return and hopes
to do better next year."
"Professor Thomas Shaw writes of a plot of ordinary
ground in Minnesota comprising the nineteenth part of an acre, which for years kept
a family of six matured persons abundantly supplied with vegetables all the year,
with the exception of potatoes, celery, and cabbage. In addition, much was given
away, more especially of the early varieties, and in many instances much was thrown
away."
"In the market-gardens of Florida we see such crops
as 445 to 600 bushels of onions per acre, 400 bushels of tomatoes, 700 bushels of
sweet potatoes; which testify to a high development of culture."
We select from Bailey's "Principles of Vegetable Gardening"
the following general estimates:
Beets--Average crop is 300-400 bushels per acre.
Carrots--Good crop is 200-300 bushels per acre.
Cabbage--8000 heads per acre.
Potatoes--The yield of potatoes averages about 75
bushels per acre, but with forethought and good tillage and some fertilizer the yield
should run from 200 to 300 bushels, and occasionally yields will much exceed the
latter figure.
Rhubarb--From 2 to 5 stalks are tied in a bunch for
market, and an acre should produce 3000 dozen bunches.
Salsify--Good crop 200-300 bushels per acre.
Onions--A good crop of onions is 300-400 bushels to
the acre, but 600-800 are secured under the very best conditions.
The price per ton for horseradish varies from ten to fifty
dollars, and from two to four tons should be raised on an acre, the latter quantity
when the ground is deep and rich and when the plants do not suffer for moisture.
Averages are very misleading and it would be better to pay
little attention to them. They are like the average wealth possessed by a class of
twenty schoolchildren. The schoolmaster who had $20 asked what was the average wealth
of each, if the total wealth of the class was $20. The brightest boy answered, "One
dollar." The schoolmaster asked Tommy at the foot of the class if he did not
think they would be a prosperous class. He answered, "It depends on who has
the 'twenty.'"
But, all the more, good averages imply some wonderful yields.
The following are actual averages in the United States Twelfth and Thirteenth Census
Report, respectively.
Flowers and plants, $2014 and $1911; nursery products, $170
and $261; sugar cane, $87 (4 tons per acre) and $5540; small fruits, $81 and $110;
hops, $72 (885 lb. per acre) and $175; sweet potatoes, $37 (79 but per acre) and
$55; hemp, $34 (794 lb. per acre) and $54; potatoes, $33 (96 bu. per acre) and $45;
sugar beets, $30 (7 tons per acre) and $54; sorghum cane, $21 (1 ton per acre) and
$23; cotton, $15 (4-10 bale per acre) and $25.70 flaxseed, $9 (9 bu. per acre) and
$14; cereals, $8 and $11.40.
Specialties, however, often do much better. For example,
R. B. Handy, in Farmers' Bulletin No. 60, United States Department of Agriculture,
tells us that a prominent and successful New Jersey grower says:
"I cannot give the cost in detail of establishing asparagus
beds, as so much would depend upon whether one had to buy the roots, and upon other
matters. Where growers usually grow roots for their own planting the cost is principally
the labor, manure, and the use of land for two years upon which, however, a half
crop can be had.
" The cost of maintaining a bed can only be estimated
per acre as follows:
| Manure (applied in the spring) |
$25.00
|
| Labor, plowing, cultivating, hoeing, etc |
20.00
|
| Cutting and bunching |
40.00
|
| Fertilizer (applied after cutting) |
15.00
|
|
Total
|
$100.00
|
"An asparagus bed well established, say five years after
planting, when well cared for should, for the next ten or fifteen years, yield from
1800 to 2000 bunches per annum, or at 10 cents per bunch (factory price) $180 to
$200."
"If the rent, labor, etc., for a crop of asparagus is
$200 per acre, and the crop is three tons of green shoots at $100 per ton, on the
farm, the profit is $100 per acre. If we get six tons at $100 per ton, the profit,
less the extra cost of labor and manure, is $400 per acre." ("Food for
Plants," by Harris and Myers, page 19.)
Around Bethlehem, Indiana, the farmers raise hundreds of
tons of sunflower seed every year, and the industry pays better than anything else
in the farming line. A good deal of the seed is made into condition powder for stock,
occasionally some is made into so-called "olive oil" which is said to surpass
cotton-seed oil. Large quantities are used for feeding parrots and poultry, or consumed
by the Russian Hebrews who eat them as we would eat peanuts.
A careful investigation made in 1898 of the value of certain
productions taken from farms in New York State shows that the culture of apples is
very profitable. From twenty adjoining farms in one neighborhood in western New York,
the report gave an average annual return of $85 per acre at the orchard, covering
a period of five years. Another report gave an average of $110 annual income per
acre for three years, and these results were obtained where only ordinary care was
given to the orchard. But note this.--
One orchard, where the trees had been well sprayed to protect
the fruit from insect injuries, and the soil well cultivated and properly fertilized,
gave a return in one year of $700 per acre, and for three years an average income
of $400 per acre.
One man bought a farm of 100 acres in Central New York with
a much-neglected orchard upon it of 30 acres, paying $5000 for the whole. He cultivated
the orchard, pruned and sprayed the trees thoroughly, and in seven months from the
time he purchased the farm, sold the apple crop from it for $6000 cash.
"Peanuts: Culture and Uses," by R. B. Handy in
Farmers' Bulletin No. 25 of the United States Department of Agriculture says:
"According to the Census the average yield of peanuts
in the United States was 17.6 bushels per acre, the average in Virginia being about
20, and in Tennessee 32 bushels per acre. This appears to be a low average, especially
as official and semiofficial figures give 50 to 60 bushels as an average crop, and
100 bushels is not an uncommon yield. Fair peanut land properly manured and treated
to intelligent rotation of crops should produce in an ordinary season a yield of
50 bushels to the acre and from 1 to 2 tons of excellent hay. (Of course better land
with more liberal treatment and a favorable season will produce heavier crops, the
reverse being true of lands which have been frequently planted with peanuts without
either manuring or rotation of crops.) Besides the amount of peanuts gathered, there
are always large quantities left in the ground which have escaped the gathering,
and on these the planter turns his herd of hogs, so that there is no waste of any
part of the plant."
Tobacco is a paying crop if the soil is just right. Two thousand
pounds per acre can be raised on favorable sites. Connecticut tobacco brings, in
ordinary times, from twenty to thirty cents a pound; from four to over six hundred
dollars being the possible return.
Some Connecticut soils raise Sumatra tobacco equal to the
imported crop that sells in this country at fancy prices. The Department of Agriculture
claims that the Cuban type of tobacco can be closely approximated in Pennsylvania
and Ohio. But it must be remembered that the soil is of paramount importance in tobacco
raising. The Department has prepared soil maps of most of the important tobacco districts
of the United States. If you think your land may be suited to tobacco, apply there
for information. You may make your land invaluable.
D. L. Hartman, Rural New Yorker, gave the following
facts and figures: " During last season the sales from one acre of early tomatoes
amounted to $454, and from a trifle more than two and one half acres, including the
acre of 'earlies,' the remainder mid-season and late plantings, the total sales amounted
to over $900. From a little less than one acre and a half $555 worth of strawberries
were sold, while the returns from early cabbages during the last few years have been
at the rate of about $300 per acre. These statements are not made in the spirit of
challenge. The results are gratifying to me, because larger than anticipated; but
much greater values can be and are produced. In fact, the limit of value that may
be grown on an acre of land no one can tell. I have a small plot of ground containing
less than one sixth of an acre, planted one year with radishes and lettuce, followed
by eggplant and cauliflower, and the next year to radishes alone, followed by egg-plant,
and each year the total sales amounted to over $200, at the rate of $1200 per acre.
Greatly exceeding even this was a smaller plot, measuring 20 X 65 feet, last year,
planted first to pansies, plants sold when in bloom, followed by radishes, of which
one half proved to be a worthless variety (it lay idle long enough to have produced
another crop of radishes), then half was planted to late lettuce, the other half
being sown for winter cabbage, plants yielding no cash return. Yet the total sales
for the season from this small plot, less than one thirty-second of an acre, was
$86.78 at the rate of the surprising sum of $2780 per acre, and could easily have
been raised to the rate of $4,000, and that without the use of any glass whatever,
Truly the possibilities of the soil are unknown."
The cooperative features used by Northeastern Long Island
intensive farmers are worthy of imitation. In the community of Riverhead a club buys
at wholesale rates commodities which the farm and household require. The club does
a large business, and has a high rating in the commercial agencies. In another instance
at Riverhead an association markets the crop of cauliflower, sending cars of such
produce to Cincinnati and Chicago. These are the best forms of cooperation.
"In the market-gardening sections the banks show prosperity.
In the towns of Riverhead and Southold there are savings banks with deposits of $4,000,000
each, and five business banks which are doing a thriving business. In this stretch
of thirty miles on eastern Long Island the farms are mostly free from encumbrance
of any kind.
" It should be noted, however, that their towns have
the open Sound with its bays which furnish open ways for transportation and an unowned
field for work." (From circular of the Long Island Guild of New York City.)
CHAPTER VII
SOME METHODS
We must not put all our time into one crop unless we are
rich enough to do our own insurance; for drought, or damp) or accident, ill-adapted
seed, or general unfavorable conditions may make failures of one or more crops. But
in variety and succession of crops is safety and profit. In order to succeed, crop
must be made to follow crop, so that the ground is used to its full capacity. To
leave it fallow for even a week is to invite weeds and to lose much of the advantage
of tillage, as well as so much time.
In the North, seeds of many kinds should be sown from the
first of March to the first of August; in the South they should be sown m every month.
By following the simple time tables for planting you will
find work ready and crops maturing and ready for sale in every month in the year.
There is an admirable table of the time to plant, given in
" How to Make a Vegetable Garden," though it does embrace some weird vegetables,
explaining, for instance, that pats-choi is used like chards," and that "Scolymus
is sowed like Scorzonera."
One can live while waiting for the crops to come up, for
many crops mature rapidly.
Specialties give employment only during a few months of each
year and bring returns only at periods of the year, but the returns can be made almost
immediate and the work almost continuous.
Long Island and Jersey farmers in marketing their crops sell
| Spinach and Radishes |
in April |
| Peas, Early Onions, and Lettuce |
in May |
| Asparagus and Strawberries |
in June |
| Tomatoes, Cucumbers, and Cabbage Seeds |
in July |
| Early Potatoes, Peaches, and Beans |
in August |
| Onions and Potatoes |
in September |
| Celery |
in October |
| Cauliflower |
in November |
| Cauliflower and Brussels Sprouts |
in December |
| Cauliflower and Brussels Sprouts |
in January |
| Brussels Sprouts |
in February |
| Brussels Sprouts |
in March |
This order of crops can be varied to suit conditions.
"The old practice of growing vegetables in beds usually
entails more labor and expense than the crop is worth; and it has had the effect
of driving more than one boy from the farm. These beds always need weeding on Saturdays,
holidays, circus days, and the Fourth of July. Even if the available area is only
twenty feet wide, the rows should run lengthwise and be far enough apart (from one
to two feet for small stuff) to allow of the use of the hand wheelhoes, many of which
are very efficient. If land is available for horse tillage, none of the rows should
be less than thirty inches apart, and for late growing things, as large cabbage,
four feet is better. If the rows are long, it may be necessary to grow two or three
kinds of vegetables in the same row; in this case it is important that vegetables
requiring the same general treatment and similar length of season be grown together.
For example, a row containing parsnips and salsify, or parsnips, salsify, and late
carrots would afford an ideal combination; but a row containing parsnips, cabbages,
and lettuce would be a very faulty combination. One part of the area should be set
aside for all similar crops. For example, all root crops might be grown on one side
of the plot, all cabbage crops in the adjoining space, all tomato and eggplant crops
in the center, all corn and tall things on the opposite side. Perennnial crops, as
asparagus and rhubarb, and gardening structures, as hotbeds and frames, should be
on the border, where they will not interfere with the plowing and tilling."
("Principles of Vegetable Gardening," page 31.)
Usually where large acreages are worked there is a tendency
to devote a greater portion of tile land to one crop and sometimes a failure in this
crop will mean ruin to the farmer, whereas, where small areas are used, there is
generally a diversity of the higher-priced crops and a failure in one is not so likely
to be disastrous.
To get the greatest production from the soil two crops can
be grown in the same soil at the same time--one of which will mature much earlier
than the other, thereby giving its place up just about the period of growth when
the second crop would need more room. This is known as companion cropping.
"In companion cropping there is a main crop and a secondary
crop. Ordinarily the main crop occupies the middle part and later part of the season.
The secondary crop matures early in the season, leaving the ground free for the main
crop. In some cases the same species is used for both crops, as when late celery
is planted between the rows of early celery.
Following are examples of some companion crops:
Radishes with beets or carrots. The radishes can be sold
before the beets need the room.
Corn with squashes, citron, pumpkin, or beans in hills.
Early onions and cauliflower or cabbage.
Horseradish and early cabbage.
Lettuce with early cabbage." ("Principles of Vegetable
Gardening," page 184.)
If fruit trees be planted, vegetables may be grown in rows.
As soon as the early vegetables mature they are removed, and a midsummer crop planted.
These are followed by a fall or winter crop.
Radishes, lettuce, and cabbage grow at the same time and
on the area formerly used for one crop. Early potatoes and early cauliflower are
followed by Brussels sprouts and celery, two crops being as easily grown as one by
intelligent handling. The best beans are grown among fruit trees.
The principles of "double-cropping" are summarized
by Professor Thomas Shaw, in The Market Garden.
"Onion sets may be planted early in the season and onion
seeds may then be sown. Between the rows cauliflower may be planted. Later between
the cauliflower, two or three cucumber seeds may be dropped. The onion sets up around
the cauliflower may be taken out first, and the cauliflowers in turn may be removed
in time to let the cucumbers develop.
"Midway between the rows of onions grown from seeds,
we can plant radishes, lettuce, peppergrass, spinach, or some other early relish,
which will have ample time to grow and to be consumed before harm can come to the
onions from the shade of any one of these crops. When the onions are well grown,
turnips can be sown midway between their rows."
So we get two crops of onions, besides cauliflowers, cucumbers,
and turnips off the same place. Weeds won't have much chance in soil treated like
that.
"Multum in Parvo Gardening" (Samuel Wood) claims
£620 ($3100) from one acre by the expenditure of considerable capital in growing
fruit against brick walls--it cost over $3100 to prepare the land, of which the walls
cost $2300. In this system the fruit trees are pruned and trained till they look
like firemen's ladders.
"In the suburbs of Paris, even without such costly things
with only thirty-six yards of frames for seedlings, vegetables are grown in the open
air to the value of £200 per acre." ("Fields, Factories and Workshops,"
page 80.)
"At the present time, for fully 100 miles along the
Rhone, and in the lateral valleys of the Ardeche and the Drome, the country is an
admirable orchard, from which millions" worth of fruit is exported, and the
land attains the selling price of from £325 ($1625) to £400 ($2000) the
acre. Small plots of land are continually reclaimed for culture upon every crag."
(Same, page 133.)
In California we hear (from George P. Keeney) that while
good truck and fruit lands usually sell for $25 to $350 per acre, the land with full-bearing
fruit or nut trees often sells at $1000, and even up to $2000 per acre. There is
no reason why any intelligent persons should not make their land increase in the
same way.
The London Daily News reports that in one year, which was
not a good season for all crops, on a half acre of land, Mr. Henry Vincent, of Brighton,
England, raised the following products:
2660 cabbages, 70 bushels spinach, 950 cauliflowers, parsley,
1460 lettuces, 660 broccoli, 16 bushels potatoes, 19-1/4 bushels Brussels sprouts,
106-1/2 gallons peas, 120 gallons artichokes, flowers, 267 vegetable marrows, 2976
carrots, 264 bundles radishes, 14 gallons French beans, 12 gallons currants' 95-1/2
punnets mustard, 27 pounds mushrooms, rhubarb, 948 bushels sprout tops, 38 dozen
leeks, 1150 plants, 11-1/4 gallons broad beans, 97 bundles sea-kale, 978 bundles
of asparagus-kale, 504 beet roots, 2913 gallons gooseberries, 219 bundles mint, 20
bundles sage, 18 bundles of fennel, thyme, besides one cartload of stones.
Mr. Vincent explains how he came to go into intensive cultivation:
"A few years ago the doctors said if I did not go out more I could not live.
Very well, just at that time there was an outcry about the land not paying for cultivation.
I could not understand this, for as a boy at seven years of age I had to go out to
farm work, therefore I never went to school. Anyhow I thought something was very
wrong if the land would not pay; so, to compel myself to go out in the fresh air,
I took an allotment on the Sussex Downs to work in the early morning before my daily
duties began. I might say that I am a waiter, and have been in my present situation
forty years, so you can understand I could not know much of land or garden work I
could not see my way clear in the few spare hours I get to take more than half an
acre of land to garden early, especially as I started knowing practically nothing
about such work, but I can manage to do my half acre all alone.
"My garden is situated on the Brighton Race Hill ridge,
and twelve years ago it was but four inches of soil on chalk, but I now have a foot
of soil on the whole of the half acre, and year by year my profits increase.
"Yes, get the men to stop on the land in this country.
We ought not to have workhouses. Every man could live, and live well, if he could
get the land, and would work it as it should be worked.
"Farmers and landowners grumble because the land does
not pay. Now for the fault. It is quite evident it is not the land, therefore, it
must be the fault of the man. Very well, get the land from these landed proprietors,
by sale preferred, and let it out to men, not by 1000 acres, as no man can farm well
a thousand acres in England; let the farms be greatly reduced, and then the land
can be treated as it should be. Most of us have children, and we all know how we
love and treat them. Treat the land in the same manner, feed it, and keep it clean,
and you will have no cause to complain. The land of old England is as good as it
ever was.
"I have serious thoughts of opening a kind of school
for people who would like to make $500 a year on an acre. It is to be done, and done
easily. I do know that one man alone can manage two acres, and at the end of this
year I shall be able to tell how much more he can manage alone, so under my system
one can gain £4 a week off two acres and do all one's self.
"If the land will produce over one hundred pounds per
year per acre, is it not wrong for a man to have, say, 500 or 1000 acres which in
no way can he properly manage; as, in the first place, he cannot feed such an acreage,
let alone keep it clean and gather in his crops?"
In truth, what an acre may produce depends on time, place,
and circumstances The product of the best acre of land so situated that its product
could be sold at retail in a near-by market, and which has been cultivated under
the best management for a term of years, would provide a very comfortable living.
The product of other acres, measured by what they produce to the cultivator in living,
declines through various grades down to almost nothing on the acre far from railroads
or difficult of access.
While in quantity and quality the least favored acre could
be made to produce as much as one best situated, yet, almost none of its production
would be available to sell, while the product of the favorably located acre could
be sold as rapidly as grown.
CHAPTER VIII
THE KITCHEN GARDEN
The aim of the kitchen garden is to provide an abundance
and variety of food for the family. As the object of the cultivator is to get the
largest product for his labor, he ought to produce all that he can consume on the
least possible area. Though one may go into mushrooms or frog raising as a money
crop, the kitchen garden is the first indispensable and should first be given attention.
For a garden choose a piece of land with a southern exposure,
sheltered on the north and west by woods, buildings, hedge, or any kind of a windbreak.
This arrangement will give the earliest garden, for it gets all the sun there is.
By running the rows north and south, the rays of the sun strike the eastern side
of the row in the morning, and the western side in the afternoon.
The best time to take hold of a piece of land is in the fall,
because then it can be plowed ready for the spring planting. The alternate freezing
and thawing during the winter breaks up the sod and the stiff lumps thrown up by
the plow, so rendering the soil pliable and easily worked. This is especially true
of land that has been reclaimed from the forest, or which has not been farmed for
many years.
Before the plowing is done, the land for the garden should
be manured at the rate of twenty-five large wagon loads to the acre. If you can get
a suitable plot that has been in red clover, alfalfa, soy beans, or cowpeas for a
number of years, so much the better. These plants have on their roots nitrogen-fixing
bacteria, which draw nitrogen from the air. Nitrogen is the great meat-maker and
forces a prolonged and rapid growth of all vegetables.
After manuring and plowing, harrow repeatedly with a disk
or cutaway harrow until the soil is as fine as dust. Then you have a seed bed which
will give the fine roots a chance to grow as soon as the seeds sprout. Too much stress
cannot be laid upon the importance of thoroughly working the soil at this time. Every
stone, weed, or clod that is left in the soil destroys to that extent the source
from which the plants can get their food.
A quarter-acre garden, which is big enough to supply the
whole family with a succession of vegetables for summer and fall, as well as some
potatoes and turnips for winter, will take a diligent workman about four days to
dig over and three days to plant. The four days' work of digging will need to be
done only once. The time spent upon planting succession crops will depend upon the
amount of the garden reserved for rotation. The part kept for lettuce, radishes,
spinach, beets, Swiss chard, peas, string and wax beans may be digged over in a favorable
season for three successive plantings, while the part devoted to early potatoes would
need to be digged only twice--once when the planting is done, and again when crop
is gathered and the ground be prepared for a crop of late cabbage or turnips. A planting
table for vegetables, which is complete and comprehensive, is distributed free by
the National Emergency Food Garden Commission at Washington, D.C.
It is far more important to plant seeds at the proper depth
than that they should be planted thinly or thickly, for if they are planted too thin,
it makes a sort of advantage by giving the individual plants ample room to develop
to large size; and if planted too thick, the evil can easily be remedied by thinning
or transplanting.
After the seeds come up, the size of almost all the vegetables
can be increased by transplanting, in favorable soil, which gives each plant room
for complete development.
It is too expensive to risk part of the land being unused
or half used on account of seeds dying, or to put in so many seeds in order to insure
growth that they will crowd one another. Where possible, therefore, seeds should
be sprouted and planted, not "sown."
Lima beans planted on edge with eye down will come up much
sooner than if dropped in carelessly so they have to turn themselves over. In a small
garden the time saved by such planting will repay the extra trouble.
In some things like onions and radishes, however, it is better
to sow them thick, and then thin them out, so as to get the effect of transplanting
without so much labor. In others, like lettuce and all the salad plants, transplanting
gives new life and energy and develops the individual plants in a way that will astonish
those not familiar with what free development means.
It is wise to plant corn after lettuce and radishes are gathered,
and more lettuce, corn, or salad, after the beans are picked. Then late crops, cabbage,
cauliflower or spinach, can go where early corn grew, so that the small patch may
earn your living and pay big dividends.
Do not let two vegetables of the same botanical family follow
each other. For instance, lima beans should not follow green beans or peas, as all
the family draw about the same elements from the soil, and are likely to have the
same insects and diseases.
Do not plant cucumbers, squash, or pumpkins too near each
other, as they will often inter-impregnate and produce uneatable hybrids.
Decide what you are going to do with your crop before you
plant it, whether to sell it, at wholesale or at retail, to eat it, or to feed it
to stock.
C. E. Hunn, in the Garden Magazine, gives the following arrangement:
"For the beginner who wants to get fresh vegetables and fruits from May until
midwinter, a space 100 X 200 feet is enough.
"1. Plant in rows, not beds, and avoid the backache.
"2. Plant vegetables that mature at the same time near
one another.
"3. Plant vegetables of the same height near together--tall
ones back.
"4. Run the rows the short way, for convenience in cultivation
and because one hundred feet of anything is enough.
"5. Put the permanent vegetables (asparagus, rhubarb,
sweet herbs) at one side, so that the rest will be easy to plow.
"6. Practice rotation. Do not put vines where they were
last. Put corn in a different place. The other important groups for rotation are
root crops (including potatoes and onions); cabbage tribe, peas and beans, tomatoes,
eggplant and pepper, salad plants.
"7. Don't grow potatoes in a small garden. They aren't
worth the bother.
By training on trellis or wire, the smaller fruit plantings
can be made much closer.
"If fruits are wanted in the garden, plant a row of
apple trees along the northern border, plums and pears on the western sides, cherries
and peaches on the eastern side. Next the apple trees run a grape trellis; and then
in succession east and west, run a row of blackberries, raspberries, gooseberries,
and currants. These rows, with the apple trees, form a windbreak, and besides adding
to the income, protect the vegetables. Next to the bush fruits, between them and
the ends of the vegetable rows, put rhubarb, asparagus, and strawberries."
Insect pests must be watched for and their destructive work
checked. Ashes, slaked lime, or any kind of dust or powder destroy most insects which
prey on the leaves of plants. The reason for this is that the dust closes the pores
through which the insects breathe. It should therefore be applied when the leaves
are dry.
Cutworms can be destroyed by winter plowing. Rotation of
vegetables will reduce the damage from insects, because each family has its peculiar
bugs. By constant change to new soil, the pests have no opportunity to get a foothold.
With bugs, as with boys, only those who are interested in
them and therefore understand them can manage them. It is fun to study the insects--and
it pays.
Here's another use of "land." Maybe a pool in your
garden or a dam in a little brook in it may help out your home garden bank account.
Of course a pond a few square yards in extent will give even better returns if you
can sell its produce at retail near by.
W. B. Shaw, a seventy-year-old veteran who lost his right
arm during the Civil War, lives in Kenilworth, D. C., and clears $1500 an acre every
year out of mud puddles--if mud puddles can be measured by the acre.
Mr. Shaw is a pond lily farmer, and despite his lack of his
good right arm, he poles his boat about his mud puddles and gathers in the pond lilies.
His is not exactly a "dry farm" and neither wet nor cloudy weather bothers
him. Furthermore, the demand for his pond lilies in Baltimore, Washington, Philadelphia,
and even New York, and Chicago, is greater than he can supply.
Mr. Shaw secured this swamp for almost nothing, as it was
considered worthless. He divided it into fifteen pools with little dams between them,
and rollers on the dams to enable him to drag his boat from one to the other. From
May to late in September he is busy every morning gathering lilies. His average is
about 500 a morning, which he ships in little galvanized iron tanks with wet moss.
Many school children know how to get results on a little
land. Mr. Mahoney, Superintendent of the Fairview Garden School, Yonkers, New York,
estimates that the total value of produce grown on the 250 gardens, composing the
school plot, in all about one and one quarter acres of land, was $1308, or at the
rate of more than a thousand dollars per acre. When it is taken into consideration
that all the labor was done by boys ranging in age from eight to twelve years, this
result is truly astonishing.
What may not adult skilled labor produce when applied freely
to the land.
CHAPTER IX
TOOLS AND EQUIPMENT--SPECIALIZED CROPS
To subdue the land with an ax, a plow and a spade is possible;
millions of acres have been so subdued. This method, however, is the most expensive
of all, as in our times, markets won't wait, and the man who wants to get on must
produce as quickly as possible. To do so, he must have the best tools. They will
pay for themselves many times over in a single year. For the farm, the following
list, in addition to a well-stocked tool chest (hammer, saw, plane, ax, etc.) covers
the indispensible:
| 1 team horses (these may be hired) |
$200.00
|
| 1 walking plow |
10.00
|
| 1 disk or cutaway harrow |
25.00
|
| 1 farm wagon |
50.00
|
| 1 cultivator (two horse) |
25.00
|
| 1 one-horse cultivator |
8.00
|
| Shovels, pick, mattock or grubbing hoe |
10.00
|
| Work harness for two horses |
25.00
|
|
TOTAL
|
$353.00
|
These things you must have to get the land in proper shape
for seeds or plants; but special crops require special tools. A scythe is good to
keep weeds away from fences. A sickle is handy to keep down grass. To reduce living
expenses, a cow for $60, and fifty hens at fifty cents each, say $25, will supply
a large family with milk and eggs. Most people make the mistake of buying too many
things and these poorly selected. It is better to have too few tools than too many,
for tools are often dropped where last used, and so are lost. Then if money is scarce,
you may not be able to make a shelter for your machines and tools, and they will
rust through the winter. Many farmers, through neglect, have to replace their tool
equipment every four or five years, but with attention and care, the original equipment,
even to the team, ought still to be in use twenty years after their purchase. I know
many instances where this is true. The above equipment is the minimum for beginning
work. The character of additions to it will depend much upon the crops which you
select as the money getters.
For general market gardening and the kitchen garden too,
the following tool list, together with the above, will include everything absolutely
necessary.
| Wheel hoe |
$6.00
|
| Spade and fork, each $1.00 |
2.00
|
| Push hoe |
.65
|
| Watering can |
.60
|
| Rake and common hoe |
1.00
|
| Bulb sprayer |
.25
|
| Trowel |
.10
|
|
TOTAL
|
$10.60
|
The wheel hoe is a great saver--of backache, especially to
the beginner; as Warner says, "at the best you will conclude that for gardening
purposes a cast-iron back with a hinge in it is preferable to the ones now in use."
The dibble, an old tool handle, or a bit of broomstick sharpened,
and garden lines to get the rows straight, labels, tomato supports, plant protectors
and stakes earl all be homemade out of old material. The full outfit would include
the following:
| Roller |
$8.00
|
| Wheel-hoe with seeder |
8.50
|
| Sprayer |
3.75
|
| Wheelbarrow |
4.00
|
| Crowbar |
1.50
|
| Weeder |
.35
|
For such crops as admit of horse cultivation a horse hoe
will save a great deal of time.
The weeder is a cousin to the push hoe and has a zigzag blade
for cutting off young weeds which are just starting above ground. It is pushed backward
and forward and cuts both ways. It is very good for soft ground; on a harder patch
use the push hoe.
A market garden is really a big kitchen garden, from which
the cultivator supplies not only his own family, but his neighbors, the public. To
run a successful market garden for profit, land suitably situated near transportation
and markets, a large supply of stable manure, hotbeds for raising plants, crates
for shipping, wagons for delivering, and a complete outfit of tools are necessary.
You must raise all sorts of vegetables and salad plants in quantities sufficiently
large to justify you in giving your whole time to the work. An acre devoted to general
market gardening could be attended to by two men with some extra help for marketing.
To get a place fully established on new, rich land requires
two or three years. On worn-out land it would take longer to build it up to the high
fertility needed for maximum production. Crops like asparagus and rhubarb take two
years to establish on a remunerative basis. If bush fruits are raised, three years
are required to get maximum results. So in starting, land should be bought outright
or leased for ten years.
In market gardening for profit, one acre might be devoted
to vegetables, one acre to small fruits; strawberries, raspberries, blackberries,
currants, gooseberries, etc. and one acre kept for buildings, poultry, etc. An energetic
man could clear one thousand dollars a year besides his living, after he got a start,
and be absolutely independent; that is, unless some predatory railroad corporation
could confiscate his profits before his product reached the market.
Some persons are just naturally so successful with plants
that if they stuck an umbrella in the ground we should expect to see it blossom out
into parasols--but they don't know why it does, and they can't teach any one else
how to do it.
Any fool can sneer at "book farming" or at anything
else, but you can hardly succeed without the best books by practical men. Do not
let some experienced ignoramus talk you out of experimenting under their guidance.
You will learn little without experience, and unless you have the grower's instinct,
you will learn less without books.
Don't be hypnotized by long experience or by success. Hardly
anybody knows his own business. You must have noticed that few of the people you
buy of or sell to, know any more of their goods than you do.
It is just the same with trades. Hardly a barber knows that
he should not shave you against the grain of the skin. Even the cat won't stand being
rubbed up the wrong way; but the barber never thought of that.
We lawyers and the doctors are supposed to be thorough in
our own field--I said lately to one of the ablest men at the New York Bar, "About
one lawyer in a hundred knows his business." He said, "That is a gross
overestimate. Shortly after I talked with three Judges, one of the City Court, one
of the Supreme Court, and one of the United States Circuit, and they each agreed
that my friend's remark was about true, and that in most cases litigants would do
as well without lawyers as with them.
If that is true, what chance is there that an uneducated
man who has "raised garden sass ever since he was a boy, and seen his father
do it before him," can teach you correctly?
Men learn very slowly by experience, because no two experiences
are exactly alike, unless they perceive and apply the principles under the experience.
An intelligent man accustomed to investigation can learn
more about a specialty in a week's study than an untrained practitioner can believe
in a year.
What the untrained teacher can tell us is of little account;
what he shows us is another matter.
Therefore get help who know that they don't know anything
about a garden and who consequently will do with a will exactly what you tell them
to do; such labor is cheap--why should you pay extravagant prices for skill to a
man who has succeeded so poorly that he can only earn day's wages? You can get much
better knowledge at less cost from a book. Study and put your knowledge into practice
yourself, where you see promise of a profit.
Almost every crop can be made a specialty. In proportion
as special crops are profitable when conditions are right, so are they sources of
loss when things go wrong. If, after your first season in the country, some special
crop takes your fancy, give extra space and time to it the second year and see if
you are successful in handling an eighth or a quarter acre. If so, you may extend
your operations as rapidly as purse and market permit.
Before concentrating upon any crop as the chief source of
income, a careful study must be made of all the conditions surrounding its production;
a crop is not produced in the broad meaning of that term until it is actually in
the hands of the consumer.
Potatoes, for instance, are grown by the hundred acres in
sections adapted to their growth, and special machinery costing hundreds of dollars
is used in planting, cultivating, and harvesting the crop. The good shipping and
keeping qualities of the potato enable it to be raised far from markets and so brings
into competition cheap land worked in large areas, with large capital. In spite of
this, however, the small cultivator can usually make money if he can sell his potatoes
directly to the consumer.
If your land is so situated that you can put your individuality
into the crop and can control all the circumstances, preparation of land, planting,
cultivation, harvesting, and marketing, your chances of success are immeasurably
increased. As soon as any important part must be trusted to some one beyond your
control, danger arises. Assiduous care in planting, cultivating, and packing will
avail nothing if the product falls into the hands of transportation companies or
commission merchants indifferent as to what becomes of it. It is therefore better
to be quite independent, sell your own crop, and have the whole operation in your
own hands from the very beginning.
Generally speaking, seed growing for the market is a highly
developed special business which is usually carried on by companies operating with
large capital, able to employ the best experts, and to avail themselves of all the
advantages of scientific methods in culture, regardless of expense. So uncertain
is the business, that even with all these facilities, they rarely guarantee seeds.
It is obvious that the amateur has little chance of succeeding in such a difficult
business. Nevertheless, he will be able after a few seasons of increasing experience
to gather seeds from selected plants and so furnish his own supply. It must be borne
in mind, however, that plants can be improved by cross breeding and that by keeping
a variety too long on the same ground its quality deteriorates, and the plant tends
to revert to the type natural to it before domestication.
When land is cropped every season, the nitrogen, potash,
and phosphorus removed from the soil must be replaced in some form, otherwise you
have diminishing returns, while the expense for labor is the same. In farming small
areas for specialties you cannot easily invoke the principle of rotation by enriching
the land with legumes, to be plowed under while green, the bacteria on the roots
of which gather nitrogen from the air, but you must get stable manure or buy chemical
fertilizers to maintain the fertility.
Special crops divide themselves naturally into two classes:
those raised for immediate shipment to market, and those to be hauled to canneries.
The first type are generally prepared in a more expensive way, and need more care
and attention. Each class requires its own special forms of packing to conform to
market peculiarities fixed by the taste of consumers.
For the cultivation of all specialties, many items of preparation
are identical. Land must be well drained, it must contain a sufficient amount of
humus, or decaying vegetable matter, to make it loose and porous; it must be free
from sticks and stones or any foreign matter likely to impede cultivation or obstruct
growth. The proper formation of a seed bed is a prime prerequisite to successful
cropping. After the land is manured and plowed it should be gone over in all directions
with a disk and smoothing harrow, until it is of a dustlike fineness.
In thorough cultivation before the crop is planted, lies
the secret of many a success, and in its neglect the cause of many failures. Intelligent
handling of crops is in a large measure knowledge of the influence of wind and rain,
sunshine and darkness, on the particular nature of the plant Delicate plants, for
example, ought to be grown where buildings or forests break the force of prevailing
winds. Sheltered valleys in irrigated sections have proved the best for intensive
cultivation. For thousands of years in China and Japan the conditions of successful
intensive cultivation have been well understood, and to-day the most efficient gardeners
are the Chinese. In some parts of Mexico, for the same reasons, intensive cultivation
has reached a high development. In our own West we are catching up on vegetables
and fruits.
CHAPTER X
THE ADVANTAGES FROM CAPITAL
We have seen what a worker with very little money can do
and how he can succeed. A small capital, however, can be used to increase the returns
to as great advantage on a small farm as large capital can be used on a large farm
and with much less risk.
Stable manure is still the favorite article with the masses
of gardeners. One ton of ordinary stable manure contains about 1275 pounds of organic
matter, carrying eight pounds of nitrogen, ten pounds of potash, and four pounds
of phosphoric acid.
When thoroughly rotted, the manure acquires a still larger
percentage of plant food; it is more valuable, not only for that reason, but also
on account of its immediate availability. Further, the mechanical effect of this
manure in opening and loosening the soil, allowing air and warmth to enter more freely,
adds greatly to its value.
It is easily gotten and often goes wholly or in part to waste.
On the outskirts of some towns may be seen a collection of manure piles that have
been hauled out and dumped in waste places. The plant food in each ton of this manure
is worth at least two dollars--that is the least Eastern farmers pay for similar
material, and they make money doing it. Yet almost every liveryman has to pay some
one for hauling the manure away. This is simply because farmers living near these
towns are missing a chance to secure something for nothing--because, perhaps, the
profit is not directly in sight. But from most soils there is a handsome profit possible
from a very small application of stable manure.
While writing this, I saw a man in New Rochelle, N. Y.; dumping
a load of street sweepings into a hole in a vacant lot. It would have been less wasteful
to have dumped a bushel of potatoes into the hole.
Commercial fertilizers are coming more and more in use by
market gardeners, and with reason. If we examine a good fertilizer, analyzing five
per cent available nitrogen, six per cent phosphoric acid, and 8 per cent potash,
we shall find that one ton of it contains, besides less valuable ingredients: 100
lb. nitrogen, 120 lb. phosphoric acid, 160 lb. potash.
Such fertilizers probably retail at forty to sixty dollars
per ton, and are fully worth it. All this plant food, and perhaps one half more,
can be drawn in a single load, while it will take ten such loads of stable manure
to supply the same amount of plant food.
There is no reason to be afraid of too much fertilizer, provided
it is evenly distributed and thoroughly mixed through properly prepared soil. Stinginess
in this item is poor economy.
Nitrogen is the most essential food for plant growth. It
is an important element of plant food in manure. In ordinary manure most of the value
is due to the nitrogen, although phosphoric acid and potash are also present. It
is found in the most available form in nitrate of soda. Nitrate of soda will benefit
all crops, but it does not follow that it will pay to use it on all crops. Its cost
makes it unprofitable to use on cheap crops; but on those that yield a large return
nitrate of soda is a very profitable investment.
"It is shown in the experiments conducted with nitrate
of soda on different crops that in the case of grain and forage crops, which utilized
the nitrate quite as completely as the market garden crops, the increased value of
crops due to nitrate does not in any case exceed $14 per acre, or a money return
at the rate of $8.50 per 100 pounds of nitrate used, while in the case of the market-garden
crops the value of the increased yield reaches, in the case of one crop, the high
figure of over $263 per acre, or at the rate of about $66 per 100 pounds of nitrate."
(New Jersey Agricultural Experiment Stations, page 8, No. 172.)
Professor Voorhees, of the same station, experimented with
tomatoes, with these results:
| Manure and Fertilizer Used |
Cost Per Acre |
Value of Crop |
| No manure |
|
$271.88
|
| 30 tons barnyard manure |
$30.00
|
291.75
|
| 8 tons manure and 400 lb. fertilizer |
15.00
|
317.63
|
| 160 pounds nitrate of soda alone |
4.00
|
361.13
|
Such common crops as tomatoes, cabbage, turnips, beets, etc.,
in order to be highly profitable, must be grown and harvested early; any one can
grow them in their regular season; their growth must be promoted or forced as much
as possible, at the time when the natural agencies are not active in the change of
soil nitrogen into available forms, and the plants must, therefore, be supplied artificially
with the active forms of nitrogen, if a rapid and continuous growth is to be maintained.
It is quite possible to have a return of $50 per acre from
the use of $5 worth of nitrate of soda on crops of high value, as, for example, early
tomatoes, beets, cabbage, etc. This is an extraordinary return for the money and
labor invested; still, if the increased value of the crop were but $10, or even $8,
it would be a profitable investment, since no more land and but little additional
capital was required in order to obtain the extra $5 or $8 per acre.
The results of all the experiments conducted in different
parts of the country and in different seasons, show an average gain in yield of early
tomatoes of about fifty per cent, with an average increased value of crop of about
$100 per acre. The rest of the report shows similar results with other crops. (New
Jersey Agricultural Experiment Station, Bulletin 172.)
Joseph Harris says, "Some years ego we used nitrate
of soda cautiously as a top dressing on the celery plants. The effect was astonishing.
The next year, having more confidence, we spread the nitrate at the time we sowed
the seed, and again after the plant came up, and twice afterward during a rain.
"Instead of finding it difficult to get the plants early
enough for the celery growers who set them out, they were ready three weeks before
tile usual time of transplanting.
"At the four applications, we probably used 1600 lb.
of nitrate of soda per acre, and this would probably furnish more nitric acid to
the plants than they could get from five hundred tons of manure per acre, provided
it had been possible to have worked such a quantity into the soil. Never were finer
plants grown. As compared with the increased value of the plants, the cost of the
nitrate is not worth taking into consideration."
As a means of fertilization without the use of artificial
fertilizer, soil inoculation has come. It has grown out of the discovery of the dependence
of leguminous plants on bacteria which live on their roots. The discovery is one
of the most important of those made in modern agriculture.
It has received its greatest impetus in America, under the
experiments of Professor Moore of the United States Agricultural Department.
The Department supplied free to farmers the bacteria for
inoculation. Now they supply it only for experimental purposes. A laboratory has
been fitted up for the work. The method is to propagate bacteria for each of the
various leguminous plants such as clover, alfalfa, soy beans, cow peas, tares, and
velvet beans. All of these plants are of incalculable value in different sections
of the country as forage for farm animals. In the West, alfalfa is the main reliance
for stockraisers. The farmers of the East are trying to establish it, but meet with
difficulty chiefly for want of the special bacteria which should be found on the
roots.
The function of these bacteria is to gather the nitrogen
of the air and supply it as plant food. Without the bacteria the plant can get only
the nitrogen which is supplied from the soil in fertilizers. With the aid of the
bacteria the growing plant can derive the greater part of its food from the air.
Here is one of the results of the use of inoculated seed
as reported by the United States Agricultural Bulletin No. 214.
G. L. Thomas, experimenting with field peas on his farm near
Auburn, Me., made a special test with fertilized and unfertilized strips, and stated
that "inoculated seed did as much without fertilizers of any kind, as uninoculated
seed supplied with fertilizer (phosphate) at the rate of 800 pounds and a ton of
barnyard manure per acre."
This seems to be only in its infancy. The Department warns
us that nitrogen inoculation is useless where the soil already has enough nitrogen
and where other plant foods are absent.
The experiments are most important, and we are probably on
the eve of as great advances in agriculture as in electricity, but the human race
has a great love for "inoculation," and indeed for all unnatural processes.
You remember the story of the wonderful coon that Chandler
Harris tells? No? They were constantly seeing this enormous coon, but always just
as they almost got their hands on him, he disappeared. One night the boys came running
in to say that the wonderful coon was up in a persimmon tree in the middle of a ten-acre
lot; so they got the dogs and the lanterns and guns and ran out, and sure enough
they saw the wonderful big coon up in a fork of the tree. It was a bright moonlight
night, but to make doubly sure they cut down the tree and the dogs ran in--the coon
wasn't there.
"Well, but, Uncle Remus," said the little boy,
"I thought you said you saw the coon there."
" So we did, Honey," said the old man, " so
we did; but it's very easy to see what ain't there when you're looking for it."
Another method of increasing fertility at increased expense
deserves notice. The vacant public lands are for the most part desert-like, and their
utilization can come about only through irrigation.
This land can be made to produce the finest crops in the
world; and the tremendous volumes of water that flow from the mountains to the sea,
once harnessed and piped or ditched to this land, will transform it into beautiful
gardens and farms.
With the work being done by the United States Government,
and that of the various states, we may look forward in the not distant future to
this land being made habitable to man.
It is well known that with the dry, even climate and with
an abundance of water applied as vegetation needs, this now arid waste is far more
productive than the Eastern states, where the crops are at the mercy of the elements,
sometimes having too much moisture and at other times not having enough.
"Irrigation offers control of conditions such as is
found nowhere except in greenhouse culture. The farmer in the humid country cannot
control the amount of starch in potatoes, sugar in beets, protein in corn, gluten
in wheat, except by planting varieties which are especially adapted to the production
of the desired quality. The irrigation farmer, on the other hand, can produce this
or that desirable quality by the control of the moisture supply to the plant. He
can hasten or retard maturity of the plant, produce early truck or late truck on
the same soil, grow wheat or grow rice as he deems advisable."
"On the irrigated fields of the Vosges, Vaucluse, etc.,
in France, six tons of dry hay becomes the rule, even upon ungrateful soil; and this
means considerably more than the annual food of one milch cow (which can be taken
as a little less than five tons) grown on each acre."
"The irrigated meadows round Milan are another well
known example. Nearly 22,000 acres are irrigated there with water derived from the
sewers of the city, and they yield crops of from eight to ten tons of hay as a rule;
occasionally some separate meadows will yield the fabulous amount--fabulous to-day
but no longer fabulous to- morrow--of eighteen tons of hay per acre; that is, the
food of nearly four cows to the acre, and nine times the yield of good meadows in
this country." ("Fields, Factories, and Workshops," pages 116-117.)
" If irrigation pays "--and no one now questions
that--"the whole Western country of rich soil, which asks but a drink now and
then, will be turned into a Garden of Eden." Maxwell's Talisman.)
Agriculture may be revolutionized with the advent of irrigation.
A new method of disposing of sewage and at the same time
irrigating the soil, has come into use recently, and will be found valuable to those
who are situated so that they can make use of it.
The sewage from buildings is drained into a large tank where
the heavier matter can settle to the bottom. When the water rises nearly to the top
of the tank it is siphoned into another tank, and from there it is piped about the
field.
The piping is very simple--ordinary drain tile conveys the
water. Beginning at the highest point of the field to be irrigated, a six-inch (or
larger) line of tile should be laid along the highest ground with a fall of not over
one inch to each ten feet. From this main trunk should be branch lines of "laterals,"
laid from eight to twelve feet apart, as they would be laid for draining a field.
These branch lines may be laid at an angle to the main trunk as may be most convenient;
all the joints must be covered so as to keep out the flirt. The whole system should
be laid deep enough in the ground to be secure from frost; but to be most effective
it should not be over fourteen to sixteen inches below the surface, hence sub-irrigation
cannot be used very successfully in the Northern states. In a sandy loam soil with
a clay subsoil it works best at sixteen to twenty-four inches.
This is substantially Colonel Waring's method of sewage disposal.
To get the best use of it for plants, the water should be assembled and kept in the
sun for ten to twelve days, then turned into the pipes until the ground is well soaked,
and then shut off and not allowed in the pipes again for ten to fifteen days, according
to the weather and condition of moisture in the soil. The crop should be cultivated
between each watering.
However, as Bailey says, "Evidently in all regions in
which crops will yield abundantly without irrigation, as in the East, the main reliance
is to be placed on good tillage."
"Most vegetable gardeners in the East do not find it
profitable to irrigate. Now and then a man who has push and the ability to handle
a fine crop to advantage, finds it a very profitable undertaking." ("Principles
of Vegetable Gardening," page 174.) Bailey, however, was not thinking of "overhead
irrigation."
The late J. M. Smith, Green Bay, Wisconsin, was one of the
expert market gardeners of his region. "The longer I live," wrote Mr. Smith,
then in the midst of a serious drought, "the more firmly am I convinced that
plenty of manure and then the most complete system of cultivation make an almost
complete protection against ordinary droughts." (Same, page 330.)
If the soil is cultivated carefully and intensively, it will
hold water within itself and carry a storage reservoir underneath the growing crop.
Finely pulverizing and packing the seed bed, makes it retain the greatest possible
percentage of the moisture that falls, just as a tumbler full of fine sponge or of
birdshot will retain many times the amount of water that a tumbler full of buckshot
will. The atmosphere quickly drinks up the moisture from the soil unless we Prevent
it. This we do by means of a soil "blanket," called a "mulch "
This finely pulverized surface largely prevents the moisture below from evaporating,
and at the same time keeps the surface in such condition that it readily absorbs
the dew and the showers. Water moves in the soil as it does in a lamp wick, by capillary
attraction; the more deeply and densely the soil is saturated with moisture, the
more easily the water moves upward, just as oil "climbs up" a wet wick
faster than it does a dry one. One can illustrate the effect of this fine soil "mulch"
in preventing evaporation by placing some powdered sugar on a lump of loaf sugar
and putting the lump sugar in water. The powdered sugar will remain dry even when
the lump has become so thoroughly saturated that it crumbles to pieces.
"We have no useless American acres," said Secretary
Wilson. "We shall make them all productive. We have agricultural explorers in
every far corner of the world; and they are finding crops which have become so acclimated
to dry conditions, similar to our own West, that we shall in time have plants thriving
upon our so-called arid lands. We shall cover this arid area with plants of various
sorts which will yield hundreds of millions of tons of additional forage and grains
for Western flocks and herds. Our farmers will grow these upon land now considered
practically worthless."
In this way it has been estimated that in the neighborhood
of one hundred million acres of the American desert can be reclaimed to the most
intensive agriculture. (See a study of the possible additions to available land in
Prof. W. S. Thompson's " Population, a Study of Malthusianism,: Col. U, 1915.)
Frederick V. Coville, the chief botanist of the Department of Agriculture, does not
hesitate to say that in the strictly arid regions there are many millions of acres,
now considered worthless for agriculture, which are as certain to be settled in small
farms as were the lands of Illinois.
Land that was thought to be absolute desert has been made
to yield heavy crops of grain and forage by this method without irrigation.
Macaroni wheat will grow with ten inches of rainfall, and
yield fifteen bushels to the acre. This however is less than the average wheat yield
in the United States.
Much can be done by dry farming; that is, by plowing the
soil very deep and cultivating six or eight times a season, thus retaining all the
moisture for the crops and reducing evaporation to a minimum.
There are thousands of acres in different sections of Montana
that grow good crops without irrigation. In Fergus County, for instance, the wonderful
yield of 45 bushels of wheat per acre is grown without irrigation. Heavy crops of
grain and vegetables are grown in the vicinity of Great Falls by the dry farming
system.
The money and time spent in spraying is also well invested.
The New York Agricultural Experiment Station began a ten-year experiment in potato-spraying
to determine how much the yield can be increased by spraying with Pyrox or with Bordeaux
mixture.
In 1904 the gain due to spraying was larger than ever before.
Five sprayings with Bordeaux increased the yield 233 bushels per acre, while three
sprayings increased it 191 bushels. The gain was due chiefly to the prolongation
of growth through the prevention of late blight. The sprayed potatoes contained one
ninth more starch and were of better quality.
The average increase of profit per acre from spraying potatoes
was figured to be about $22 on each acre. The result was arrived at from experiment,
two thirds of which was by independent farmers. (Particulars will be found In Bulletin
No. 264, issued by the Department.)
In fourteen farmers' business experiments, including 18 acres
of potatoes, the average gain due to spraying was 62-1/2 bushels per acre, the average
total cost of spraying 93 cents per acre; and the average net profit, based on the
market price of potatoes at digging time, $24.86 per acre.
"One class of gardeners," Burnet Landreth explains,
"may be termed experimental farmers, men tired of the humdrum rotation of farm
processes and small profits, men looking for a paying diversification of their agricultural
interests. Their expenses for appliances are not great, as they have already on hand
the usual stock of farm tools, requiring only one or two seed drills, a small addition
to their cultivating implements, and a few tons of fertilizers. Their laborers and
teams are always on hand for the working of moderate areas. In addition to the usual
expense of the farm, they would not need to have a cash capital of beyond 20 to 25
dollars per acre for the area in truck."
"Other men, purchasing or renting land, especially for
market gardening, taking only improved land of suitable aspect, soil, and situation,
and counting in cost of building, appliances, and labor, would require a capital
of $80 to $100 per acre. For example, a beginner in market gardening in South Jersey,
on a five-acre patch, would need $500 to set up the business, and run it until his
shipments began to return him money. With the purpose of securing information on
this interesting point, the writer asked for estimates from market gardeners in different
localities, and the result has been that from Florida the reports of the necessary
capital per acre, in land or its rental (not of labor), fertilizers, tools, implements,
seed and all the appliances, average $95, from Texas $45, from Illinois $70, from
the Norfolk district of Virginia the reports vary from $75 to $125, according to
location, and from Long Island, New York, the average of estimates at the east end
is $75, and at the west end $150."
I have before me now one of the roseate advertisements, which
we so often see in the newspapers, telling how fortunes can be made by investing
a few dollars in a tropical plantation in Mexico.
It gives what are supposed to be startling yields per acre,
and yet the returns, which must necessarily be taken with considerable allowance,
are only from $580 to $1087 per acre on various plantations.
There are market gardeners and nurserymen near New York City
who are making their acres produce better returns than this. It is not necessary
to go off into the tropical wilderness seeking a fortune which is usually a gold
brick that some fellow is trying to sell you, when as good results can be secured
right at home.
Market gardeners in and near Philadelphia pay $25 to $50
an acre and upwards rent for land, and work from five to forty acres. This is as
much as similar land in many parts of the country could be bought for. But it is
not a high rent when they are right at the market--one man makes the round trip in
two and one half hours--manure costs them nothing--for years they have been using
the excavations from the old style privy wells, which has been hauled to their farm
and deposited where they wished it, free. They have modern facilities, such as trolley
and telephone, and are as much city men as any clerk in an office. They clear far
higher profits from an acre than the average farmer, raising never less than two,
and often three crops in a season. They employ several men to the acre, and at certain
times many more, working the men in gangs. Only the difficulty of getting good help
at their prices prevents them from using twice the number.
However, the possibilities of putting capital into land at
a profit are still infinite.
What chiefly attracts the gardener to the great cities is
stable manure; this is not wanted so much for increasing the richness of the soil--one
ninth part of the manure used by the French gardeners would do for that purpose--but
for keeping the soil at a certain temperature. Early vegetables pay best, and in
order to obtain early produce, not only the air, but the soil as well, must be warmed;
that is done by putting great quantities of properly mixed manure into the soil;
its fermentation heats it. But with the present development of industrial skill,
heating the soil could be done more economically and more easily by hot-water pipes.
Consequently, the French gardeners begin more and more to make use of portable pipes,
or thermosiphons, provisionally established in the cool frames.
Competition that stands in with the railroads can be met
only by being near the market or having water transportation. Indeed, the erect of
water transportation in getting manure, and in delivering the produce from the railroads,
appears in the early history of trucking. The railroads often crush out boat competition
by absorbing docks and standing in with the commission men. This could be met by
such cooperative selling agencies as the flower growers already have.
"One of the earliest centers for the development of
truck farming in its present sense was along the shores of Chesapeake Bay, where
fast sailing oyster boats were employed for sending the produce to the neighboring
markets of Baltimore and Philadelphia. In a similar way the gardeners about New York
early began pushing out along Long Island, using the waters of the Sound for transporting
their produce. The trucking region on the eastern shore of Lake Michigan is another
sample of the effect of convenient water transportation in causing an early development
of this industry. The building of the Illinois Central railroad opened up a region
in southern Illinois that was supposed to be particularly adapted to fruit growing."
(" Development of the Trucking Interests," by F. S. Earle, page 439.)
If one goes into the trucking business on so large a scale
as to be able to make deals with the railroads, such as The Standard Oil Company
has made, of course additional prices could be gotten, owing to the possibility of
putting competitors at a disadvantage. That business is a large one.
In doing business on this scale, much will depend on your
ability as a merchant.
"It is useless to grow good crops unless they can be
sold at a profit; yet it is safe to say that ten men grow good truck crops for one
who markets them to the best advantage."