— CORNELL UNIVERSITY.. ae eee gems 2 THE Roswell PP. Flamer Library THE GIFT OF ROSWELL P. FLOWER FOR THE USE OF THE N. Y.. STATE VETERINARY COLLEGE. 1897 Digitized by Microsoft® CORNELL UNIVERSITY LIBRARY This book was digitized by Microsoft Corporation in cooperation with Cornell University Libraries, 2007. You may use and print this copy in limited quantity for your personal purposes, but may not distribute or provide access to it (or modified or partial versions of it) for revenue-generating or other commercial purposes. Digitized by Microsoft® Cornell University Library The original of this book is in the Cornell University Library. There are no known copyright restrictions in the United States on the use of the text. http //www.archive.org/details/cu31 924051101016 Digitize off® by Micros “mde JUaUITIOdx a AYSIOAIUA) eJOsIUUTTT Prsydays Jopol] a4 Digitized by Microsoft® AND THE SILO How to Cultivate and Harvest the Crops; How to Build and Fill the Silo; and How to Use Silage By... THOMAS SHAW Professor of Animal Husbandry at the University of Minnesota Author of “Public School Agriculture” ‘ Weeds and How to Eradicate Them” “The Study of Breeds” ‘‘ Forage Crops Other Than Grasses” ILLUSTRATED q New York ORANGE JUDD COMPANY Digitized’ by Microsoft® ~ fat s a ereceas Pale OE Copyright 1900 ~ by ORANGE JUDD COMPANY Nou Digitized by Microsoft® TO THE DAIRYMEN AND FARMERS OF THE UNITED STATES THIS WORK IS MOST RESPECTFULLY DEDICATED BY THE AUTHOR Digitized by Microsoft® ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS The author desires thankfully to acknowledge the outside sources from which aid was obtained 1n the preparation of the book. These include sundry bulletins issued by certain of the agricultural experi- ment stations in the United States, also the helpful © work, “A Book on Silage,’ written by Prof. F. W. Woll of the University of Wisconsin. The sketches were nearly all prepared by Mr. Charles P. Taylor of the University of Minnesota. Digitized by Microsoft® TABLE OF CONTENTS PART ONE CHAPTER I. PAGE. Soiling Crops Sr =o Ge Sy (3. a a ee a eg CuHapter II. Indian Corn or Maize - - - - - - - - = Ig CHAPTER III. Sorghum Bs ws Bg ey Se Ge ee ee Cuapter IV. The Non-Saccharine Sorghums - - - - - - = 51 CHAPTER V. Plants of the Clover Family - - - - - = - - 68 Cuarter VI. Leguminous Plants Other Than Clover - - - - = = 102 Cuarter VII. Plants of the Brassica Genus - - - - - - -. =~ 139 Cuarter VITI. The Common Cereals eS 2 SB oe ee = 168. CHAPTER IX. Millets = £2 S30 2 = eS fo 08 SS oS oS 2 783 CHAPTER X. Bield: Roots: 4: 2: ay oe) eee Sy i aes vil Digitized by Microsoft® Vili TABLE OF CONTENTS. CHAPTER XI. Miscellaneous Plants - - - - - - CuHapTeErR XII. Succession in Soiling Crops - - - - PART TWO Cuapter I. The History of Siloing - - - - - Cuapter IT, The Benefits from Siloing Crops - - - Cuapter III. Facts Relating to Silo Construction - - CuHapter IV. Building the Silo- - - - - - - CHAPTER V. Crops Suitable for the Silo - - - - CHAPTER VI. Filling the Silo - - - - - = - Cuapter VII. Feeding Silage - - - - - - ~ Digitized by Microsoft® - 269 - 292 - 322 - 336 - 350 FIG. O ON QAuNA WH H The Model SRepiEtd Hromespion ce. Squaw Corn for Fodder - - - + - Giant Fodder Corn for Soiling - - - - - Early Amber Sorghum - -— - - Sorghum Grown for Sonlsiig, First Cittting - Red Kafir Corn -— - - = = = Yellow Milo Maize - - - - - - - Brown Dhoura - - - - - - - - Jerusalem Corn - -- - - - - - Alfalfa, Single Plant- - - - - - . Alfalfa, Grown for Soiling - - - - - The Mummy Field Pea - - Vetches and Oats for Soiline: Second Cutting - Sheep Yasturing on Soy Beans -— - Soy Beans for Soiling a Sheep Pasturing on Cowpeas - - - - Cowpeas Grown for Soiling - - - - - A Dwarf Essex Rape Plant - - - - - Dwarf Essex Rape for Soilime - eee Cabbage for Soiling - - 8 Oats and Wheat for Soiling or Hodder - Oats and Peas for Soiling - Oats First Pastured, Then Gaver for Soiling German Millet for Soiling - - - Hungarian Millet for Soiling - - - - - Sand Vetch - - - - - - - |= - Jerusalem Artichokes - - - - - - - Sunflowers - SG” dee. EP pes Sheep Barn with Reund Sila - eee Section of Stave Silo - - - - - - Splice of Stave with Iron Tongue - - - - Lugs for Hoops - - - - - - - = Door of Stave Silo- - LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS Sketch Showing Stave Sila: wits Shute: Laddes aid Hand Cart - - Sketch Showing Stave Sie ath Root and Lugs Prop- erly Distributed - - Section of Wall of Recagular Silo = # Elephant Fodder Corn- - - - = = Sorghum for Silage - - - - - - - 1X Digitized by Microsoft® Digitized by Microsoft® AUTHOR’S PREFACE This book is one of a series on agriculture which the author hopes to be spared to complete. It is designed more especially to meet the needs of dairymen when providing green food for their stock, summer and winter, but it is also intended to be similarly helpful to all farmers who keep domestic animals on the arable farm, and it is hoped that the student also at the agricultural college may be able to glean from its pages what will be helpful to him when prosecuting his investigations. Excellent information on the subject of soiling and also on that of the silo has been furnished by various authors, but in a form more or less fragmentary, irregular and incomplete. It has been the aim of the author in the present work to cover these subjects with at least a measurable degree of completeness and system. In writing a series of books on agriculture, it is not easy to avoid some repetition. In fact, it is practically impossible to do so. For example, when one book treats of forage crops other than grasses and is followed by a second on soiling crops and the silo, as in the present instance, it will be found that many of the crops grown for these respective uses are the same. They are grown on the same kinds of soils, and the methods of growing them are similar. xi Digitized by Microsoft® Xi AUTHOR’S PREFACE. If each treatise is to be complete in itself, the methods of growing these respective crops must be given in both, and this necessitates some repetition. It has been, and will be, the constant aim of the author, however, to avoid such repetition to the greatest possible extent. By combining two or more separate treatises in one, repetition could be almost entirely avoided, but the purchaser would then have to pay for matter in which he might not be interested in order to obtain that which was of special interest to him. Of the two plans, the author believes that he has chosen that which will be more advantageous to the general public. University Experiment Farm, St. Anthony Park, Minn., 1900. Digitized by Microsoft® PART ONE - SOILING CROPS Digitized by Microsoft® Digitized by Microsoft® CHAPTER I. SOILING CROPS. Soiling crops are those which are sown from time to time to furnish food for domestic animals, and which are to be harvested while yet immature and fed to them in the pasture, the paddock, the feed lot or the stall. Corn cut and thus fed to animals at any stage prior to maturity furnishes an illustration of a soiling food. A soiling food is, therefore, another name for a green food. It is not necessary that it shall be fed as soon as harvested, but it is necessary that it shall be fed in the green form. Corn preserved in the silo is essentially a soiling food, inasmuch as it is cut when immature and in that con- dition is fed to live stock, though it may not be fed for months after it has been cut, as for instance, when it has been preserved in the silo, hence the propriety of combining the subject of soiling crops and the silo in this treatise. Soiling crops differ from forage crops in that the former are harvested and then carried to the animals which consume them, whereas live stock gather the latter for themselves; and soiling differ from fodder crops in their being cut and fed green, whereas fodder crops are frequently harvested when mature or approaching maturity and are always fed to animals in the cured form. People who are disposed to follow rigidly the teachings 3 Digitized by Microsoft® 4 SOILING CROPS AND THE SILO. of the dictionaries will probably take some exception to these definitions, but the time has certainly come when more precision must be given to at least some of the definitions in agriculture, to prevent confusion of ideas. For instance, the defini- tion of forage crops given in our best authorities would make these include soiling crops also. Such a definition is at variance with common usage, and surely the popular idea when consistent and legiti- mate is of higher authority even than that of the recognized standards. Adaptation in Soiling Crops.—The growing of soiling crops is chiefly adapted to an intensive cultivation. It may be better associated with the tillage of small rather than of large farms and is better adapted to localities where the population is crowded and markets are near, as, for instance, in the neighborhood of large cities. It was to be expected therefore that the growing of soiling foods would first receive attention in the east, and so it did. But the day is coming, and is near, when in one or the other of its forms it will be most extensively carried on also in the west, and more especially in those sections in which dairying prevails. Soiling is, of course, only necessary on farms on which live stock are kept more or less numerously. And even on these it may not be much needed when - pastures are plentiful and succulent during the greater part of the grazing season. It is more needed in dry than in moist climates, on poor than on rich lands, and where milk is sought rather than beef. Partial and Complete Soiling.—Partial soiling means supplementing the pastures with green food Digitized by Microsoft® SOILING CROPS. 5 for a part of the season, as occasion may require. Such food may be given once a day or oftener, according to the needs of the animals. The chief object sought in partial soiling is to keep domestic animals abundantly supplied with palatable and nutritious food, when the food from the pastures is inadequate. And where milk production is involved it aims to furnish succulent food after the grass pas- tures have lost much of their succulence, even though they should still be abundant. Partial soiling is best adapted to a system of cultivation that is intermediate between the extensive and intensive systems; that is to say, toa system that meets the needs of the average arable farm. In all countries with summer climates deficient in moisture it is an essential appendage and material help to dairying. In no other way can the dairyman keep up a maximum milk flow at so small an outlay. Complete soiling has reference to that system by which domestic animals are sustained on food fed to them in the stall, the feed lot, or the paddock dur- ing all the year. It does not imply that all the food so fed shall be given to the animals in the green form, but that green food will usually form a considerable portion, if not, indeed, the greater part, of the ration. Complete soiling is adapted to an intensive system of cultivation; that is to say, where cultivable lands are scarce and dear, and from which it is necessary to obtain a maximum yield while they are being tilled. Its general adoption in this country where land is so plentiful, and in which it is relatively so cheap, is probably remote rather than near, notwith- Standing that it has been practiced in some sections MS Digitized by Microsoft® 6 SOILING CROPS AND THE SILO. of the thickly populated countries of western Europe for many years. Benefits from Growing Soiling Crops——The following are the more important benefits from growing soiling crops: 1, Food supplies are increased in a marked degree; 2, in various ways the waste in feeding is lessened; 3, animals are sustained in better form than where soiling is not practiced; 4, injury to the land through poaching is prevented; 5, _a salutary influence is exercised on weed eradication ; 6, a saving in land is effected; 7, a saving in fertility is effected; 8, a saving is also effected in the item of fencing; 9, animal production is greatly increased ; and, 10, the cost of keeping the family cow is lessened. Increase in Food Supplies.—Soiling enables the farmer to grow more food than he could by any other system. Usually the growth of plants is hin- dered in proportion to the extent to which the plants are pastured down while yet immature. And crops that are pastured are further injured by the tramping of the animals that feed upon them. They are injured directly by the bruising which they receive from the hoofs of the animals which feed upon them, and indirectly by the impaction of the land from pastur- ing it when not dry enough. These facts are simply mentioned without taking space to give the reasons. And since soiling crops are usually cut a little short of maturity it is more practicable to grow two crops from the same land, where soiling is practiced, than where it is not. The relative increase in food production where soiling is practiced as compared with pasturage can Digitized by Microsoft® SOILING CROPS. 7 not of course be stated otherwise than in the most approximate manner. It will vary greatly with such conditions as soil and season. But it will not be extravagant to say that when animals are soiled all the year in the one instance, and when they are pas- tured during the season of pasturage, and are then wintered on food grown on other land in the other instance, a given area will sustain at least twice the number of animals through the year by the former system than it will by the latter. Less Waste in Feeding —When crops are fed under the soiling system there is less waste than when pastured or fed in the matured form. This saving is effected, first, in the absence of injury through treading as compared with pasture crops; second, in the absence of loss in harvesting as compared with matured crops; and, third, in the more complete con- sumption of the food. The injury to pasture crops through treading has already been referred to. Soiling crops when judiciously managed are seldom so injured by the weather as to be rendered unfit for food. Fodder crops when matured are fre- quently damaged by rain when being cured. When thus damaged they lose in palatability, in nutrition, and also through mold induced by storing when not yet fully cured. The more complete consumption of food fed in the green form as compared with food fed when ripe, arises chiefly from the greater palatability of the former. The fodder portion of plants, that is to say, the stems and leaves, is always better relished by animals when fed before they are fully matured. For instance, feed rye to cattle when it has not yet reached Digitized by Microsoft® 8 SOILING CROPS AND THE SILO. the earing stage, and it will be eaten with avidity. Feed it when fully out in head and it will be eaten indifferently. Feed it when ripe and little else than the heads will be eaten. Feed the straw after the grain has been threshed, and it will be consumed by the animals only when impelled by hunger. Chemists tell us that fodder plants contain all the food ele- ments that they will possess at the time the ripening process begins, that is to say, by the time they have reached that stage when the stalk begins to assume a yellow tinge at the ground. They should be fed, therefore, as soiling food before they pass this stage, for as soon as they get beyond it there is loss in palatability. And there is loss in digestibility as the ripening stage is neared, that is to say, the propor- tion of the indigestible woody fiber is increased. On the other hand, when plants are cut when considerably short of maturity, there is loss from want of sufficient development. Theoretically, the most food will be got from plants when they are cut as soiling food a little short of maturity. In prac- tice, however, this is impossible, as it would too much curtail the length of the period for feeding each crop. But with crops that grow again and again, as with alfalfa, for instance, there is no loss probably in cut- ting them as soon as they have made sufficient growth to justify the expenditure of the labor involved. Sustains Animals in Better Form.—By the aid of soiling food domestic animals can be maintained in better form than without it. With such aid they can be maintained in a more even condition, the ani- inal energy can be more perfectly conserved, and the Digitized by Microsoft® SOILING CROPS. 9 succulence of the foods usually exercises a whole- some influence on the health of the stock. In the absence of soiling foods it is hardly pos- sible for the farmer to keep his animals through all the year in what may be termed a well balanced con- dition. When he depends wholly on pastures during the summer season these may fail. When they do his animals suffer proportionately. On the other hand, if the pastures are superabundant there is waste. When pastures lose their succulence, the milk flow from milk-giving animals is proportion- ately reduced, and no after feeding will wholly restore it, howsoever suitable it may be. As the character of the season cannot be foreseen, farmers are wise who make provision for a possible shortage in pasture by sowing more or less of one or more crops to provide soiling food. If the best possible returns are to be obtained from animals, they must be well supplied with food every day in the year. Whenanimals are fed in whole or in part on soiling foods, they may frequently be kept nearer at hand than when not so fed, hence their needs can be more easily met. When the days are hot they may be more easily housed. In the time of flies they may be more easily protected from the same by keeping them in cool, darkened sheds or stables during the heat of the day. In hot weather they can be left out in paddocks over night, and in cold weather they can be housed. Such attentions have a marked influence in maintaining an equilibrium of condition. The use of soiling foods conserves animal energy by lessening that waste which arises from undue Digitized by Microsoft® Io SOILING CROPS AND THE SILO. exertion on the part of animals when gathering their food. When the dairy cow has to travel far when seeking food in the pastures, she does so at the expense of food required to sustain the prolonged exertion. And when food is thus used to sustain energy it is very evident that it cannot be used to make milk. Likewise, when growing cattle have to travel beyond a certain limit in order to get supplies for the day, they do so at the expense of flesh. And the same is true of the horse, the sheep and the pig. Live stock should, of course, be given sufficient exer- cise to keep them healthy and to give them proper stamina. Beyond this, exercise means waste of food, and this waste can be prevented by growing a suffi- ciency of soiling foods. Soiling foods, judiciously fed, tend to keep the animal system in proper tone, hence thus far they exert a favorable influence on the health of live stock to which they are fed. In the absence of those foods it is difficult, if not impossible, to keep the system in the best of tone during certain periods of the year. Where soiling foods are not grown there can be no assurance of succulence in the pastures beyond the early summer months. Pastures will not sustain an undiminished milk flow in cows, even when consid- erably short. of the yellow leaf stage. When dry and crisp they are a less valuable food than well cured hay, notwithstanding that the food may be abundant. On such pastures swine will soon lose flesh unless the pastures are supplemented with other food. By growing succulent foods in due succession and in adequate sufficiency they may be made available for live stock in one form or the other during a large Digitized by Microsoft® SOILING CROPS. Il part of the year, if not, indeed, through the whole year; hence the beneficial influence which they exert on the health of the animals may be made continually operative. But there are other senses in which the soiling system may become prejudicial to the health of the animals. These are discussed on Page 18. Injury Through Poaching.—When the soiling system is practiced, lands are not injured by poach- ing, that is, by the treading of the animals when the hoofs sink below the surface of the land. On all soils poaching is to some extent harmful, and on clays it 1s quite harmful, since impaction follows on the return of dry weather to the very great injury to the growth of the grasses. As no person can control the weather, the farmer who is dependent on pastures only to provide food for his live stock in the season of growth must needs allow them to feed upon the pastures betimes when they will injure them by treading ; and it may be added that close grazing in very dry weather may seriously injure pastures. Particularly is this true of pastures in some parts of the dry west. The farmer without soiling food may be powerless to prevent such a result. Influence on IVecd Eradication—The soiling system may be made to render material aid in eradi- cating weeds. This arises, first, from the thickness with which the food may be grown; second, from the season at which much of it may be sown; and, third, from the immature period at which it is reaped. Soiling food may be sown more thickly rela- tively than if the same plant or plants were sown to produce a matured crop of seeds. Such sowing secures more of fineness in the food, and in Digitized by Microsoft® I2 SOILING CROPS AND THE SILO. consequence more of palatability. The food thus grown crowds weeds because of its thickness, and also hinders their development because of the density of the shade. _ Soiling food may be sown at different seasons because of the difference in the habits of the plants thus grown. Several varieties may be sown late. When these varieties are thus sown, ample time is given to sprout and in turn to destroy myriads of weed seeds that may be in the upper section of the tillable soil. In fact, where such cultivation is what it ought to be, the ground will be comparatively clean before the crop is grown or planted. As soiling foods are cut while yet immature, the weeds which grow in them have not the same chance to mature as though the crop had been allowed to stand until fully ripe. Notably is this true of soil- ing crops that are sown reasonably early. And when these are removed early in the season, another soil- ing crop, or a catch crop of some kind may be made to follow the first one. This second crop will also be helpful to the cleaning of the land. Saving in Land.—Growing soiling foods effects a great saving in land, as it enables the grower to raise much more food from a given area. The sav- ing thus effected is greater relatively in the west and south than in the east and north. This arises from the greater relative adaptability of the east and north to the growing of grass pastures, and from the greater relative adaptability of the west and south to the growing of soiling foods. The extent of the saving will vary with the conditions. But it would not be extravagant to say that ordinarily where Digitized by Microsoft® SOILING CROPS. 13 three acres of grass are required to keep a milch cow in good form for six months, it would be possible to grow enough soiling food to keep the same cow all the year. In some sections of the prairie in the far west, where cultivated grasses have not been grown with marked success, the difference would be even greater. In instances, not a few, it has been found possible to grow ample supplies of food on one acre by the soiling system to feed a cow all year. As the population becomes more dense, and as popu- lous cities multiply, the saving in land effected by soiling in either of its forms will increase in impor- tance, and more in the neighborhood of large cities than elsewhere. Saving in Fences——Growing soiling foods les- sens the necessity for building fences on farms on which live stock are kept. A marked saving is thus effected in labor and money, the extent of the saving being proportional to the number of animals kept, . to the cost of labor and materials for fencing. Unless where the materials for fencing are very cheap, it is a costly affair, both to build and to maintain fences. It is seldom that any kind of fence, strong enough to secure cattle, can be built for less than twenty-five to fifty cents per rod, when labor and material are included, and in some instances the outlay would be much greater. This outlay, or much of it, must needs be repeated at least every other decade, to say nothing of the sums paid out from time to time in repairs. There is also the further objection that on the strip of land on which the fence stands, weeds are much prone to grow, unless considerable hand labor is expended in keeping them down. Digitized by Microsoft® I4 SOILING CROPS AND THE SILO. On the other hand, we must not assume that the soiling system will entirely obviate the necessity for fences. | Theoretically, where complete soiling is carried on no fencing would be required other than that used in enclosing the yards and paddocks in which the animals are to be exercised, or in which they are to be kept over night in warm weather. But this idea must not be pressed too far, for where sufficient stamina in live stock are to be maintained, animals must have exercise beyond what they will voluntarily take in small paddocks. Saving in Fertility.—The soiling system effects a great saving in fertility, since it enables the farmer to make more and better manure than can be obtained from live stock kept on the pasturing system, and less of what is thus made is wasted. More manure is made, first, because the animals are at all times on full feed, whereas on pasture they are frequently on short supplies, and, second, because by the soiling system a greater number of animals can be sustained on a given area. The manure made is likely to be more valuable, since along with soiling food greater quantities of meal, rich in the elements of plant growth, are usually fed. And there is less waste in the manure made if properly saved, since its value is not then impaired by insects and other adverse influ- ences, as it is when dropped in the field. In many instances the soiling system will enable the farmer to more than double the value of the manurial prod- uct made, as it enables him to more than double the supplies of food grown. Increase in Animal Production.—Such a system cannot fail to increase animal production. The Digitized by Microsoft® SOILING CROPS. 15 extent of this increase will be in proportion to its completeness. If it increases the food products 100 per cent, it will also increase the milk or meat pro- duction more than 100 per cent, since the animals maintained will be increased proportionately. They will also be maintained on foods at all times ample in quantity and of correct adaptation. These influ- ences will tend to a further increase of production. The greater outlay involved, however, in securing this added increase should never be lost sight of. Sustaining the Family Cow.—lIn villages, in suburbs of towns and cities, quite a number of the inhabitants keep cows. To such people the cow is a source of untold blessing, because of the utility of the product which she gives. Oftentimes those peo- ple are unable to secure adequate pastures. This difficulty may easily be overcome when the owner of a cow possesses a small piece of land. He can then supplement the pastures by growing soiling foods, and with great advantage to both cow and land. Where but one cow is kept, a small area will suffice to supply her needs. Some Objections to the Soiling System—To the soiling system there are some objections. Chief among these are the following: 1, It involves increased outlay for labor; 2, it requires more con- stant attention on the part of the attendants; 3, it is not always easy to adjust the food supplies to the needs of the animals, and, 4,it may,in some instances, tend to impair the stamina of live stock. Increased Outlay for Labor.—The soiling sys- tem cannot be.adopted in either of its forms without a considerable increase in the labor of those who care Digitized by Microsoft® 16 SOILING CROPS AND THE SILO. for the live stock so fed. Even in the partial form, increase in labor is considerable. In the complete form, it is much greater; and of course increase in labor involves a corresponding increase in outlay. The increase in labor arises, first, from the necessity for cutting the food daily, or at intervals of not more than two or three days; second, from the necessity for handling and conveying it to the animals in the green form; third, from the necessity for feeding and otherwise caring for the animals from day to day in the pasture, paddock, shed or stall; fourth, in caring for the yards or paddocks and in handling the manure. From the sum of this labor, however, in making the comparison, there should be deducted the less amount of the labor necessary in providing fencing. Notwithstanding, the extra labor involved, and the increased expenditure resulting therefrom, is the one great standing hindrance in the way of the more general adoption of the system of complete soiling by the farmers of this country. Nor is the adoption of complete soiling likely to become general until farm labor becomes cheaper and until land becomes scarcer and dearer. But beyond all ques- tion, in the opinion of the writer, the day is not very far distant when complete soiling will be practiced by a considerable number of the farmers in every state of the Union. Partial soiling does not involve nearly so muck labor as complete soiling, hence it is practiced by a greater number of farmers. Dairymen, especially, cannot well get along without it. The necessity for thus growing and feeding food to supplement the pastures increases with the dryness of the climate. So Digitized by Microsoft® SOILING CROPS. 17 essential is it to the highest success in raising and properly maintaining farm stock that it must even- tually be practiced by all or nearly all farmers who do not follow the system of complete soiling. Tax on Attcndants——Where complete soiling is carried on, the care of the animals must be con- tinuous throughout the season. Every day thereof brings its round of duties, and they cannot be neg- lected except at the expense of the live stock. Food must be secured for the animals with unfailing regu- larity, it must be fed to them every day, and usually two or three times a day. To the average farm laborer this work savors so much of the treadmill order that it is distasteful. He looks upon it in the light of a yoke which he does not care to take upon himself. Hence, until those better days come when such labor will be looked upon through a proper lens, for it has its compensations, the adoption of the soiling system in either form will be relatively slow. Adjusting Food Supplies—Complete soiling calls for the exercise of much thought in securing food supplies and in adjusting them to the needs of the animals. There must needs be succession in foods to keep up a constant supply. No one food is at its best for soiling uses for many weeks in succes- sion. There must also be variety in the foods thus grown in succession. This 1s essential to the well- being of the animals to which the foods are fed. It is further rendered imperative by the different periods of the year when various plants grow and mature sufficiently for being fed at their best. A supply of these foods must always be on hand through sunshine and storm. In some instances, however, 2 Digitized by Microsoft® 18 SOILING CROPS AND THE SILO. showers fall frequently and. for days in succession, so that it may not be easy to secure food supplies unless when soaked with rain; and it may be also more or less soiled with earth. To properly adjust these matters in the face of varying seasons is no easy task. It cannot be done without the exercise of much forethought. Impaired Stantina in the Stock —While, as has been shown, the soiling system tends to promote good health in live stock, it may easily be so con- ducted as to ultimately injure stamina in the animals subjected to its conditions. Up to a certain limit, utility in live stock is improved through artificial conditions. Beyond this limit, stamina are weak- ened. Where the border line runs between the most approved conditions of environment and conditions that lead to deterioration, is not always easily deter- mined. Unnecessary exertion on the part of animals when getting this food lessens production. Insuff- cient exertion lessens stamina. Under the complete soiling system the individual must guard against undue confinement of the animals, or their natural vigor will wane. All history and experience point to increased mortality among animals and also among men in proportion as they are aggregated under conditions of much restraint. The dangers of undue restraint, however, do not apply to animals subjected only to the conditions which partial soiling imposes. And with complete soiling, it is probable that they may, in a great measure, be avoided by giving due attention to the conditions which are necessary to the maintenance of improved vigor in domestic animals, Digitized by Microsoft® CHAPTER II. INDIAN CORN OR MAIZE. It would probably be correct to say that Indian corn (Zea Alays) furnishes more food for live stock than any other plant now grown in the United States, and that it will continue to do so through all the years that are yet to come. Taking everything into consideration it will probably produce more food per acre tor domestic animals than any other plant, and there are but few foods which can be fed in a greater variety of ways. In furnishing soiling food on unirrigated land, it is in some respects without a rival on the .\merican continent. So great is its value for this use that in the near future very few sections will be found in all the United States in which it will not be grown on a large majority of the farms by those who keep live stock. Green corn is pre-eminently a food for dairy cows when in milk, owing in part to the close relation hetween succulence in food and free mill production. But it may also be fed with much advantage to other classes of cattle when pastures are scant, and also to horses of ali ages, although to horses at work it should not be given in large quantities, lest a too lax condition of the bowels be induced. It furnishes excellent green food for sheep, when of fine growth. It also furnishes food for swine that is much relished by them, especially when the corn is of the sweet 19 Digitized by Microsoft® ‘wiey quoutiedxq Aysr9AluE) eJOSOUUTT soppoy Joy UIOD MUNbsS “7 “Zid (02) Digitized by Microsoft® INDIAN CORN OR MAIZE, 2I varieties. They will virtually consume the entire product when it is fed to them prior to the maturing of the crop. Corn grown as soiling food will yield from ten to thirty tons per acre, according as the land is poor or rich and the season is dry or moist. A good average crop may be placed at fifteen to twenty tons per acre. Distribution—Corn can be grown as soiling food in nearly all the tillable portions of the United States, since, with a mean temperature of about 60 degrees, it will become sufficiently advanced for being cut as soiling food in from fifty to seventy days from the time of planting. But where it can be allowed to grow for a longer period, the crop is relatively more valuable. Nearly all the tillable portions of the United States have marked adaptation for grow- ing corn to be fed in the green form. The sections least well adapted to its growth are those probably which border on the Pacific ocean, between Alaska and California, because of the low mean tempera- tures that prevail there. In nearly all the tillable areas of Canada, also, corn can be grown in the finest form for summer feeding and in sections too far north to mature the grain. Soil—Corn ts specially adapted to warm, deep loam soils rich in humus, and that lie upon subsoils of what may be termed porous clay. It is a most voracious feeder on decaying organic matter, hence when it is to be grown, care should be taken to keep the soil well supplied with such. food. But it may be grown with more or less success on almost any kind of land not too low in available plant food, not too Digitized by Microsoft® 22 SOILING CROPS AND THE SILO. strongly impregnated with alkali, and not overmoist or overdry. It may be made to flourish on the stiffest clays when they are sufficiently pulverized, and on the poorest sands when they have been sufficiently enriched. Place in the Rotation.—As a fodder or grain crop, that is, as a crop for being fed in the cured form, corn should be grown whenever practicable as a cleaning crop. More commonly it should be planted after one or more grain crops have been taken from the land, and it should be followed by a grain crop in which grass seeds have been sown. Frequently it should be sown on an overturned grass or clover sod. But when sown to provide soiling food it can with much advantage be grown as a “catch” crop, that is to say, asa crop preceded or followed by another crop grown on the land the same season, and in some instances both preceded and followed by another crop. \here the seasons are sufficiently long it may thus be grown with peculiar fitness after a crop of winter rve is pastured, plowed under green, or reaped when mature; after clover is pastured, buried or reaped: after grain crops are pas- tured off, and in some instances after grain crops are harvested; after a crop of early sown rape is grazed down, and after certain other soiling crops have been removed from the land, as, for instance, peas and oats. . It may also be grown after any kind of a fall or spring sown crop that has failed from any cause. But in areas in which the seasons are quite short, it may not be possible to grow another crop on the land the same season. The crops that may with much Digitized by Microsoft® INDIAN CORN OR MAIZE. 23 propriety be sown after soiling corn include winter wheat, winter rye, winter oats, the winter vetch, the sand vetch, rape and crimson clover. Corn may thus frequently be sown as soiling food without interfering with the growth of the crop that would ordinarily be taken from the land. Preparing the Soil—\Vhen preparing the soil, the aim should be to secure a seed bed moist, clean and fine. When winter rye is plowed under, it should not be later than the earing stage, and in regions deficient in moisture earlier than that, lest through its bulkiness it should cause the land to lie too loosely upon itself and so lose too much of its moisture, or through its woodiness it should fail to decay soon enough to feed the corn crop. If the buried rye is rolled and harrowed soon after it has “been buried, the moisture in the soil will be better conserved and the more quickly will the rye decay. These remarks will apply equally to the burial of fresh farmyard manure with much litter in it. But in time of wet weather, it would not be necessary thus to roll and harrow the land so soon after it had been plowed. As the preparation of the soil for this crop cannot usually begin long before the plant- ing of the crop, special pains should be taken to pulverize the soil and to make it firm, that the germi- nation of the young plants may begin at once after planting, and that the subsequent growth may be rapid. It should always be the aim in growing a soiling crop of corn to produce a large quantity. It is usu- ally fed in the immature form, hence quality in the food cannot be so much influenced by close or wide Digitized by Microsoft® 24 SOILING CROPS AND THE SILO. planting as it is when the corn crop is allowed to mature. Land, therefore, not sufficiently fertile to produce a maximum crop should be fertilized accord- ing to its needs. Where it can be obtained, farm- yard manure is one of the cheapest and most effective ‘of fertilizers. It may be applied most freely in climates not deficient, or not much deficient, in mois- ture. It feeds the corn crop better when it has been reduced, or fermented, more or less, before it is applied. On lands lacking in moisture the applica- tion of large quantities of farmyard manure in the unreduced form should be avoided, unless it can be applied some considerable time before the planting of the corn, otherwise its bulkiness and slowness of decay may harm the crop more than it will help it. Commercial fertilizers may also be applied in addition to farmyard manure where the supply cf the latter is limited, or alone in its absence. The composition of these fertilizers and the quantity to apply will depend upon the needs of the land. But more commonly complete fertilizers will be prefer- able, that is to say, fertilizers which contain a certain per cent. of nitrogen, phosphoric acid and potash. Sowing—Corn for soiling uses may be sown broadcast by hand and covered with the harrow; with the grain drill, all the tubes or with only part of them in use; or it may be strewn by hand in shal- low furrows made by the plow. Which of these methods ought to be adopted will depend chiefly upon such conditions as the conveniences at hand for planting the crop and upon the area to be grown. Much has been written against the plan of sow- ing the corn broadcast by hand, also against the plan Digitized by Microsoft® INDIAN CORN OR MAIZE. 25 of sowing it with the grain drill when all the tubes areinuse. Yet it may be true that a large majority of the farmers who grow corn for soiling persist in growing it thus. And there is probably some reason for such persistence. It is very convenient to sow corn in this way. The stalks, because of their fineness, are more palatable than when of stronger growth, and on good soil much bulk of food is obtained. The objections to this method of planting the crop are: The lack of growth in the corn in severely dry weather, the encouragement given to the growth of weeds, the larger amount of seed required for plant- ing, and the less nutritious character of the food. There is some force in all these objections. Notwith- standing, in the judgment of the author they do not rove conclusively that on well prepared soils corn for soiling should not sometimes be grown thus. But it should not be so grown on land that is frequently lacking in moisture, on land that is low in fertility or on land on which weed seeds lying on or near the surface have not been well sprouted and destroyed before the planting of the corn. When corn for soiling is planted with the grain drill, some of the tubes only being in use, there is much latitude in the precise methods practiced Sometimes every second tube is used. When pianted thus, the crop will make more growth on soils only moderately supplied with plant food, and it will also make a better growth in dry weather. When thus planted, of course, the rows are too near to admit of horse cultivation. Such cultivation may be given with the rows even nearer to each other than thirty inches, but when less distant than thirty inches it Digitized by Microsoft® 26 SOILING CROPS AND THE SILO. cannot be done with so much freedom or ease. The larger the variety of the corn, the more distant should be the rows, to avoid too much shading from the sunlight ; hence there may be instances when corn grown for soiling should be planted more than thirty inches distant. Sometimes such corn is planted with the drill in what may be termed doubie rows, that is to say, in rows not more than from six to nine inches apart. But the distance between the pairs of double rows should be at least thirty inches. In planting corn thus, with some grain drills at least, it may be neces- sary to duplicate the amount of driving that would be sufficient to plant the corn in single rows. Other drills, however, may be made to plant at least two double rows at one and the same time. This is dene by leaving open the avenues that lead to the tubes which do the planting and closing all the others. Corn planted thus will produce a greater bulk than if planted in single rows, yet this method of planting admits practically the same kind of cultivation that would be suitable for corn grown in single rows. When the corn is sown by hand, shallow fur- rows are made with the plow, the seed is strewn thickly in these, according to the desires of the grower, and it may be covered by hand or by draw- ing a heavy harrow crosswise over the ground. The object sought in planting the corn thus is to secure a thick stand of plants that may, also, be cultivated, when a drill with which to sow the plants is not obtainable. But this method of planting corn for soiling should not be attempted when a large area is to be planted. Digitized by Microsoft® Fig. 3. Giant Fodder Corn for Soiling (27) Minnesota University Experiment Farm. Digitized by Microsoft® 28 SOILING CROPS AND THE SILO. The variety, or varieties, of corn to sow or plant will depend on conditions such as relate to climate and soil. In northerly latitudes it may be wise to plant only the quick growing flint varieties. In more southerly latitudes, it may be necessary to grow only the slow growing dent varieties. When the corn is to be allowed to pass the earing stage, before being fed, it may be proper to choose some of the varieties of sweet corn for planting. But since soil- ing corn is usually fed before the corn on the ear is of any considerable food value, it is well to select varieties with a leafy tendency of growth, since these varieties will be more relished by the animals to which the crop is fed. The quantity of seed required will vary with the size of the seed kernels, or, in other words, with the variety of the corn, and with the method adopted in sowing the seed. Probably no method of sowing calls for the use of more than three bushels of seed per acre, or less than one bushel per acre. There would seem to be no advantage derived from grow- ing corn for soiling purposes with the plants less dis- tant than from three to four inches in the line of the row, whatsoever the kind 3f cultivation adopted, and there may often be good reasons for growing the plants much further apart. The time for planting corn for soiling will largely depend upon such conditions as climate, soil, and the prospective needs of the animals to which the crop is to be fed. Although in southern lati- tudes, this crop may be sown for soiling uses far on into midsummer, it should never be planted in the spring before the soil has become sufficiently warmed Digitized by Microsoft® INDIAN CORN OR MAIZE. 29 to germinate the seed quickly. Slowness of germi- nation is more or less injurious to the crop, and prolonged slowness of germination may be even fatal to it. It is probably safe to conclude that the season is sufficiently advanced for corn planting to begin ‘when apple blossoms are unfolding their beautiful tints. It may be desirable to have the season for feeding green corn as long as possible. This may be brought about in one of two ways: First, several varieties, which call for varying | periods in which to grow, may be planted at the same time; second, but one varicty may be sown at inter- vals not closer to each other than two or three weeks. The second of these methods is preferable, since the one variety selected may be the most suitable to grow in that particular locality. When corn is grown as soiling food for pigs, the aim should be to secure much. grain rather than abundant growth of stem and fees. It should therefore be planted in hills or rows, as corn is usually grown, to provide ears. From eight to twelve quarts of seed will suffice to plant an acre, and, as previously intimated, the sweet varieties are to be given the preference. Cultivation.—The harrow and the cultivator are the instruments chiefly used in cultivating corn for soiling. Owing to the short period required by corn to grow, it is seldom necessary to use the hand hoe, when a sufficient use has been made of the har- row. The corn ground should be harrowed a few days subsequently to the planting of the seed. It may be necessary to harrow twice before the plants appear when the germination is tardy, but once is usually sufficient. The crop should he harrowed at intervals Digitized by Microsoft® 30 SOILING CROPS AND THE SILO. of only a few days, especially when the weather is dry, even though the land is not foul with weeds that it may the more perfectly retain its moisture. The harrowing should cease when the plants are sev- eral inches high. For reasons that will be manifest, the harrow should be light, should have a broad sweep, and when in use the teeth should usually be set to slant backward. It should also be driven across rather than along the drills, that fewer plants may be covered by the harrow. When the crop must be planted on foul land, more seed should be used than would otherwise be necessary, to allow for the freer use of the harrow, and consequently for the loss of a larger percentage of the plants. When the cultivator can be used, its use ought to begin soon after the harrowing has ceased, and it should continue at intervals until the feeding of the crop has virtually begun. These intervals should usually be not more distant than, say, seven to ten days. The cultivation should be shallow, that the corn roots may not be broken, and that the moisture may be better conserved than it would be by deep cultivation. It should come close up to the line of the rows, that weed growth may be checked to the greatest possible extent. Feeding.—The feeding of the corn may begin as soon as it 1s fully in tassel, or even sooner but for the loss in maximum development that would ensue, and this feeding may be continued until the crop is matured. But when fed to swine it may be well to defer the feeding until the corn in the ear is nearly ready for table use. The residue of the green corn, if the crop is not all consumed. may be cut at Digitized by Microsoft® INDIAN CORN OR MAIZE. 31 the stage of early maturity, cured in the shock and fed with much advantage to live stock subsequently through the entire fall and winter. The farmer who has a sufficient area of corn grown and properly har- vested on the plan above outlined may sustain his horses, cattle and sheep in excellent form, howsoever dry the autumn may be, or howsoever scarce the pasture. But it is very important that the crop shall be harvested at the stage of early maturity, that is to say, when a little under-ripe, and that it be nicely cured. Vastly increased attention is likely to be given to this feature of corn production in the near future, more particularly in the northwestern states, so much characterized by bright autumn sunshine. When only a small quantity of soiling food is to be fed daily, it may be cut with a scythe and carted to the animals, or thrown to them over the fence which may separate the corn crop from an adjoining pasture. It may be well in some instances to so plan for feeding the corn when choosing the land on which it is to be grown, that is to say, it may be well to sow a strip of corn not too wide beside the pasture and along its entire length. The saving in horse labor that would thus be effected when feeding the crop would be material, but to the plan there is the objection that corn or other green crop fed thus leads to the dropping of an undue proportion of the manure in that part of the pasture on which the green food has been fed. When green corn is cut for pigs, the corn hook will probably be the best implement to use. When fed on a large scale, the crop must needs be cuit with the mower, according to the needs of the Digitized by Microsoft® 32 SOILING CROPS AND THE SILO. live stock. Or, as much may be cut at one time as will suffice for two or three days’ feeding, especially when the crop is well advanced in growth, as then it does not quickly wilt overmuch, as it would at an earlier period. A moderate amount of wilting rather adds to the relish of the food, and it also les- sens the danger from abundant feeding when the green corn is first given to the animals. The portion fed once or twice a day, as the case may be, will have to be drawn as frequently by horse labor, except when it is fed in racks in a yard, or in the stable mangers. In such instances enough may be drawn at one time to suffice for two or even for three days. But too much wilting must be guarded against, else it will lessen the palatability of the corn. Some form of truck with a platform not far from the ground should be used in carting all kinds of green food, in order to lessen muscular expenditure in handling food with so much water in it. Where the facilities are suitable, there is no way by which corn thus carted can be fed to live stock with a less expenditure of labor than by feeding it in a pasture. It is then thrown from the dray or wagon and is consumed without any further labor in handling the residue, or in carting the drop- pings. But of course there is oftentimes con- siderable loss in the manure. When corn or other green food is thus fed, it should be dumped off in small bunches not too near one another, so the animals may consume it without being molested by one another; and it should be strewn on a different portion of the pasture every time it is fed, to insure greater cleanliness in the feeding, also to secure a Digitized by Microsoft® { INDIAN CORN OR MAIZE. 33 more even distribution of the droppings. The whole pasture may be gone over in this way. The plan of manuring a field thus is certainly very cheap and efficacious. The loss in fertility is not great if the pasture is to be plowed the same autumn. If it can be arranged to have the food thus spread on the ground in the absence of the live stock, they will not tread on it so much when turned in to feed upon it. The ideal plan, when it can be carried out, is to have two pastures and to spread the food in each alter- nately when the live stock are in the other pasture. When the green corn is fed to horses or cattle in manger or racks, for manifest reasons, it is well to have it placed in these when the animals are absent, unless when they are tied in stalls. It may be most conveniently fed to sheep or swine in the pastures, but there may be occasions when it will be found advantageous to feed it in paddocks, feed lots or sheds. The feeding of sweet corn to swine may be continued after the crop has matured, but there will be loss in feeding the stalks unless the ears only are fed to the swine. The stalks may of course be cured and fed to horses or cattle. 3 Digitized by Microsoft® CHAPTER III. SORGHUM. Sorghum (Sorghum vil gare var. saccharatuat) has not been very extensively grown as a food for live stock on any part of the continent, but for sev- eral years past its great value for such a use has been known to a limited number of farmers in various centers, and in many instances it has been fed by those farmers with very satisfactory results. It is probably true that in Kansas more sorghum has been grown to provide food for live stock than in any other state in the Union, but in some of the states which border upon Kansas, and in others farther south, more or less sorghum has been grown for stock within the past few years. The idea has gone abroad, and rightly, too, that sorghum is more deli- cate and slower in growth than corn. But the gen- erally accepted view based on this idea, viz., that to grow sorghum and to keep it clean involves great labor is only partially correct. When sown on ground well prepared and clean on and near the surface, it requires no more labor subsequent to the sowing of the seed to grow sorghum than to grow corn. But it is frequently necessary to expend more labor in cleaning and meliowing the seed bed for this crop than in preparing the same for corn. If sown on land foul with weed seeds within the surface strata of the soil, the weeds will start in advance 34 Digitized by Microsoft® Fig. 4. Early Amber Sorghum (35) Minnesota University Experiment Farm. Digitized by Microsoft® 26 SOILING CROPS AND THE SILO. of the sorghum and will greatly hinder its growth unless much labor is expended in fighting then. Sorghum stools much when it is growing, hence the growth is finer in character than the growth of corn. This of course adds to its palata- bility as a food for stock. But its greatest value as a soiling food lies, first, in its power to pro- duce more than one cutting per year when grown under favorable conditions of soil and climate; second, in its ability to grow in climates with a limited rainfall. The plants grow slowly for a time, and the development of root growth is limited ; later they take a firm hold upon the soil, and 1f the weather is warm they rush forward with much quickness and vigor. Sorghum furnishes excellent soiling food for horses, cattle, sheep and swine. Like nearly all _green foods it must be fed with some caution to horses when working. It is becoming more com- mon to pasture sheep and swine upon sorghum than ‘to feed it to them as a soiling food, owing to the marked adaptability of this plant in providing pas- ture for these animals. But when fed as soiling food to sheep and swine it is much relished, more especially when of tender and succulent growth. Its highest use as a soiling food, however, is in pro- viding supplies for milch cows. They are fond of sorghum and it is good for milk production, and a given area furnishes relatively a large quantity of food. This plant has been known to produce thirty tons of green food per acre, but the average is under rather than over fifteen tons. In many instances the Digitized by Microsoft® SORGHUM. 37 yield would be even under ten tons per acre. Whether the largest yield will be obtained from one or two cuttings per acre will be largely dependent on the character of the season, but with sufficient rainfall larger yields will be obtained from two cuttings, and the sorghum from the second cutting is of increased fineness because of the more abundant stooling of the plants caused by the first cutting. Distribution.—Sorghum can be grown for soil- ing food in all the tillable portions of the United States that will produce Indian corn. This means that it can be grown successfully in every state in the Union. It can also be grown in Canada over simi- lar areas, but in those sections of Canada that mark the northerly limit of corn production, it cannot be grown as successfully as corn, because of insuff- ciently high temperatures in the growing season. As this plant is possessed of greater power to withstand drouth than corn, it has a higher adapta- tion for much of the area lying west of the tier of states which border on the Mississippi river and east of the Rocky Mountains. The extent to which sor- ghum will yet be grown for pasture, soiling food and fodder within the area named, can only be sur- mised. The conditions for its abundant growth in much of the said area are not at all unfavorable. The tillable areas on the continent which are least adapted to the growth of sorghum are those which border on the Atlantic and Pacific coasts and north from Portland in Maine on the one hand and from San Francisco on the other. Soil—The soils that possess highest adaptation for corn also possess highest adaptation for sorghum. Digitized by Microsoft® 38 SOILING CROPS AND THE SILO. The latter will grow best, therefore, on loam soils which are well supplied with humus, and which rest on a subsoil of readily permeable clay. All, or nearly all, prairie soils are well suited to the growth of sorghum. But the most suitable soils for this plant have more of the sand element in them than those which possess highest adaptation for growing corn. Sorghum may also be grown with success in sandy soils underlaid with sand or gravel and so lacking in moisture that corn could not be success- fully grown upon them. On the other hand, in the dry belt there are vast stretches of just such land which are so lacking in moisture that sorghum even cannot be grown on them in the absence of irrigation. On certain other soils, as, for instance, clays of more or less fineness of texture, corn may be grown to bet- ter advantage than sorghum. The former will suc- ceed measurably well on clays so stiff as to be quite unsuited to the growth of sorghum. Place in the Rotation—\When sorghum for soiling is the only crop grown on the land during the season of growth, it may be placed anywhere in the rotation, but preferably between two grain crops, as then it can be grown as a cleaning crop. Its effi- cacy for such a use will depend much upon whether it is or is not cultivated while growing. In either case, when the land is properly handled weed growth will be diminished. Sorghum may also be grown as a catch crop, but not to the same extent as corn, since some varieties of corn may be grown ina shorter period than any of the varieties of sorghum. When thus grown, however, it may frequently be made to follow such crops as winter rye, whether Digitized by Microsoft® : SORGHUM. 39 pastured, used for green food, plowed under, or har- vested. Sometimes it comes after clover is plowed under or made into hay; or early sown rape that has been eaten down. It may also be made to follow certain early garden crops, and crops intended for producing hay or grain, but which, through lack of promise, have been pastured off. The chief objec- tion to growing sorghum as a catch crop arises from the want of sufficient time, between the plowing of the land and the sowing of the seed, to give ample opportunity for sprouting the weed seeds that lie on or near the surface of the soil. Since corn may be harrowed to a much greater extent than sorghum without injury to the plants, it has higher adaptation than sorghum for being grown as a catch crop; on the other hand, sorghum will grow under conditions so dry as to bring distress upon the corn crop. Preparing the Soil—tLand in the best condition for being planted with sorghum is clean on and near the surface, is possessed of a fine tilth and is firm and moist. When sorghum is the only crop that is to be grown on the land for the season, it is usually. not difficult to so cultivate the soil that it will be in the condition above described when the crop is to be sown. Usually it is preferable to plow the land in the autumn. There will then be time to sprout the weed seeds on and near the surface, and in turn to destroy them before the seed is planted. This can be accomplished by the occasional use of the harrow, and in some instances it may be necessary also to use some form of cultivation. The precise nature of the implement to be used will be measurably dependent upon the character of the soil. While the Digitized by Microsoft® 40 SOILING CROPS AND THE SILO. surface soil is thus being stirred, its power to hold moisture is also being increased. And even though it be necessary to defer sowing the seed for a time, in order to secure the requisites necessary to insure a good seed bed, it is better to adopt such a course than to sow the seed on ill-prepared land. As previously intimated, there is usually not time to prepare the land thus, when sorghum is grown as a catch crop, but some things can be done that will tend to enhance the growth of the crop when it is planted. As soon as the land is plowed it should be rolled and harrowed to prevent the escape of moisture. _ But if there is already sufficient moisture in the land, it is not necessary to use the roller; and if the sowing of the seed can be deferred for a time, without too much hazard, something can be accomplished by way of cleaning the land on’ or near the surface. But more commonly it is necessary to sow the seed as soon as the ground can be made ready for it. While sorghum grows fairly well on land of but medium fertility, since the roots gather much food in the subsoil, the yields are usually propor- tionate to the fertility in the land. Farmyard manure, when it can be obtained, is one of the best and cheapest fertilizers for sorghum. Commonly it would be applied before the land is plowed, whether used in the fresh or in the reduced form. In the fresh form it may, with much propriety, be buried in the autumn, thus giving it ample time to measurabiy decay before the crop begins to feed upon it. But on leachy soils and in climates with much rainfall, the aim should be to apply the manure only a short Digitized by Microsoft® SORGHUM, 4 time before the crop is to be planted, lest its more valuable ingredients should filter into the drainage water and pass away before they can be appropriated by the plants of the crop which is to follow. It is not a good plan to top-dress the seed bed which is to receive sorghum seed with any kind of farmyard manure, because of the prevalence of weed seeds in the same. But it may in some instances serve an excellent purpose, to top-dress sandy soils with farmyard manure in the autumn, and then to bury the manure that has been so applied in the carly spring. The surface soil will thus be so far enriched _as to promote a rapid growth. Commercial fertilizers may be applied alone, or in conjunction with farmyard manure. Complete fertilizers are more commonly used, but the exact nature of the product to be applied will depend upon the extent to which the soil is wanting in the various leading elements of fertility. The aim should be to apply these fertilizers so that they will stimulate vig- orous growth in the plants when they are young, since, if they have thus been made strong while yet young, their power to extract plant food from the soil at a later period of development will be greatly enhanced. The fertilizer should therefore be sown when practicable at the same time the seed is sown, and in near proximity to the same, but not too close to it when the fertilizer is possessed of any ingre- dients of a caustic nature. For several years the question of fertilizers for sorghum is not likely to give much concern to the growers of the same in the upper basin of the Mis- sissippi river. It is very different, however, with the Digitized by Microsoft® 42 SOILING CROPS AND THE SILO. farmers living on the more hungry soils of the lower Atlantic and Gulf states. Sowing—One of the following methods of sowing sorghum is usually adopted: First, it is sown broadcast by hand and covered with the harrow; second, by the grain drill, all the tubes or only every alternate tube being used; third, by hand in shallow furrows marked out by the plow; or, fourth, by the grain drill in single or double rows with a space ot thirty to forty-two inches between them. The first method is usually practiced by those who have no grain drill, since it is convenient to sow the seed thus. The chief objections to sowing sorghum by this plan are, first, the seed is imperfectly covered and at vary- ing depths, hence it grows up more or less unevenly ; second, some of the seed in dry weather fails to germinate; third, when sown thus it cannot be cuiti- vated, which, under very dry conditions, may lead to failure in the crop. ‘The second method buries the seed at a uniform depth, hence the germination of the seed may be expected to be more uniform, but the objections from smothering through the presence of weeds and through injury from dry weather are much the same as when the seed is sown by hand, though less in degree. The use of only every other drill tube when sow- ing the seed insures a more bulky growth of the crop, but at the expense of the fine character of the growth. The third method is only resorted to when a small quantity 1s to be sown in the absence of a grain drill, and when at the same time it is desirable to cultivate the young crop. The fourth method is followed when a large area is to be grown, and when it is Digitized by Microsoft® ‘me JUsUTIodxg AyIsioAtUE) e}OSaUUITYT (Bu173Nd 4s414) SuyJos JOY UAMOID uINYyZI0g -S ‘314 (fF) Digitized by Microsoft® 44 SOILING CROPS AND THE SILO. desirable to cultivate the crop. In sowing the seed almost any make of drill may be used. In sowing double rows two adjoining tubes are active, while the tubes that occupy the space between the double rows are inactive, that is to say, not in use. The space between the rows that form the double row is thus from six to eight or nine inches wide, according to the make or pattern of the drill, and the distance between the double rows will be determined by the nature of the soil, the variety of the sorghum to be grown and the character of growth expected from it. The richer the soil, the more distant the rows from one another; the larger the variety of the sor- ghum the coarser will be the character of the growth produced. The chief objects sought in planting the double in preference to the single row are: To secure an increased yield in weight of fodder, and to secure a crop fine in character. One objection to the sys- tem is found in the shelter that is thus provided for weeds between the two lines of the double row. Prominent among the varieties of sorghum that are more commonly grown are the Early Amber, sometimes called the Minnesota Amber, the Early Orange, Folger’s Early and Link's Hybrid. The first named has marked adaptation for northern lati- tudes. The second and third are much grown in the states of the middle west, and the fourth is one among several varieties grown in the south. The quantity of seed to be sown will depend upon climatic conditions and upon the mode of plant- ing. It is manifest the system of sowing broadcast will call for much more seed than the system of planting sorghum in single or double rows. \When Digitized by Microsoft® SORGHUM. 45 the seed is broadcasted by hand or when it 1s sown with the grain drill—all the tubes in use,—one bushel of seed per acre will usually be sufficient, although some growers advocate sowing as much as two bushels per acre. Where the moisture is likely to prove inadequate to the needs of the growing crop, results more satisfactory will be obtained by reducing the quantity of the seed to be sown. When grown in single rows with a wide space between them, a few quarts of seed will suffice per acre, but in growing this crop for soiling uses it will, usually, be found advantageous to sow not less than a peck of seed per acre, whatsoever the method of growing the crop that may be adopted. The time for sowing the seed will, of course, vary with such conditions as relate to climate and rotation. It is a mistake to plant before warm and settled weather has set in. When sown too early the germination of the seed will be imperfect, the early growth will be sickly in character, and the weeds will push on ahead of the sorghum, so when the crop starts to grow no conditions, howsoever favorable, can make it a success. A crop grown under similar conditions, except that it is not sown until the weather is sufficiently warm, will prove much more satisfactory than the former. The best rule to follow, perhaps, is that which defers sowing the sorghum seed until the corn crop has been planted. Of course sorghum may be sown for soiling at _ any subsequent time, so long as there is time enough to secure sufficient growth to pay for the young crop. It must, of course, be harvested before the autumn Digitized by Microsoft® 46 SOILING CROPS AND THE SILO. frosts arrive. While green and succulent it is easily injured by frost. Cultivation.—Harrowing sorghum is the only mode of cultivation that may be resorted to when it is sown on the broadcast plan, either by hand or with the grain drill. It cannot be harrowed nearly so much as corn, owing to the much greater delicacy of the young plants, and when planted with the grain drill the harrow may be more effectively used than when the seed has been broadcasted, for then the plants do not uproot so easily. Sorghum sown with the grain drill may, usually, be harrowed with benefit to the crop just when the first blades are pushing through the soil. The harrow used should be light, of a broad sweep and the teeth of the same should be slanted backward to the greatest possible extent when the work is being done. No little dif- ference of opinion prevails as to the degree of the benefit arising from harrowing the crop after it has got well through the soil. It is at least question- able if sorghum should be harrowed after the plants appear until they get up several inches above the surface. Before that period of advancement they are easily uprooted and also easily buried in the process of harrowing. The quick growth of sor- ghum will certainly be promoted by harrowing, but the crop should not be harrowed to the extent of inaking the plants too few to produce a maximum of forage. Where it is intended to use the harrow freely on the young plants, enough additional seed should be sown to allow for the expected loss. In sections deficient in moisture, it is more nec- essary to use the harrow freely than in those opposite Digitized by Microsoft® SORGHUM. iy in character. When the crop is threatened with serious injury from the presence of young weeds, it ought to be harrowed. More sorghum will be secured, and that of a superior quality, from a piece of land in which the plants have been thinned over- much by harrowing than from a similar piece of equal area in which the weeds have obtained the ascendency over the sorghum. When practicable, the cultivation of sorghum sown in rows sufficiently distant should be carly begun, it should be frequent, and may be continued almost up to the time of the last cutting of the crop for the season, and it ought to be shallow rather than deep. After the first cutting of the crop, the benetit from prompt subsequent cultivation will be abundantly apparant. Some hand hoeing may be given betimes with profit in the line of the row, but when the land has been well prepared such work is seldom necessary. Feeding.—There is no cast-iron rule as to when the cutting of the crop should begin. It should not be delayed, however, until the seed heads are formed when a second cutting is intended. If the sorghum is cut after that period the yield from the second growth will be much reduced. When cut too early the yield from the first cutting is unduly small. Usually the cutting of the first growth does not begin until the crop. is from two to three feet high, but it may begin earlier if necessary, and the cutting of the second growth may begin as soon as the seed heads appear, or even earlier. Since, under normal conditions, the crop is cut and fed from day to day according to the needs of the live Digitized by Microsoft® 48 SOILING CROPS AND THE SILO. stock, the second growth will frequently be ready to cut by the time the first growth is all consumed, providing the consumption of the first growth has covered a period sufficiently long. This period wiil vary, but it should not be less than three to four weeks. Sorghum, therefore, from a single sowing, may be made to provide soiling food in the green form for live stock from six to eight weeks. But during periods of severe drouth, the second cutting may not materialize, or it may, at least, be disap- pointing in its growth. When but one cutting is made the harvesting may begin as soon as the seed heads are fully formed, and may be continued until the crop is fully matured. But when the sorghum is to be fed to sheep or swine in the green form, they will consume it with greater relish when cut at an early stage of growth. The food is then fine in character, juicy, tender and contains but little fiber. When thus fed one or two more cuttings can be obtained in one season because of the earlier stage of development at which the sorghum is cut. But it is more common to pasture sheep and swine on young sorghum than to feed it to them as soil- ing food. When but a small quantity is wanted per day, the scythe is commonly used in cutting the sorghum. When grown along and beside a pasture fence, of necessity the scythe must be used in cutting the food for convenience in feeding the same. When a large amount is required the mower must be used. As the plants do not shrivel readily, enough may be mown at one time to last for two or three days, more especially when the green food is Digitized by Microsoft® SORGHUM. 49 to be fed to the cattle and horses. As in feeding corn, it may be fed within a pasture, in racks, feed lots, or mangers in the stables. Some care is necessary, especially when the feeding begins to limit the amount fed, or to feed it in a somewhat wilted condition, lest it should cause hoven or bloat. Inattention at this point may lead to serious loss, but green sorghum is less liable to produce hoven than clover or alfalfa. The amount that may be given daily need not be limited except by the needs of the live stock, unless for a few days at the first. However, more satisfactory results will follow when some other food less succulent is given. Sorghum-may also be fed to live stock with great advantage in the matured form, on what may be termed the soiling plan of feeding. When thus fed it is common to cut the crop with the binder or mower, but more commonly with the latter. The sorghum is then allowed to lie on the ground for sev- eral days before being gathered together, especially when it is not well matured, or when the weather is damp. It does not take injury from rain as corn would when thus exposed. The outside of the stem is hard, hence the rain does not penetrate it. But some injury is done through the soil that adheres to it. It is true, nevertheless, that sorghum exposed thus and lying on the ground for a period of two or three weeks in rainy weather has been eaten subse- quently and with a relish by live stock. It 1s drawn into windrows, by using a strong rake, and is then put into large “cocks” or heaps by hand. When the crop is very heavy, it may be bunched without first having been raked. In such cocks 4 Digitized by Microsoft® 50 SOILING CROPS AND THE SILO. sorghum will not ferment or mold as corn does, hence as much as 500 pounds, or more than that, may be put in one heap without any danger of loss from heating. From these the sorghum may be drawn and fed to live stock in the pastures, in the sheds or stables, as desired. This food is greatly relished by the animals at that season of the year, and since it is fed with but little handling it is con- sidered an economical food. Feeding from such a source may be continued until the closing in of the winter. When sorghum is to be fed thus, it is com- monly grown like grain, that it may be fine enough to be handled with the fork without difficulty. No other kind of food that can be grown comes in more opportunely for feeding at that season than sorghum. In: the states of the middle west and in those of the south, where winter delays its coming, this method of feeding sorghum is peculiarly advantageous. Digitized by Microsoft® CHAPTER IV. THE NON-SACCHARINE SORGHUMS. The chief of the non-saccharine sorghums are Kaffir corn, Milo maize, dhourra and Jerusalem corn. Teosinte, properly speaking, is not a sorghum, but it will be included in the discussion of the non- saccharine sorghums because of the similarity in the methods of cultivation and in the uses for which it is grown. Of these plants, Kaffir corn is the best known and the most extensively cultivated, but it would be premature to reach the conclusion that because of this it is the most valuable. It has been cultivated apparently in the United States for a longer period than the other non-saccharine sor- ghums. Milo maize in some of its varieties is likely to make a strong competitor to Kaffir corn. These plants are all of comparatively recent introduction into the United States. At least no one of them has been extensively grown in the same until within a comparatively recent period. They are but little known, therefore, to any considerable number of the agriculturists of the country. It will be in order, therefore, to give a short description of each and also to make some reference to the distinc- tive peculiarities of growth. Kaffir corn (Sorghimn «iulgare) is a sturdy growing plant. The stem is thick at the base, taper- ing toward the top and usually grows to the hight of I Digitized a ner 52 SOILING CROPS AND THE SILO. about five to six feet. Since it does not grow so tall as many of the varieties of corn, nor so tall as sorghum, or Milo maize, it is more easily handled than these in the sheaf when fully grown. The leaves are long and large and fairly numerous, but not markedly abundant. . It throws up a single spike which bears a head in which the seeds are closely packed. The head is fully six inches long and three inches broad and stands erect, or nearly so. Large yields of seed are obtained, and when ground its feeding value for the various classes of farm stock is nearly equal to that of corn. The plants are but little liable to break down with the wind. They have extraordinary power to grow under dry condi- tions and to retain succulence in the leaves and stems even after the seed has matured. The leading varieties of Kaffir corn are the red and the white. The red matures earlier than the white, but the latter would seem to produce more seed. The red variety is better adapted than the white to states north from where the most suitable conditions exist for growing Kaffir corn. Milo maize (Sorghum vulgare or Andropogon sorghuit, var.) is a vigorous growing plant. In the tests made at the Minnesota university experiment station in 1897-08, the plants attained an average hight of about eight feet. The leaves are large, and from the center of the stalk upward they are quite numerous. Each stalk when matured is surmounted by a large head which bears seed profusely. This head has an average length of about six inches and an average diameter of about four inches. When the head first appears it is erect, but when matured Digitized by Microsoft® ‘wie. JUoWiadxy AYSIOAIUE) PJOSaUUTY W410) IIEY pea 9 “Bld (£8) Digitized by Microsoft® 54 SOILING CROPS AND THE SILO. it hangs downward. It is somewhat more open than the seed head which is produced in Kaffir corn. There are two leading varieties of Milo maize, named respectively the yellow and the white. The former is the earlier of the two. In 1897 some of the seed of the yellow variety matured at the Minne- sota university experiment station, but not all of it. In 1898, one plat of the same variety was pastured with sheep. About the same results were obtained as from pasturing early amber sorghum. Another plat was grown in rows three feet distant from one another and harvested like corn. It was found that the numerous leaves around the top of the plants added to the difficulty in shocking and in preserving the fodder from injury by rain. When fed to cattle and sheep they ate it with more relish than they mani- fested for any of the other non-saccharine sorghums. Dhourra (Andropogon sorghum, Brot.) is of at least four varieties, the brown, the black, the red and the white. Of these, the brown is more commonly grown. It is so named, doubtless, from the color of the seeds when ripe. It grows less rapidly than Milo maize. At the Minnesota university experi- ment station in 1897, the plants grew from six to eight feet in hight. The large aa long leaves are not numerous. The seed heads are thick and heavy and oval shaped. They hang on a stem, which, though erect at first, assumes a shape resembling the neck of a goose as the maturing process goes on. It is a rather slow grower and matures oad about the same time as Kaihr corn, Jerusalem corn (. dndropogon sorghum, Brot.) bears some resemblance to dhourra in appearance Digitized by Microsoft® Fig. 7. Yellow [ilo [Maize (55) Minnesota University Experiment Farm. Digitized by Microsoft® 56 SOILING CROPS AND THE SILO. and also in its habits of growth. It is even stronger in the stem than dhourra and has still less of forage. The seed heads are large, and like those of dhourra, hang on hook-shaped stems. At the Minnesota university experiment station in 1897 the plants grew to the hight of about five feet. Like those of dhourra they grew more slowly than Milo maize or Early Amber sorghum. Jerusalem corn should be grown rather for the seed than for the fodder. It is not probable that either dhourra or Jerusalem corn will be extensively grown for soiling food where Milo maize and sorghum can be grown. Teosinte (Reana lururians) is distinguished from the non-saccharine sorghums in the less erect character of the growth, in the extent to which the plants sucker, in the greater fineness and abundance of the long and slender leaves, and in the manner in which the seed is produced. The seed grows on small ears and the ears grow numerously around every top joint of the seed stem. They are enclosed in a husk. There is probably no fodder plant that tillers so much as teosinte. As many as sixty suckers have been produced by a single plant. In the experiments conducted at the Minnesota univer- sity experiment station in 1808, it was found that when planted in rows three feet apart and thinned to fifteen inches in the row, each plant produced from five to twenty-five stalks. Those thinned to from two to three inches in the row produced from two to twelve stalks. The latter were also much more upright in their growth. Seed heads were not even formed on any of the plants. Teosinte would make an excellent pasture and soiling plant for the south Digitized by Microsoft® Fig. 8. Brown Dhourra (57) Minnesota University Experiment Farm. Digitized by Microsoft® 58 SOILING CROPS AND THE SILO. but for the low palatability which it possesses. It is thought a greater weight of food can be obtained from this plant than from any of the sorghums or millets that have been tried in the United States. These plants can all be made to furnish pasture, soiling food, hay and fodder for winter feeding, and when the season is long enough to mature seed, they can all be made to furnish large yields of grain. It is yet premature to say much about the precise rela- tive adaptation of these plants for feeding uses. It would probably be correct, however, to state that Milo maize and teosinte are the most promising pasture and soiling plants, that Kaffir corn is the most promising fodder plant, especially for dry areas, and that dhourra and Jerusalem corn are the largest producers of. seed. The seeds of all the non- saccharine sorghums are excellent for all kinds of farm animals, but unless when given to fowls they ought to be ground before being fed. The yields of fodder will of course vary greatly with the variations in soils and in the length of the seasons. They will run from a few to many tons. The largest yields of soiling food are obtained from teosinte and Milo maize. Distribution —The non-saccharine sorghums are without exception less hardy than the common varieties of corn. Nor are they so hardy as sor- ghum is, at least in some of its varieties. It follows therefore, that these plants are not likely to succeed far northward. Only in the Mississippi basin and in the Rocky mountain valleys, with their hot mid- summer temperatures, are they likely to succeed in the near future north of the fortieth parallel of north Digitized by Microsoft® “Wde JuautIadNG AjIsIoAlUp) BJOSaUUITT UJOD WayEsnise °6 *3I4 (6S) Digitized by Microsoft® 60 SOILING CROPS AND THE SILO. latitude, that is to say, north of the parallel which runs through Springfield, Ill.; and even in the Mis- sissippi basin they can be grown with greater success south of that line rather than north of the same. In the trials made with the non- saccharine sorghums at the Minnesota university experiment farm, all the varieties tested pro- duced an abundant growth of green food, as will be evident from what has previously been said in regard to them, but only in a few instances did any of the varieties mature seed. These plants are also more tender than corn and sorghum in the early stages of their growth, and with the exception of Milo maize they would seem to be less palatable than corn and sorghum. In view of these facts, it is only in localities not well adapted to the growth of corn and sorghum that the non-saccharine sorghums are likely to supersede them. It is not probable, there- fore, that they will supersede corn and sorghum north from the fortieth parallel of latitude, at least not in the near future. Of course it is impossible to say how much further to the north the line of suc- cessful growth may be pushed when these plants become better acclimatized. The greater power which the non-saccharine sorghums have to grow under conditions too dry for the successful growth of corn, furnishes a sufficient reason for growing them under such conditions. A second reason is found in the greater yields of grain which they furnish in many localities in the south. _A third reason arises from the power which they have to grow again when cut. This property, in conjunction with the abundance of the food which Digitized by Microsoft® THE NON-SACCHARINE SORGIIUMS., 61 they produce, gives them a high place as soiling foods or even as pasture plants where they can be - successfully grown. The highest adaptation for the non-saccharine sorghums is found at present west from the Missis- sippi river and south from Nebraska, with Kansas, Arkansas and Oklahoma as its center. But both east and west from these states they can be grown profitably over considerable areas. | Teosinte has higher adaptation to the states which mark the south- ern boundary of the Republic, but it may be grown successfully as soiling food in the states immediately north of these. Soil—A\ll the non-saccharine sorghums would seem to have greater power than corn to gather plant food in a dry soil. They are therefore relatively better adapted than corn to a sandy soil. But it would not be correct to say that they have greater power to grow in a sandy soil than in a sandy loam, nor in a dry climate than in one possessed of con- siderable moisture. They would seem also to have greater power than corn to gather food in soils low in humus, and yet where humus is present in consid- erable quantities they grow more vigorously than where it is present only in meager supply. All these plants gather much of their food in the subsoil, hence the nature of the subsoil has an influence on their growth not very much less than the surface soil. Subsoils, therefore, that contain a layer of hardpan which is near the surface are quite unsuited to the growth of these plants. The most suitable soils are those sandy in tex- ture, possessed of a considerable supply of humus Digitized by Microsoft® 62 SOILING CROPS AND THE SILO. and underlaid with clay that is open in character rather than retentive. But some of the non-saccha- rine sorghums will produce fairly good crops when both the soil and subsoil are sandy. Notably is this true of Kafhr corn. The sandy soils of the Rocky mountain valleys have high adaptation for the non- saccharine sorghums, and the same is true of much of the land in the southern and south- western states. Place in the Rotatton—The non-saccharine sorghums consume considerable quantities of nitro- gen while making their growth, hence the aim should be to grow them after nitrogen-gathering crops. Since they will grow better on soils possessed of a fair quantity of humus, the effort should be made to grow them as far as can be done where green manures have been buried, and within a reasonably recent period. They can therefore with much pro- priety be made to come after crimson clover, the cowpea, the soy bean, the common vetch, the sand vetch and the velvet bean. even though these crops should be harvested. They should also be grown after such crops as winter rye or rape plowed under, and on overturned sod when the conditions may admit of so doing. But they may of course be given almost any place in the rotation when a due regard is had to the fertility of the soil. Cultivation is also usually given to these crops during the growing period, hence they may be classed as cleaning crops. This means that they cught to be followed by grain crops where these can be successfully grown, and grass seeds should be sown on the grain crops. But in some sections Digitized by Microsoft® THE NON-SACCHARINE SORGHUMS. 63 where these crops can be successfully grown, the conditions are too dry to admit of the successful growth of the grasses that are ordinarily cultivated. In such locations some winter crop could be made to follow these crops, since the ground is in excellent condition to receive it, and this could be done with but little additional preparation of the land by way of tillage. These crops include winter rye, the winter vetch, the sand vetch, crimson clover, and in some localities, alfalfa. Preparing the Soil—The preparation of the land for these crops is much the same as for corn. The aim should be to secure a free, firm and moist seed bed in sections low in the amount of the rainfall. This can best be secured by plowing the land as long as possible previous to the planting of the seed, and by harrowing the surface of the land thus plowed at intervals of more or less duration. This method of managing land will also be very helpful in removing weeds from the uppermost section of the soil. These crops are planted later than corn and even later than sorghum, hence the season is more prolonged during which such treatment can be given to the land. Sometimes in areas much deficient in moisture the plan termed “‘listing’’ is adopted in growing some of these crops, as in growing corn. When this method of planting is followed, the soil is not first plowed. Furrows are turned both ways from the line where the seed is to be planted. The work is done by using a double-mold-board plow, which also loosens the soil for some distance below the line of the furrow. In the soil thus loosened the seed is planted. The object sought is to enable Digitized by Microsoft® 64 SOILING CROPS AND THE SILO. the plants to gather moisture under circumstances more favorable than would result from ordinary cultivation. _ When rainfall is usually abundant, the aim should be to secure friability rather than impac- tion in the surface soil, hence it would have to be more deeply stirred during the preparatory cleaning process. But when these crops come after a winter crop pastured off or plowed under, there is not much time for thus attempting to clean the land. The fertilizers suitable for non-saccharine sor- ghums are practically the same as those suitable for sorghum. When, however, farmyard manure is applied under very dry climatic conditions, it must not be applied in large quantities lest the too rapid escape of moisture near the surface of the soil should be promoted. Sowing the Seed.—The method adopted in sowing the seed of these crops will vary somewhat with the kind of crop, with the percentage of mois- ture present in the soil, with the percentage in the same that may be expected in the growing season, and with the precise object sought in growing the different varieties. © The more branching, for instance, the habit of growth in the plants, the more distant from one another do they require to be grown. The less the degree of moisture the more distant also should they be from one another. If fineness of leaf and stem are sought, the plants may. under some conditions be sown broadcast or with the grain drill on what may be termed the broadcast plan. But when a more vigorous and Digitized by Microsoft® THE NON-SACCHARINE SORGHUMS. 65 luxurious growth is sought, then the seed should be planted in rows and cultivated. The latter sys- tem will be more commonly adopted where moisture is deficient. When sown on the broadcast plan, the aim should be to plant with the ordinary grain drill all the tubes being in use, or only every alternate tube, as may be desired. When sown in rows far enough apart to admit of cultivation being given, the same implement may be used, but of course various other seed planters may also be used. The rows should be trom thirty to, say, forty-two inches distant, accord- ing to circumstances, except in the case of teosinte, which should, at least when grown for certain uses, have a greater distance between the rows. But the most suitable distance for placing the rows when growing these crops can only be determined with precision in each locality by actual experience in growing them. The time for planting will depend on the location and the character of the weather. It would be a mistake, however, to plant the seeds before the weather had become steadily warm. The plants are less able when young to endure cold than corn in nearly all its varieties, and than sorghum in its leading varieties. At the Minnesota university experiment station low temperatures prevailed dur- ing two or three weeks subsequent to the planting of these crops in 1897. Corn in some of its varieties made a fairly good start notwithstanding, and the Early Amber variety of sorghum maintained its hold upon the soil. The non-saccharine sorghums with- out exception only partially germinated, although 5 Digitized by Microsoft® 66 SOILING CROPS AND THE SILO. the conditions were precisely the same. It was necessary to plant the non-saccharine sorghums a second time. The amount of seed required will vary with the climatic and soil conditions and with the character of the produce sought. The more favorable the attendant conditions, the greater should be the amount of seed sown when growth fine in character is sought, and since the plants of some of these sor- ghums produce more stalks and foliage than others, it is not necessary with the former to plant so much seed. Notably is this true of teosinte, and in a less degree of Milo maize. When planted in rows where cultivation is to be given other than harrowing, a few pounds of seed will suffice for an acre. But when these crops are sown broadcast, from about one-half bushel to one and one-half bushels of seed per acre are used. Cultivation—When the non-saccharine sor- ghums are planted with any kind of drill or planter, they may be harrowed without hazard to the plants just as they begin to push up through the ground, providing the harrow is light, and that when in use a backward slant is given to the teeth. Later, on certain soils, as those quite loose in character, such as the humus soils of the prairie, seme form of weeder may be used in many instances, more espe- cially when the plants are in rows distant from one another. When thus planted, further cultivation should be given with more or less frequency. It should be sufficient to destroy weeds and to retain moisture in the soil to the greatest extent practicable. Where moisture is usually more or less wanting, the Digitized by Microsoft® THE NON-SACCHARINE SORGHUMS. 67 crops should in all instances be so planted that they may be cultivated. Feeding —The non-saccharine sorghums and also teosinte can be cut for soiling food from one to several times in one season. More particularly is this true of Milo maize and teosinte. The same mode of cutting, carting and feeding may be adopted as in handling sorghum (see Page 47). The cut- ting may begin at any time after sufficient growth has been made to justify the same, and the residue of the crop not wanted for green food may be allowed to mature. When sufficiently matured, it can be harvested and fed in winter. The ration is improved by feeding these crops in conjunction with one of the legumes, as, for instance, alfalfa, vetches, cow- peas or soy beans. In many instances it would be possible to feed them thus, since one or more of the legumes named can be successfully grown under conditions suitable for the successful growth of the non-saccharine sorghums. Digitized by Microsoft® CHAPTER V. PLANTS OF THE CLOVER FAMILY. Many kinds of clover are now being grown in this country. Some of these are indigenous, but those possessed of highest economic value have been introduced from Europe. While each kind has a mission of usefulness in some section or sections of the continent, only a few are suitable in any marked degree for being grown as soiling food. The chief of these are the common or medium red, the mammoth, alsike, crimson and alfalfa. As the methods of growing the first four varieties are in many respects very similar, they will be considered together. Alfalfa will be discussed by itself, since it differs considerably from the other clovers men- tioned in habits of growth, and for this reason requires different management. MEDIUM, MAMMOTH, ALSIKE AND CRIMSON CLOVER. Medium red clover (Trifolium pratense) is biennial and perennial in its habit of growth, accord- ing to the climatic and other conditions under which it is grown. It differs from the other three kinds in the continuity of its growth throughout all or nearly all of the growing season. Because of this peculiarity it usually produces two cuttings of soiling 68 Digitized by Microsoft® PLANTS OF THE CLOVER FAMILY. 6%) food or hay in one season, whereas, the others only produce one. Mammoth clover (Trifolium inedium) is also biennial and perennial in its habit of growth. It differs from the other clovers in the stronger char- acter of the top and root growth which characterizes it. The food which it produces is in consequence coarser in character, unless when the plants are grown very thickly. It is better adapted than the medium variety to soils that are medium or less than that in fertility. The bloom on both the medium and mammoth varieties is a beautiful red. To the casual observer the only differences apparent in the varieties while they are growing are the larger leaf, stem and head of the mammoth variety. Alsike clover (Trifolium hybridum) is a peren- nial plant. The period of its duration is dependent on such conditions as pertain to climate, soil and treatment. All of the clovers under discussion will live longer than they otherwise would if prevented from producing seed. This kind differs from all the others in the greater fineness of the growth and in the beautiful blending of white and red tints in the bloom. Crimson or Scarlet clover (Trifolium incarna- tum) is an annual plant, that is to say, it completes the cycle of its existence within twelve months from the date of sowing the seed, although more com- monly it is sown one year and reaped the next. It differs from the other clovers in the shape of the heads, which are oblong and cone-shaped, in the rich scarlet color of the bloom, and in the more hairy character of the stems, a property which Digitized by Microsoft® 7O SOILING CROPS AND THE SILO. detracts from its feeding value when grown for hay. While clover of all the species named furnishes an excellent soiling food, it is not so commonly grown for such a use, for the reason, first, that the yield per acre is much less than that of many other foods grown for soiling; second, that ordinarily it is so easily cured for hay, and, third, that it is so easily handled when cured. The crimson clover is ready to be cut for soiling food before the spring months have gone, or some weeks before the medium, which in turn is ready in from two to three weeks in advance of the mammoth and alsike. The value of the crimson clover as a soiling food is thus some- what lessened by the necessity for thus cutting and feeding it when pasture is plentiful and succulent. Clover furnishes excellent soiling food for horses, cattle, sheep and swine, but when fed to sheep and swine it should be cut at a stage somewhat earlier than when fed to horses and cows, to secure more fineness in the growth. When fed to cattle and sheep it should be somewhat restricted in quantity at first, or else wilted before it is fed, as the unre- strained feeding of fresh cut clover will sometimes cause bloating, which if not speedily relieved may result fatally. The yield of soiling food from all these kinds of clover varies, of course, with the conditions under which they are grown. It will be approximately correct to place the average yield of the first cutting of medium clover for soiling uses at six tons per acre, and of the second cutting the same season at four tons. But these yields can be increased at Digitized by Microsoft® PLANTS OF THE CLOVER FAMILY. 7p) least 50 per cent by judicious cultivation. The yield from each of the other varieties is somewhat greater than that obtained from the first cutting of the medium clover, but it is likewise some- what less than that obtained from the two cut- tings of the latter. Distribution.—The clover zone in the United States and Canada covers the entire portion of the arable land. But there are stretches of country, nevertheless, in which clover of any of the species heretofore introduced has not been grown with any marked success. One of these stretches lies east of the Rocky mountains in what is usually spoken of as the semi-arid belt. In this area it perishes from want of moisture. Another stretch lies to the north of Minnesota and North Dakota, where the low winter temperatures forbid the successful growth of clover. In some limited areas of these stretches, some kinds of clover can be grown, but it cannot be said of the same that they have high adaptation for growing clover, nor can any of the clovers now under discussion be grown with marked success in the southern states, unless it be the crimson. The summer heat is not favorable to its development. The distribution of the medium, mammoth and alsike species of clover is about the same, but the alsike can be grown somewhat farther north than the medium or the mammoth. Above the soth parallel these clovers are not a success, nor are they a marked success below the 38th parallel, unless in very limited areas. In much of the country between these parallels they can be grown with more or less suc- cess, save in the semi-arid country beside the Rocky Digitized by Microsoft® 72 SOILING CROPS AND THE SILO. mountains and east of them, and in the cold country lying north and south from the eastern half of the St. Lawrence river. The highest adaptation for these clovers is found south of the 5oth parallel and beside the Pacific, including also the Rocky mountain valleys when supplied with moisture. Next in adaptation comes what was originally the forest country, including certain prairie lands, which. although not originally covered with timber, will produce it readily. This belt lies between the upper Mississippi and the New England states. The New England states and the Maritime provinces of Canada will grow clover,. but not with that luxuriance which characterizes its growth in the other areas named. ‘The greatest clover-growing states on the continent include Michigan, Wisconsin. eastern Minnesota, Iowa, northern Missouri. . Illinois, Indiana, Ohio, and parts of Montana and Washington. It also grows with superlative luxuriance in southern Ontario. Crimson clover thrives best in a climate some- what warmer than is suitable for the other kinds. The highest adaptation for this plant is probably found in the Atlantic and Gulf states, southward from New York city. It is not usually grown with much success north of the latitude of Columbus, O., that is to say, north of the 4oth parallel. But for a short distance north of that line it may be grown in good form along the Atlantic coast and for a much greater distance north of the same latitude along the Pacific coast. Unless well protected, crimson clover cannot withstand low temperatures. \When the medium, mammoth and alsike clover grow at their Digitized by Microsoft® PLANTS OF THE CLOVER FAMILY. 73 best, crimson clover can seldom, or never, be grown with equal success. Soils.—All the species of clover under discus- sion will grow better in soils having in them a very decided clay element. When sufficiently supplied with moisture, these clovers will even grow vigorously in clays of the stiffest texture. They grow better in clay loams than in sandy loams, but in fertile sands, such as abound in many of the Rocky mountain valleys, they will make a wonderful growth when plentifully supplied with water. The volcanic origin of many of these soils, however, may account for their wonderful adaptation to the production of clover. The humus soils of the prairie will produce clover abundantly when there is in them enough clay to make them measurably dense, but when this element is so far lacking as to allow them to lift with the winds, they do not possess highest adaptation for clover. In fact, it cannot be success- fully grown upon these, unless in exceptional instances, until the land becomes impacted by cultivation more or less prolonged. Soil adaptation in the medium red and mammoth red clovers is about the same. Ordinarily they grow in what may be termed deep, moist, friable clays, underlaid with a subsoil of clay of medium density. They grow least well on soils impregnated with alkali and on infertile sands, more especially when these are ill supplied with moisture. Those soils usually spoken of as swamp lands have special adaptation for the growth of alsike clover when they rest on a clay subsoil, and when the water table has been sufficiently lowered in them Digitized by Microsoft® 74 SOILING CROPS AND THE SILO. by some form of drainage. But alsike clover will also grow well in some of those lands which have highest adaptation for the medium, red and mammoth sorts, more especially those of them that are strongly spiced with clay. The ordinary upland prairie does not seem well suited to the production of alsike clover, more especially when this soil is lacking in moisture. While crimson clover will flourish on soils well adapted to the growth of the other red clovers, it would seem to have more adaptation for sandy soils than these. Much of the soil in the chief centers for growing crimson clover is sandy in tex- ture. This greater adaptation arises probably in part from the great power the plants have to gather food, and in part from the moist character of the climate in crimson clover centers during those por- tions of the year in which the crop is produced. Place in the Rotation.—As clover is a soil reno- vator, the aim should he, first, to grow it on land in which it is specially desirable to increase the supply of nitrogen; second, on land where it is to be fol- lowed by a crop that requires an abundant supply of nitrogen in the soil to enable it to produce abun- dantly. It should also be sown on land that is at least measurably clean, as an abundant growth of weeds in the crop will not only lessen the yield, but will impair its feeding value in proportion as they are present. There is special fitness, therefore, in laying down to clover, land that has produced a crop to which clean cultivation was given, as, for instance, a crop of corn, potatoes or field roots. And the reasons are equally good for following the clover crop with wheat, oats or barley, corn or potatoes. Digitized by Microsoft® PLANTS OF THE CLOVER FAMILY. 75 In some sections it is common to grow medium red clover, corn or potatoes and small grain in a three years’ rotation. When the conditions are suitable the plan is an admirable one. But few methods of crop production will compare with it in the easy maintenance of soil fertility and in the profits that grow out of the system. The other leading kinds of clover, however, are not so well adapted as the medium for such a rotation. The mammoth does not produce a second growth, for being plowed under, as does the common red. The alsike is perennial in its habit of growth, and the crimson is better adapted to another form of rotation, as will be shown below. The medium and mammoth clovers may, never- theless, be made to fit into any kind of a rotation. The aim should be to grow them at short rather than at long intervals in the rotation, and for several reasons. First, as previously intimated, they have great power to enrich the land by depositing in it nitrogen drawn from the air; second, they have much power to gather supplies of phosphoric acid and potash in the subsoil, much of which is deposited again in the cultivable strata; third, they improve the mechanical condition of the land by the abun- dance of the vegetable deposit contained in the roots, and, fourth, the humus thus supplied greatly increases the power of the land to hold moisture, whether it comes from above or below. There is probably no other plant grown that is capable of exercising so beneficent an influence on farming. The place for crimson clover is, properly speak- ing, that of a catch crop. It is usually grown as the antecedent of or the consequent to some other crop Digitized'by Microsoft® 70 SOILING CROPS AND THE SILO. grown the same season. And this is true of it whether it is grown for pasture, for soiling food, for hay or for green manure. It may with much pro- priety be preceded by such quick-growing early sum- mer crops as vegetables and certain of the early maturing cereals, and followed by such crops as pota- toes, corn or any of the sorghums, and on soils low in fertility by cowpeas or soy beans. Preparing the Soil—In preparing the soil for clover seed in any of its varieties, the aim should be to secure a seed bed fine, firm, deep, moist and clean. It should be fine that the clover seeds may be more perfectly hidden from the light, and that the tender, tiny rootlets may easily ramify the soil in search of food. It should be firm to prevent evaporation, too rapid from the surface. It should be deep to allow the tap roots to go down readily. But in light sands, or spongy loam soils of the prairie, shallow cultiva- tion would be preferable unless done a good while previously to the sowing of the seed because of the difficulty of sufficiently firming such soils. It should be moist to promote quick germination and rapid growth. It should be clean to secure an abundant growth in the clover and to produce a good quality of food. The first of these conditions may be more readily secured when the soil is plowed in the autumn, and such plowing is also favorable to secur- ing all the conditions named. Deep plowing can be done much more advantageously in the fall than in the spring, where fall plowing is in order. But in climates with much rainfall in winter, autumn plow- ing may be less judicious than spring plowing, Digitized by Microsoft® PLANTS OF THE CLOVER FAMILY. V7 especially where the soil contains much clay. The winter rains cause it to “run together” in a way that increases the labor of subsequent cultivation, and that further imperils the abundant and vigorous growth of the plants. Some soils are so friable that they call for but little pulverization; other soils, as clays, are oftentimes cloddy on the surface. It is especially important that these shall be made fine by the repeated use of the roller and harrow. Firmness in the seed bed may be secured by plowing the land a considerable time previous to the sowing of the seed, or by using the roller freely on it. Autumn plowed lands always furnish a seed bed more firm than those that are spring plowed, a fact of much significance in cultivating the soils of the northwestern prairies. When firming some classes of these soils, by running a heavy roller over them, it may be necessary to follow the roller with a light harrow to prevent them being more or jess carried away by the wind. Deep cultivation is secured, of course, by simply plowing more deeply, and in some instances by subsoiling. In some sections of the prairie the growth of. clover is greatly promoted by plowing so deeply that some of the firmer subsoil shall be brought to the surface. But with nearly all classes of soils, if much of the subsoil were brought to the surface at one time the influence on plant growth at the first would be harmful, because of the unameliorated condition of such subsoils. The management that secures a fine tilth and a firm seed bed will also tend to increase the moisture in the land. When the clover seed is sown early in the spring, a clean seed bed can only be secured by cultivation given the previous season, Digitized by Microsoft® 78 SOILING CROPS AND THE SILO. but when sowing the seed is deferred until late in the spring or until summer, the seed bed may be made clean near the surface by the frequent use of the harrow between the opening of nar and the sowing of the seed. When growing clover for soiling, it is very important that heavy yields shall be obtained, since a heavy crop is so much easier to gather than a light one. The former may easily be lifted, and with sufficient cleanness, without using a rake; whereas, the latter would require to be raked, thus adding very much to the labor of gathering the crop, and to the area of land required to grow it. One great advan- tage from growing soiling crops, viz., that of intensive production, would thus be defeated. It is always expedient, therefore, to make land quite rich that is to grow clover for soiling, when it is not so already, by the addition of fertilizers. Of these, farmyard manure is certainly one of the best; and when applied it will of course feed the nurse crop as wellas the clover. The kind or kinds of commercial fertilizer or fertilizers that may be employed with most advantage will depend upon the needs of the land. Nitrogen, phosphoric acid and potash are most frequently needed, but in quantities that vary according to conditions, and in many instances lime acts very beneficially. On some soils the growing of the clover is greatly stimulated by sow- ing on the young plants when the period of growth is beginning or has already begun, an application of gypsum, usually not less than 100 pounds per acre and not more than 300 pounds. In other instances, marked benefit results from sowing wood ashes, Digitized by Microsoft® PLANTS OF THE CLOVER FAMILY, 79 leached or unleached, on the crop previous to the season of active growth. The application of leached ashes should be about four times as heavy as that of unleached ashes, that is to say, it may run from about 200 bushels per acre upward. Sowing the Seed. —Clover seed may be sown by hand, by using a hand seed sower, or by the grain drill with, and, in some instances, without an attach- ment for sowing grass seeds. Which of these methods should be adopted will depend on various conditions, such as relate to soils and soil properties and to the machinery that is available. When the seed is sown by hand, the aim should be to sow with two hands rather than with one, and to distribute the seeds quite evenly. The seed can be carried in a seed box or sack suspended at a suitable hight against the breast of the sower and kept in place by the use ~ of shoulder straps. Much care should be taken to choose a still time for hand sowing the seed, as, for instance, the early morning, and also a condition of soil that hinders its undue adherence to the feet of the sower. That form of hand seeder which is wheeled on the land on a hand barrow frame distributes the seed more evenly than would be possible in sowing by the method just described, and it can be sown when the winds are blowing at a rate that would forbid scat- tering the seed by hand at such a time. When the seed can be sown with the grain drill, the saving in labor is very considerable and the work is also done in excellent form. When it is desired to bury the seed deeply, as on spongy prairie soils, it may be thus planted by mixing the clover seed along with Digitized by Microsoft® 80 SOILING CROPS AND THE SILO. the grain. When a less covering is sought, as in sowing under average conditions, the seed is allowed to fall in front of the drill tubes, and when a still lighter covering is desired, as when the seed falls on heavy soils, it is covered by using a roller on the land after the seed has thus been dropped upon its surface. And in yet other instances, as when the soil is quite heavy and ample moisture is assured, the seed thus deposited is frequently allowed to lie unburied. But when a light covering can be secured for clover seed, the germination of the seed is more certain and the ability of the young plants to with- stand dry weather is increased. The quantity of seed required will vary with the variety sown, with the richness of the soil, and with the proportion of seed of other grass plants that may be sown along with the clover. When clover is sown alone, from ten to fifteen pounds per acre of the crimson clover are usually sown, but some- times a less quantity, from ten to twelve pounds of the medium red and mammoth species and from four to six pounds of the alsike. The difference in relative quantities sown arises chiefly from the dif- ference in the relative size of the seeds and the difference in the capacity of the plants for stooling. The richer the soil also the less the quantity of the seed required, and the amount of clover that ought to be sown will of course be reduced as grass seeds are added to the seed sown. Since clover, when it grows vigorously, is liable to lie down when sown alone, it is considered advan- tageous to sow along with it the seed of some grass, that the grass plants thus produced may sustain the Digitized by Microsoft® PLANTS OF THE CLOVER FAMILY. 81 clover. Timothy is more commonly grown thus than any other grass, because of its very general adaptation, but in some localities tall oat grass may better serve the end sought, since it is about as early as Clover inits habit of growth. As timothy matures about the same time as the alsike and mammoth clovers, it is more suitable for being sown along with these than with the medium sort. But it should not be sown with the expectation that it will furnish a support to crimson clover, because of the much more rapid growth of the clover. For every pound of the seed that is added to the mixture sown, the clover seed should be reduced in the same propor- tion, and sometimes the reduction in the clover should be greater relatively. But it is seldom neces- sary to have the timothy seed form more than one- third of the quantity of seed sown. The period for sowing clover may be made to cover all the spring months, and in some instances the early summer months, but the medium, mammoth and alsike clovers are more commonly sown in early spring. They should seldom be sown in autumn, as the young plants cannot endure the cold of the winter following. But to this there may be scme exceptions. In some instances the seed is sown while the old snow yet lingers, but when thus sown some of the seed is liable to be carried away with the vanishing snows, when the melting of the latter is hastened by warm rains. At other times it is sown when the ground is honeycombed by spring frosts. The seed is thus covered by the action of frost and sun. In other instances it is sown on a light fall of snow, usually spoken of as “‘sugar 6 Digitized by Microsoft® 82 SOILING CROPS AND THE SILO. snow.” When the latter melts it frequently carries much of the seed down into the soil. Clover seed is seldom if ever sown thus early, except with a nurse crop of winter wheat or rye. Usually it would be a safer way to defer sowing the seed until the surface of the soil has so dried that when the seed is sown it may be covered with the harrow. The harrow- ing if properly done is beneficial to the nurse crop as well as the clover seed. But in some instances the harrow cannot be used, as in clay soils, which remain unduly moist in the spring. When clover seed is sown with a nurse crop of spring grain, as, for instance, barley, wheat or oats, it should be covered more or less deeply; the later the period of sowing the more imperative is it that the seed should be so covered. Where moisture is usually sufficiently plentiful, the plan of sowing clover seed with a nurse crop is commendable. But all nurse crops are not equally favorable to the growth of the clover. Those which are most favor- _ able include barley and winter rye; those which are least favorable include such crops as oats and millet. But when clover is sown with a nurse crop and the weather turns dry, if the nurse crop can be pastured off, or cut at some stage previous to that of maturity, the hazard to the young clover plants will be so far lessened, as they are then deprived to a smaller extent of the strengthening influences of sunlight and moisture. On the soils of the prairie, so light that they are springy to the tread, a good stand of clover may frequently be obtained by sowing it with a crop that is to be pastured, as, for instance, a crop of mixed cereals or rape. The treading of the live Digitized by Microsoft® PLANTS OF THE CLOVER FAMILY. , 83 stock would seem to react beneficially to the young clover plants by impacting the soil near the surface and thus lessening the loss of moisture through sur- face evaporation. Sheep are considered more suit- able for such pasturing than cattle or swine. But there may be instances when a stand of clover can best be secured by sowing it alone, as when the normal supply of moisture is low. When thus sown, the soil should be made as clean as possible before sowing the seed. It may not be possible thus to clean the land when the seed is sown early, but it may be cleaned, at least measurably well, by sur- face cultivation, when the seed is deposited late in the season. \Vhen sown on weed infested land, the weeds should be kept down with the mowing machine. Crimson clover is not usually sown earlier than July, and it is not considered wise to sow it later than September, unless in the mildest portions of the south. Near the northern limit of production it is thought more or less hazardous to sow later than August. If the plants enter the winter in a weak condition, the danger is imminent that they will perish before spring. When preparing the land, it is sometimes thought preferable to seek fine surface cultivation without plowing the land. rather than the deep cultivation which plowing secures. In some instances, as on clean land, from which early vege- tables have been harvested, the seed may be at once sown and covered with the harrow. In other instances it is sown in the standing corn and cov- ered lightly with the last cultivation given to the corn crop. There may be instances when it would Digitized by Microsoft® 84 SOILING CROPS AND THE SILO. be proper to sow it amid grain stubbles and to cover it with the harrow. It is manifest that the methods of sowing this crop are various. To so great an extent is this true that it would not be prudent to try to give directions that would precisely meet the needs of each locality. Cultivation.—Clover does not require any culti- vation in the sense in which drilled corn and sorghum call for the same. But it is important that it shall not be grazed too closely the first season, lest its power to withstand winter weather shall be unduly weakened. In a large majority of instances it should not be pastured or mowed the first year when it has been sown with a nurse crop. But in some seasons it may grow so rank that by its own weight it would smother underneath the snow, unless pas- tured more or less. In some localities quite favor- able to the growth of clover, it will produce seed the first year unless means are taken to prevent it from doing so. To allow the plants to produce seed the first year will materially tend to weaken their growth the second year. To prevent such a result, such clover should be cut by the mower set high and when it is coming into bloom. The plants cut off should be allowed to lie where they fell. They will act as a mulch to protect the crop. But when clover is sown early and not along with a nurse crop, there may be instances, not a few, when it would be advis- able to cut it for hay or green food. Feeding.—The harvesting of green clover for soiling in all its varieties may begin as soon as the first heads appear, but more food will be secured if the cutting is deferred until the crimson tint on the Digitized by Microsoft® PLANTS OF THE CLOVER FAMILY. 85 heads is pronounced. The cutting and feeding of the crop as green food may he continued as long as the plants are eaten with a relish by live stock. When ready for being made into hay, it is common not to feed it longer as green food. This stage will be reached by the time that the crop is in complete bloom. Itis manifest, therefore, that the period for using clover as soiling food is a short one, not longer usually than from two to three weeks, and if a plat or field of alsike, or mammoth clover has also been sown in addition to the medium red clover, it will prolong the feeding for about an equal period. The two crops, therefore, will provide green food for five or six weeks in succession. The medium red clover will also furnish a second cutting of soiling food which will be available in about six or seven weeks subsequent to the first cutting, when grown under normal conditions. The period of cutting will vary from about June Ist to July rst north of the 4oth parallel. The green food is cut daily or every other day, as may be desired, by using the scythe or field mower, and is fed in pastures, paddocks or from feed racks in the yards, as may be thought most advisable. In large quantities it is of course drawn on a truck or wagon. When cut with the mower it should not lie many hours in very bright weather without being “bunched,” as it will soon lose so much moisture that its succulence will be too much lessened. A little wilting tends to obviate the danger from bloating in the animals to which it is fed. This danger with cattle and sheep is always imminent in some degree when green clover is fed in a very succulent condi- Digitized by Microsoft® 86 SOILING CROPS AND THE SILO. tion and unstinted in quality, when the animals are hungry. And the danger is further increased by dampness caused by rain or dew. ALFALFA. Alfalfa (Medicago sativa), sometimes called lucern, has a higher adaptation for soiling than any other plant of the clover family. This arises, first, from the rapid and prolonged character of its growth; second, from its long-lived character; and, third, from the excellent quality of the food which it produces. Alfalfa is ready for being cut as green food at least two weeks earlier than medium red clover, and in some instances it will yield a cutting every month thereafter during the season. There are some favored sections in the United States in which, by judicious managment, alfalfa may be cut and fed as green food every month in the year. The duration of alfalfa meadows will depend in a great measure on the conditions of soil and subsoil, more especially the latter, while it will sometimes fail within a few years from the date of sowing; in other instances, it will continue to grow and thrive indefi- nitely. Alfalfa meadows are now in existence which have been mowed every year for more than forty years. But of course the average duration does not cover nearly so longa period. The excellent quality of the food arises in part from its nitrogenous char- acter and in part from its palatability. In view of the pre-eminent suitability of this plant for soiling purposes, it seems strange that this fact has not been more generally recognized by Digitized by Microsoft® (87) Fig. 10. Alfalfa, Single Plant Minnesota University Experiment Farm. Digitized by Microsoft® 88 SOILING CROPS AND THE SILO. farmers. Under favorable conditions it would be easy to obtain abundant supplies of green food from alfalfa from spring until fall at a less cost than it can be obtained from any other source. Green alfalfa is not only relished by horses, cattle, sheep and swine of all ages, but it is specially adapted to their needs. When fed freely to young animals it promotes a large and vigorous growth. Along with suitable grain adjuncts, it will fatten animals quickly and will give them a fine finish. Lambs can be raised upon this food alone, in addi- tion to the milk furnished by their dams. And with but a limited addition of more carbonaceous food, swine may be raised upon it until ready for the block. Of course during the fattening period, grain must be the chief reliance. But to no class of stockmen is green alfalfa of more benefit than to dairymen. It is excellent for milk production, and the long season during which it is accessible further accentuates its value. Of course, in the green form, it should be fed with some restriction to horses at work, but for all other classes of horses it makes excellent food. It is also helpful when fed to fowls. Other things being equal, meat and milk cannot be produced any- where more cheaply than in areas possessed of high adaptation for growing alfalfa. The yields of green food furnished per acre for the season vary with the number and strength of the cuttings to be obtained. There are localities in which alfalfa will grow, and yet the vields obtained are not equal to those which would be obtained from an equal area of red clover. In these it should not be grown. The number of cuttings obtained per Digitized by Microsoft® PLANTS OF THE CLOVER FAMILY. 89 season in the green form varies from one to seven or eight, but the average may be stated as four, and the yield per cutting may be put at four to six tons peracre. Inareas nota few, therefore, from sixteen to twenty-four tons of green alfalfa may be obtained per acre from season to season, and with no other labor after the crop has been established than that of opening the sluices which let in the irrigating waters. Nor are those alfalfa lands likely to become exhausted soon, because of the extent of the subsoil from which they draw food supplies. Distribution —But few plants are of wider dis- tribution than alfalfa. While it is not able to endure temperatures so low as some of the real clovers, it will thrive in latitudes too warm and dry to produce these kinds in good form. The growth of alfalfa would seem to be more hedged in by conditions that relate to soil and subsoil than by those which relate to climate. Because of these limitations, alfalfa will yield abundantly in certain areas within a state, and in other areas in close proximity to them it cannot be grown at all. It can probably be successfully grown in portions of each state in the Union. Sa wide is its distribution that it is successfully grown in some portions of Quebec, Ontario and British Columbia in Canada. But the distinctive alfalfa belt of the United States lies west of the Mississippi and south of the Missouri. It embraces nearly every Rocky moun- tain valley from Canada to Mexico. It includes areas possessed of subterranean waters, not too dis- tant from the surface, as well as those which it inay be necessary to irrigate at certain seasons; also Digitized by Microsoft® go SOILING CROPS AND THE SILO. certain tillable upland soils in several states which cannot be subjected to irrigation. The variety known as the Turkestan, recently introduced by the Depart- ment of Agriculture at Washington, is proving so hardy, that it is now thought it can be successfully grown in areas that are too dry and too cold for the successful growth of the kinds heretofore grown. While alfalfa will produce well in some rainy climates, it has higher adaptation for those that are dry, up to a certain limit. Drenching rains which literally saturate the ground with water are harmful to it rather than helpful. And in climates where the period of growth is long, this crop is propor- tionately more helpful than in those where it is short. It is not a little surprising that a soiling crop so useful should not have been grown to a greater extent in the past in the lower Atlantic and Gulf states, since the conditions in certain areas of these are quite favorable. With the greater need that is now being felt for a supply of such foods, the produc- tion of alfalfa will doubtless greatly increase in the near future. Soil_—The soil and subsoil more than anything else are potent factors in determining where alfalfa may and may not be grown. And of these the sub- soil is the more important. The reasons will be at once apparent when it is remembered that alfalfa roots grow deeply and that the major portion of the food obtained from the earth by the plants comes from the subsoil rather than from the soil. The soil conditions most favorable to the growth of alfalfa are found in loam soils, inclining to sand or gravel, and spiced with a goodly increment of clay. But alfalfa Digitized by Microsoft® PLANTS OF THE CLOVER FAMILY. gt will frequently flourish in clay soils with no slight degree of adhesion in them, providing the subsoil conditions are suitable. The vegetable soils of the western prairies are not usually well adapted to the growth of alfalfa. The volcanic soils of the Rocky mountain region furnish ideal conditions when suffi- ciently supplied with moisture. In a subsoil in which alfalfa roots are to grow vigorously, the most important requisite is that it should be easily penetrable. Ideal conditions are sometimes found for starting an alfalfa crop success- fully, and yet the plants soon fail because of the impenetrable character of the subsoil. The second great requisite in the subsoil is, it should be deep. ‘The necessary depth will vary, but it should not be less than several feet to provide ample feeding ground for the roots; and a third requisite is that the subsoil should be moist. But at all seasons of the year it should be free from stagnant water to the depth of several feet from the surface. These con- ditions are best obtained in certain of the almost rainless river valleys of the west. If the soils and subsoils are sandy or gravelly, and underneath them are sheets of water at varying depths, the plants are supplied with moisture irom this water through the process of capillary attraction. With similar con- ditions of soil and subsoil, except that the ground water is absent, the alfalfa plants would perish unless irrigated. This explains why alfalfa cannot be grown in wide areas of the semi-arid country west of the Mississippi, where the soil and subsoil requi- sites are all that could be desired, but for the absence of the ground waters. Digitized by Microsoft® g2 SOILING CROPS AND THE SILO. In the absence of irrigation and also of marked humidity in the climate, what may be termed mild clay subsoils furnish the best subsoil conditions for growing alfalfa. In these it gathers suitable food. These subsoils, oftentimes, possess a sufficiency of moisture through all the season to sustain good crops. Of course, in dry seasons the subsoil moisture may become so reduced as to materially interfere with abundant production. But in climates of average humidity, they are satisfactory for growing this crop. Place in the Rotation.—Properly speaking, alfalfa can scarcely be said to be a rotation plant, owing to the long period through which it continues to grow. That is one of the objections urged against growing it. But in certain areas favorable to its development, it may be grown for a term of years more or less limited, and then followed by certain other crops for an intervening term of years. As it is one of those plants which gather nitrogen from the air, it is so far a soil renovator. Alfalfa should, therefore, precede some crop which requires much nitrogen to perfect its growth, as, for instance, corn or wheat. Deep-rooted plants may follow alfalfa with much propriety, since they can find ample food in the subsoils even, in which alfalfa roots are mold- ering, as, for instance, field roots, or rape. And the crop that precedes alfalfa should, if possible, be a cleaning one. The task of plowing a soil filled brimful of alfalfa roots of strong growth is by no means an easy one. But it may be facilitated by using a plow with a share somewhat serrated in its cutting edge. When the plow is drawn, these serrations will cut Digitized by Microsoft® PLANTS OF THE CLOVER FAMILY. 93 the roots and so make it possible to turn a straight furrow. Preparing the Land.—The preparation of the soil that will be the most suitable for alfalfa will depend upon conditions such as relate to variations in soil and to the season for sowing the seed. Speak- ing in a general way, the seed bed should be deep, moist, clean and of fine tilth. But with upland soils subjected to very dry conditions, stirring the soil to but a little depth, when preparing a seed bed, would be preferable. The firming of the seed bed is pecu- larly applicable to the upland soils of the south- western states, but it will oftentimes be necessary to run a light harrow over the ground, after it has been firmed with a heavy roller, to prevent the wind from lifting the soil and in some instances to prevent the too rapid evaporation of soil moisture. When the seed is sown in the early spring, it is not possible at all times to secure a clean seed bed for the alfalfa, unless it is made to follow a well cultivated crop of the previous season. There may also be instances in which the labor would be wisely expended in sum- mer fallowing the land the previous year. When it is thus fallowed it is important that green crops be sown upon it at the same time and plowed under, that the soil may thus become abundantly supplied with vegetable matter. Such crops as autumn sown rye followed by a quick growing legume are well adapted to such an end. When the seed is sown late, there is then time to clean the surface soil through the successive harrowings that may be given. Because of the probable duration of the crop when established, and Digitized by Microsoft® O+ SOILING CROPS AND THE SILO. because of the recognized tendency in weeds and in some other grasses to increase and thus crowd out the alfalfa, it is very important that the crop be sown upon a clean seed bed. When alfalfa is sown with a nurse crop, the preparation of the soil that is best suited to the nurse crop is likely also to prove suitable to the alfalfa. But in soils with much adhesion, it may be necessary tc further pulverize them before they are in the best condition to receive the seed. In some instances, it will be better to plow the land in the autumn; in other instances, as where rainy winter climates prevail, plowing ought to be deferred until spring. Sometimes, as in soils that adhere overmuch, deep plowing is preferable and subsoiling may even be very advantageous; at other times, as in tilling soils of the opposite extreme, shallow plowing would be preferable. Usually after crops that have been cultivated, it is only necessary to finely pulverize the surface soil when preparing it for a seed bed. In laying down a piece of land to alfalfa, it is very important that at least the surface soil should have in it much available fertility as well as that it should be in fine condition as to tilth, while it is probably true that no plant grown as, food for live stock has greater power to gather the elements of support from the soil, the subsoil and the air than alfalfa, it is also true that in the early stages of growth alfalfa readily succumbs to vicissitudes from various sources, as excessive wet or drouth, heat or cold, overshading, or even undershading. The behavior of the plant in after years depends in no Digitized by Microsoft® PLANTS OF THE CLOVER FAMILY. g5 __ little degree upon the nature of the start of the first season. If the plants are weak when they enter the winter, they are likely to perish before spring, and if the stand is thin at the first, it is likely to become more so, though in some rich soils it may be improved by adding more seed. Experience has taught that with this crop also farmyard manure is an exceilent stimulant to growth. On the whole, when this fertilizer is used in the fresh form, it should be applied with the previous crop that it may readily give up to the young plants the unused content of fertility, and that many of the weed seeds in it may be given time to sprout before sowing the seed. When preparing the land for alfalfa it would be a mistake to top-dress the land with farmyard manure, even though much reduced by fermentation, as it will still contain weed seeds that will prove troublesome. The artificial fertilizers that ought to be applied must be determined by the needs of the land. They include nitrogen, phosphoric acid, potash and lime. The need for applying these is not so great west of the eastern Mississippi watershed as east from that line. The gray ash soils of the farther west are usually abundantly supplied with the requisite food elements. These fertilizers may better be applied before the seed is sown, except the nitrogen, which, in some forms at least, is more helpful when sown on the young plants. Gypsum will benefit young alfalfa. plants quite as much as it benefits young red clover. And it may be stated here, that unreduced farmyard manure applied to alkali lands is so far an excellent cerrective of their alkalinity. Digitized by Microsoft® 96 SOILING CROPS AND THE SILO. Sowing the Sced—The seed may be sown by hand, with the hand sower, or with the grain drill. Since alfalfa is a somewhat larger seed than red clover it may be covered rather more deeply, particularly on western soils. On some of these it may be sown as wheat, that is to say, by using the ordinary drill tubes used in sowing grain. On true alfalfa soils, the seed is seldom sown with a nurse crop, but in moist climates this method of obtaining a stand is quite feasible, and in some instances commendable. It is generally deemed preferable to sow the seed without a nurse crop, that the plants may have the full benefit of all the season to enable them to take possession of the soil to the fullest extent possible. Any of the small grains usually sown in the spring will answer for the nurse crop, but of these barley is the best. And there are instances in which winter wheat and winter rye may form the nurse crop. It may frequently be unwise to allow the nurse crop to mature, but the degree of the advancement which it should be allowed to make will depend upon conditions. If a nurse crop is grown it should never be at the expense of the alfalfa crop. And in a large majority of instances it will be wiser to dispense with the nurse crop altogether. Opinions differ much as to the quantity of seed that should be sown. Amounts named as suitable vary from twelve to thirty pounds per acre. Usually from fifteen to twenty pounds will be found suffi- cient, the last named quantity being rather more in favor on true alfalfa soils. Twelve pounds per acre may suffice in climates possessed of moist seasons. Digitized by Microsoft® PLANTS OF THE CLOVER FAMILY. 97 If the plants are sown too thinly they make coarse hay. Of the two extremes, excessive seed sowing is the least harmful since the tendency is constant for the plants to become thinner. The seed is usually sown about as early in the spring as the ground is ready to till. But it may be possible to sow the plants so early in the season in certain climates that the newly sprouted plants will succumb to a severe spring frost. But when they do, of course, the seed can again be sown. With alfalfa as with many other plants, better results will probably be obtained by sowing late enough to insure continuous growth. In mild latitudes it may be possible to sow when the late fall rains come, but the hazard to the young plants in the winter follow- ing is to be reckoned with. Cultivation.—Ordinarily no cultivation is given to alfalfa. But in some parts of the continent of Europe where labor is cheap, it is planted in rows, and hand hoed, to give the plants opportunity to develop favorably, but in this country such hand labor would be too costly. It is important that the roots be strong and vigorous when they enter the first winter, as that is usually the greatest period of hazard to the young plants. When grown on upland it is not common to use the crop for food the first season. But it may be necessary and highly advan- tageous to run the field mower over it once or oftener to prevent the ripening of the weeds that are pretty certain to grow in it. Close cutting would seem to be more beneficial to the young plants than cutting less closely, owing probably to the better adjustment of the relations as to moisture present in the soil and vi Digitized by Microsoft® 98 SOILING CROPS AND THE SILO. the needs of the young plants. All the plants that fall before the mower are allowed to remain where they fall. When the crop is grown under irrigation, it is common to utilize one cutting the first year and sometimes two. But the young crops should not be pastured the first year, and on the upland it should not be pastured at all unless at certain seasons of the year. Pasturing in the winter in cold climates is particularly injurious, but in sections where the crop grows at its best, it may be pastured even in the winter, though as previously intimated, frequent and prolonged pasturing is thought to ultimately injure the stand of the plants, even under the most favor- able conditions. Feeding.—Alfalfa is ready for being harvested as soiling food as soon as the blossom buds are formed. It may be cut even earlier than that, more especially when fed to sheep and swine. The feed- ing should begin as soon as the food is ready, as in suitable weather it rushes very quickly to maturity. But the residue not needed as soiling food may with much propriety be made into hay. With sufficient moisture present, the crop at once begins to grow again, and in from four to six weeks after the cutting of the preceding growth the next crop is ready. Where irrigation is practiced, it is customary to flood the land as soon as the crop has been removed. As the alfalfa soon gets woody after it has reached the stage of full bloom, the residue not wanted for soiling food ought to be cut for hay even before it is in full bloom, else the quality of the hay will be reduced. It is apparent, therefore, that the feeding period from each crop or cutting is not a Digitized by Microsoft® ‘Wey Juautiadxy AjisioAlus) PlosauUlyY (66) Buylog 10y UAOID ENE “TT Sty Digitized by Microsoft® 100 SOILING CROPS AND THE SILO. long one, not longer usually than three weeks. If, however, two plats or fields have been grown by cutting one at an early stage of growth, and then cutting the other, and again the first and likewise the second in continuity of alternation to the end of the season, the supply of alfalfa for soiling may under favorable conditions be made to cover the entire sea- son after the first growth is ready for being cut, which is usually in May or June, according to the locality. The same result can be accomplished with but one field by taking care to cut first one portion and then another, that the part first cut may grow up again while the other part is furnishing soiling food. But in the absence of irrigation, it may not be possible to feed this food without interruption. The scythe, or the mowing machine is used in cutting the crop, but usuaily the latter. When cut it may be drawn and fed the same as clover, that is to say, by strewing it on the pasture, by putting it into feed racks in a yard or paddock, or by feeding it in mangers. It should be wilted more or less when fed to cattle and sheep, as it is sometimes liable to produce bloating when fed without stint in the green form. Enough may be cut at one time to last for a limited number of days, providing it is not allowed to lie broadcast in the swath where it fell beneath the mower. Although horses and swine are oftentimes pas- tured on alfalfa, some growers favor feeding it to them as soiling food unless where the conditions for growth are exceedingly favorable. The treading and close eating of horses are pretty certain to mate- rially shorten the duration of a stand of alfalfa Digitized by Microsoft® PLANTS OF THE CLOVER FAMILY. IOI When pigs are pastured on alfalfa without intermis- sion, it is not easy to regulate the pasturing so that the food will be kept tender and appetizing. But horses and pigs are pastured to a very considerable extent on alfalfa. Sheep are not very much pastured on alfalfa because of the danger from bloating. When fed as soiling food to sheep and swine, it ought to be cut while younger and more tender than would be necessary when it is fed to horses and cattle. The long period during which alfalfa may be fed makes it easily possible to feed it in conjunction with other soiling foods less nitrogenous in char- acter, as, for instance, corn and sorghum. The alfalfa may be fed one end of the day and green food at the opposite end of the same. The variety thus secured is advantageous. Alfalfa, even in the green form, may be advantageously used in fattening animals along with some carbonaceous food, as corn, barley or rye, but its highest use is found in growing animals and in producing milk. The owners of extensive alfalfa meadows would seem to be in a position to raise horses, cattle, sheep, swine and to produce dairy products more cheaply than these can be produced by any other system of arable farming. Digitized by Microsoft® CHAPTER VI. LEGUMINOUS PLANTS OTHER THAN CLOVER. The legumes are a numerous family, and yet the species that have special adaptation to soiling uses are not many. In addition to plants of the clover group, the chief of these are the field pea, the common vetch, the cowpea and the soy bean. The cowpea and the soy bean are in a sense the comple- ments of the field pea and the common vetch, when considered from the standpoint of distribution. These will be considered separately. THE FIELD PEA. Outside the clover family. the field pea (Pisum sativum) is probably the most valuable legume that is now grown on this continent. The esti- mate thus put upon it is based on the high nitrogen content which it contains, upon the high relative palatability which it possesses and upon the various combinations in which it may be grown. Peas in combination with oats is a favorite soiling food with dairyvmen, wherever these can be successfully grown together. Asa food plant its value is probably greater when grown alone, but owing to the trailing habit of growth which characterizes the pea, it has been found necessary to sow it along with some other plant when used in Digitized bk Ofcrosoft® Digitized by Microsoft® The Mummy Field Pea Fig. 12. University Experiment Farm. Minnesot: (103) 104 SOILING CROPS AND THE SILO. soiling, that the crop may be harvested with greater ease, and that the value of the pea vines as stock food may not be impaired by their lying on the ground. Whether fed as a soiling food or in the cured form, peas are much relished by all kinds of domestic animals. In the green form, peas are specially suited to the needs of animals giving milk. In the cured form they are specifically a food for sheep, and the ripened grain is unsurpassed as a food for swine. The yield of the mixed crop in the green form is seldom less than ten tons per acre, and probably seldom more than twenty tons. Distribution The common field pea may be grown in excellent form above the forty-fifth parallel of north latitude and from the Atlantic to the Pacific, except in some limited areas in the dry belt east of the Rocky mountains. As a mixed crop for soiling, and even in the unmixed form, it may also be grown many miles south of the line named, at least in certain areas. But below the forty-second parallel, the fruitage of the plants becomes more or less uncertain because of the high temperatures that prevail when the pea is in bloom. On high elevations the crop is not thus affected, hence in such situations peas will produce abundantly far southward. It is found at its best in temperatures that are equable, and in climates moist in character. Soil—Loam soils strongly impregnated with clay are eminently adapted to growing peas. They may also be grown with much success on stiff clays. The returns from sandy loams will be favorably influenced or otherwise, according as these soils con- tain much or littlezelay, vAndathe same is true of OTHER LEGUMINOUS PLANTS, 105 the humus soils of the prairie. The volcanic soils of the Rocky mountain valleys and the alluvial soils in many of the river bottoms in Montana, Washington and Oregon have special adaptation for the produc- tion of peas. Light, hungry sands are ill adapted to pea culture. While the vines will grow immensely in slough and marsh lands which rest on clay not far distant from the surface, they do not fruit well in these places, since the energies of the plant are so much directed to the growth of vines. While it is not necessary that soils should be very rich in order to grow peas, they must be supplied with a fair amount of potash and phosphoric acid and enough nitrogen to give the crop a good start. The rest they will gather from the air. Place in the Rotation.—When peas are grown alone, the aim should be to have them precede a crop that requires much nitrogen to perfect its growth; for instance, a crop of wheat, since, as already inti- mated, peas are nitrogen gatherers. When grown in combination, almost any place in the rotation may be assigned to this crop. As it is commonly sown early in the season to provide green food, and is also harvested at a correspondingly early period, it may frequently be followed by a crop of rape or fall tur- nips, and it may with much propriety be followed by a crop of winter rye. Preparing the Soil——This crop is more com- monly grown as soiling food along with vats, although it may also be grown in conjunction with other kinds of grain. Wheat is not considered as good as oats for being grown in combination with peas, for the reason, first, that it matures less slowly Digitized by Microsoft® 106 SOILING CROPS AND THE SILO. than peas, and, second, that when fed as soiling food, wheat is not relished by the stock quite so highly as oats. Nor is barley, since it ripens ahead of peas, and the beards are objectionable after they have reached a certain stage of ripening. Peas and oats mature more nearly at the same period, and as oats stool more than peas and wheat, or peas and barley, they produce a food less coarse in character. But whatsoever the combination fixed upon, the preparation of the land is virtually the same, nor does it usually differ from the preparation that has been found best suited to the growing of small grains. Usually the ground on which the crop is to be sown early should be plowed in the fall. A cleep seed bed is preferable, since peas require a deep covering. As previously intimated, the fertilizers most needed for this crop are potash and phosphoric acid. But in some instances, nitrogen has to be applied to start the crop vigorously.. Farmyard manure is very suitable when it can be obtained; and on many soils land plaster will very much stimulate the growth of the peas when applied to the crop after the plants have grown some distance above the surface of the. ground. It would be possible to enrich the ground too much to obtain the best results from this crop. When rankness in the growth is excessive, the green mass often falls down before the bloom or head appears, and when it does, its palatability is mate- rially lessened and the difficulty in harvesting is increased. Sowing.—Various methods of sowing the seed have been adopted, and of necessity to meet the needs Digitized by Microsoft® OTHER LEGUMINOUS PLANTS. 107 of conditions not the same. Where the rainfall is normal and the soil is strongly impregnated with clay, the seed of the peas and oat may be mixed and deposited together by the grain drill. In such soils three inches would seem to be a sufficient covering. But in the black loams of the prairie, and especially in the absence of a plentiful supply of moisture, it would seem to be necessary to plant the peas more deeply. This necessity probably has given rise to the practice somewhat common in prairie areas of first sowing the peas on unplowed land and then burying them four inches, and even more than that, in the process of plowing the ground. The oats are then sown in some instances as soon as practicable, and in other instances several days later than the first sowing, and they are buried less deeply. The second method is usually preterable. When sod lands have been plowed in the autumn, or in the early spring, and when the furrow slices have been made narrow rather than wide, and laid at an angle of about forty-five degrees, the seed may be broadcasted by hand and simply harrowed in. It will fall between the crests of the furrow slices, and the har- row, when used properly, levels these and conse- quently buries the seed sufficiently. But peas should never be sown thus on level surfaces, as the shallow covering given to them by the harrow will be washed off in a considerable degree by the first shower that falls. The varieties of peas hest adapted to soiling uses cannot be named, since different conditions call for different varieties. Usually those kinds that are fine rather than coarse in stem are to be preferred. Digitized by Microsoft® 108 SOILING CROPS AND THE SILO. On soils with high adaptation for peas, the medium varieties are to be preferred and on soils opposite in character the larger varieties. Nor can the proportion of seed to be sown in the mixture be definitely stated. On clay loams, peas and oats are frequently sown in equal quantities by measure, and with satisfactory results. On other soils peas should greatly preponderate in the mix- ture, and yet again the same is true of oats. From two to three bushels of the mixture are sown per acre, and in some instances even a larger quantity. The best method of sowing this crop and the propor- tions of seed that ought to be sown can only be deter- mined for each locality by actual test. It will usually be found that the best yields wiil be obtained by sowing peas and oats early rather than late, but to prolong the feeding period it is necessary sometimes to sow at successive intervals. The results will of course be influenced by the char- acter of the season. Some few varieties of peas would probably prove very suitable in providing soiling food, at least under certain conditions when sown alone. The crown pea and the grass pea are of this class. Their straw is more upright and branching than other varieties, and in consequence is less liable to lodge. These two varieties are at least worthy of being given a trial. Cultivation—When peas have been grown alone or in conjunction with some other kind of grain, and for the purpose of providing soiling food, har- rowing the crop once or twice is the only form of cultivation that canibesgiventonit- A light harrow OTHER LEGUMINOUS PLANTS. IOQ should be used. The more weedy the soil and the more rapidly the moisture escapes from it by surface evaporation, the greater will be the benefit from using the harrow. Harrowing has been found particularly helpful to this crop when grown on certain of the soils of the prairie. If the harrow is used but once, it should be so used before the peas have reached the surface. When the peas have been sown and then covered with the plow, and the oats or other factor of the mixed crop is sown later, the grain thus sown may be very conveniently covered with the harrow while the first harrowing is being given to the pea crop. A second harrowing is seldom given, but when it is it should be deferred until the plants have become well rooted, and much care must be exercised in doing the work, or the harrow will bury too much of the grain. Feeding.—Peas grown alone may be fed as soiling food to swine from the appearance of the first bloom, but the highest feeding value is not obtained from the crop until a considerably later period. When fed in combination with oats or other grain to cows in milk, the feeding may begin when the peas are in full bloom or when the oats or other grain comes into head. The season of feeding may be continued until the crop is nearly ripe. The scythe or the mower should be used in cut- ting the crop, according as the quantity to be fed is little or much. And the method of feeding to be adopted is practically the same as in medium red clover. The crop is easily handled, more so than such soiling crops as corn or cowpeas, since it can be so Digitized by Microsoft® T1o SOILING CROPS AND THE SILO. convenien: y lifted with a fork of suitable construc- tion. Also it is one of the safest soiling foods to feed, since it never produces bloating when judi- ciously fed. When the crop cannot be all used in the green form, the portion that remains should be cut and cured for winter feeding before the grain in the pod or the ear has passed the dough stage. The crop may be mowed and cared for after the manner of hay, or when it stands up sufficiently well it may be cut with the binder. When harvested with the binder, the sheaves should be made small and should not be very tightly bound. \Vhen the crop is very badly lodged, the pea harvester may be used to better advantage than any other implement in cutting them. The crop may be fed in a pasture, in a paddock, in racks in the shed or in mangers in the stable. THE COMMON VETCH. Several species of vetches have been grown in this country, but only one of these, viz., the common vetch (Vicia sativa) would seem to have special adaptation for being grown as soiling food. The sand vetch (Iicia villosa) has been given a consider- able measure of praise during recent years for its ability to furnish green food for stock, but in the judgment of the author its highest use will be found when it is grown as a pasture plant rather than as a soiling food. The common vetch is frequently alluded to as though it embraced two varieties, viz., the winter and spring sorts, but these were originally probably one and the same kind grown at different seasons of the year. Digitized by Microsoft® OTHER LEGUMINOUS PLANTS. ITT This plant has not yet been given the high place in our agriculture which it deserves. As a food plant it possesses excellent qualities, is less susceptible to injury from frost than the pea and is even more palatable and nutritious. It can be grown in various combinations, and is capable of making a second growth in some localities, though not in all, if cut while immature. And when the conditions are favorable it can be grown with much success as a pasture plant, as a soiling food, or as hay for winter feeding. The relatively high price of the seed has, probably more than anything else, hindered the growing of this crop for soiling food. This should not be so, as in states favorable to the growth of the vetch, abundant yields of seed may be obtained. The common vetch furnishes excellent food for all kinds of live stock kept upon the farm. When fed freely to cows in milk, the yield is increased. It has a peculiar adaptation for stimulating growth in lambs that are being given a forcing diet, and no kind of soiling food is more highly relished by swine. The product will of course vary much, but when grown alone the common vetch will run from about ten to fifteen tons per acre. When grown in combination with other plants, the return will be influenced by the nature of the combination. Distribution.—The common vetch can be grown with greater or less success in every state in the Union and in every province of Canada. It makes the most complete growth, however, in cool and humid climates. The provinces of Canada from Lake Huron eastward, and the north Atlantic states Digitized by Microsoft® II2 SOILING CROPS AND THE SILO. are well adapted to the growth of this plant. But the highest adaptation, viewed from the standpoint of climate, is found in western Washington and in Oregon. The growth that is produced in some sec- tions of the states is simply extraordinary. The summer climate of the central and southern states is too hot for the successful growth of vetches at that season of the year. But in several of these states, if not indeed all of them, the vetch may be grown with greater or less success when sown in the fall and fed in the spring. The dry climate of the semi-arid belt west of the Mississippi river is not well adapted to the growth of vetches. Soil—The soil conditions favorable to the growth of the common vetch are much the same as those favorable to the growth of the common pea. Vetches luxuriate in clay loams and can be grown with a fair measure of success even on stiff clays. Infertile sandy lands are not favorable to the growth of the common vetch, but the sand vetch has much power to grow on these Jands. The black humus soils of the prairie, where the clay content is low or entirely wanting, will not produce the best crons of this plant. The gray soils of the Rocky mountain valleys which produce rank peas will also produce rank vetches, and with or without irrigation according to conditions. Place in the Rotation.—Since vetches are soil renovators, they may be grown with advantage before a crop that requires much nitrogen to perfect its growth, as, for instance, wheat; and because of their ability to grow even on soils not very abun- dantly supplied with plant food. Vetches may be Digitized by Microsoft® OTHER LEGUMINOUS PLANTS. I1l3 grown almost anywhere in the rotation. They will make a good growth on overturned sod, but such land is usually wanted for the production of crops less able to appropriate plant food under adverse con- ditions. When sown in the autumn the winter vetch can with much propriety be sown after a grain crop, and there is ample time between the harvesting of the grain crop and the sowing of the vetches to prepare the seed bed in fine form. The vetches thus sown will be reaped early enough to admit of growing some other crop that same season on the land that produced the vetches. Such a system of rotation is most helpful in cleaning land. When sown early in the spring the crop is also consumed early enough to admit of following it with some kind of catch crop that same season. Winter wheat and winter rye fit nicely into the rotation after spring sown vetches. Preparing the Soil——Since vetches are sown sometimes in the spring and sometimes in the autumn, the precise methods of preparing the soil will vary considerably. On fall plowed land the only further preparation necessary is to stir the sur- face soil deeply enough to furnish a good seed bed. On spring plowed land the aim should be to secure a firm seed bed on the spongy humus soils of the prairie, and to secure a fine pulverization on clay soil that is cloddy. On land plowed in the summer in order to receive seed in the autumn, the aim should be to retain moisture in the land to the greatest ex- tent possible, by the use of the roller and harrow on it after it has been plowed. Fertilizers, especially those rich in nitrogen, are less needed by the vetch plant than by plants unable 8 Digitized by Microsoft® TI4 SOILING CROPS AND THE SILO. to gather the same from the air. But lands fre- quently exist in which the supply of this element in the soil is so low that the vetch plants sown on them are unable to make a vigorous start unless some fertilizer is applied previous to the sowing of the vetches. If commercial fertilizers are added, pot- ash and phosphoric acid are especially fitted to meet the needs of the plants. Sowing —The method of sowing depends to some extent on the nature of the combinations of seeds sown. But the aim should be to sow the seed with the grain drill, since, owing to the globular form of the seed,—like ,eas—it is easily uncovered by rain when it lies near the surface of the soil. But it is not necessary to bury the seed so deeply as the pea is usually buried. From two to three inches would seem to be deep enough in any soil. Vetches may be sown in various combinations to produce soiling food. The following include some of the more important combinations when sown in the spring :—1, vetches and wheat, oats or harley; 2, vetches, wheat and peas; 3, vetches, oats and peas. In figure 13 the vetches do not show though present in quantities equal to the oats. And the following are some of the more important com- binations when the crop is sown in the autumn :— 1, vetches and winter rye or winter wheat; 2, vetches and winter oats or winter barley: 3, vetches and crimson clover. But there may also be some in- stances where it is preferable to sow the crop without admixture, as when two cuttings are sought from one sowing to provide very tender food for lambs or swine. Digitized by Microsoft® “WI. J JUaUIIadxy Aysisaluy~) vosauUTyy (Zu1}}N7 puodes) ZulpIos Joy SJeQ PUB SO4dI2A ($41) d by Microsoft® igitize 116 SOILING CROPS AND THE SILO. The proportions of seed in the combination that will prove most satisfactory can only be ascertained by actual test in each locality. But the aim should be to make the vetches, to the greatest extent pos- sible, the dominant factor in the mixture, consistent, however, with the retention of upright growth in the crop. The other factor or factors of the combination are intended rather to support the vetches than to furnish food. When vetches are sown with crimson clover, the seed of the latter should be used sparingly lest it crowd the vetches. The quantity of seed that ought to be sown will vary with conditions such as relate to fertility, moisture and the varieties of plants used in the combination. But it will seldom, 1f ever, be advan- tageous to sow less than one bushel of vetch seed per acre, except when peas are used in the combination. and sometimes even more than the amount of the vetch seed named should be sown. When the vetches are sown alone, from one to one and one-half bushels of seed are used. The best time for sowing the seed is largely dependent on the use that 1s to be made of the crop, and on the character of the climate. Vetches sown in the spring should as a rule be put into the ground quite early, but in moist climates it is admissible to sow them later and at intervals if necessary. When sown in the autumn they should be given time to get well rooted before the more trying weather of winter arrives. Cultivation -—Harrowing is the only form of cultivation that can be given to this crop, and when all the conditions are favorable to growth, it is not Digitized by Microsoft® OTHER LEGUMINOUS PLANTS. I17 necessary even to use the harrow. But there may be instances in which decided benefit will result from running the harrow over the crop when it is ready to push through the surface soil, and possibly also at a later period. But since the vetch is a somewhat tiny plant when it first begins to grow, much care must be taken in harrowing the crop, or the plants will be buried. Feeding.—In climates that are moist, the feed- ing of the vetch crop may begin at a comparatively early period, since it will make a good second growth, but in those opposite in character the wisdom of such a course would be more than questionable. Vetches. cut before they come into bloom are highly relished by swine. More commonly, however, the cutting should not begin until the blossoms have ap- peared, and it may be continued until the crop has reached an early stage of maturity. In the later stages of its growth, it furnishes very rich food, and even in earlier stages it furnishes valuable food. The crop may be cut with the scythe or mower, and may be fed in the same manner as peas. It is more easily handled than various other grain crops since it is sufficiently adhesive to admit of being lifted easily, and yet it is not so adhesive as to make it difficult to lift a separate forkful. When fed only to swine where a limited number is kept, or to sheep that are being fitted for the show, it 1s customary, and the practice is a good one, to sow the vetches somewhere contiguous to the farm buildings for convenience in feeding. When it so happens that more of the crop is on hand than can be used in the green form, the surplus Digitized by Microsoft® 118 SOILING CROPS AND THE SILO. should be cut at an early stage of maturity and cured for winter feeding. When thus fed it makes iu itself almost a perfectly balanced ration for some kinds of feeding. It is particularly excellent for cows in milk and for sheep. When thus fed, the crop may be conveniently harvested with the pea harvester which will do the work of cutting almost as quickly as though it were a hay crop. But when the crop is well supported by some other grain growing along with it, the binder may be made to harvest the same with manifest advantage. THE SOY BEAN. The soy bean (Glycine hispida) has only been tested in this country during recent years. Its growth has been confined to comparatively limited areas, hence but a relatively small number of the agriculturists of the country have any knowledge of the plant, based upon practical experience. The fol- lowing facts, however, have been fairly well estab- lished in regard to the soy bean: 1. It is not adapted to a climate in which the temperature is low in summer, or in which the season of growth is short. 2. It is able to gather the food of sustenance in relatively poor land, although it will of course give better returns from rich land. 3. It can withstand drouth and excessive wetness in the soil better than many other plants grown as food for live stock. 4. The flowers are not much liable to injury at the critical period, owing to peculiarities of structural development, hence they are more sure of fruiting than those of many other food plants Digitized by Microsoft® ~ OTHER LEGUMINOUS PLANTS. a9) and they also possess the power of self-pollina- tion. 5. It has much power to draw nitrogen from the air and to deposit the same in the soil for the benefit of succeeding crops. 6. It is one of the richest of foods grown for live stock. 7. It may be grown as pasture, as soiling food, as hay or as green manure; it may also be grown for the grain whicl: it produces. The soy bean, very often designated the soja bean, is an annual plant. When all the conditions are favorable it will grow to the hight of four feet or more, but the average hight of the plants is from two to three feet. It is branching in its habit of growth, the stems are somewhat coarse and the leaves are large and fairly numerous. The pods are short and broad, and each pod contains from two to five seeds which vary much in color according to the variety. The yield of the beans varies of course with the nature of the soil, the season and the method of cultivation adopted. Crops have been grown which produced as high as forty bushels per acre, but the average crop is probably Jess than half that amount. The soy bean makes an excellent food for cattle and swine, probably also for horses and sheep, although experience in feeding it to horses and sheep is as yet somewhat limited. The green food and the hay are excellent for cows in milk; the same is true of the seeds when ground and fed with some less concentrated food. Soy bean meal should probably be always thus fed. Except the peanut, there is perhaps no other vegetable product grown in this country which contains such high percentages of Digitized by Microsoft® ‘wey Wowredxq Aysioatuy), eJOSOUUTT suvag Aog uo Supinysed dasys ‘Ft *3Id (oz1) Digitized by Microsoft® OTHER LEGUMINOUS PLANTS. T21 protein and fat in a form so highly digestible. It is considered superior in nutritive qualities to oil meal, and in some tests that have been made it has compared well with cottonseed meal. But the fact must not be overlooked that the hand- ling of the crop, when grown, is more exacting” and laborious than the handling of some other soiling crops. The yield of the green crop per acre varies much with the conditions, but usually there is no difficulty in growing ten to twelve tons per acre on average land. But the value of this plant in producing food for live stock is measured less by the yield than by the richness of the food. Distribution.—Since the soy bean is a child of the sun, it cannot be grown successfully in far north- ern latitudes. The highest adaptation for this plant will, in nearly all instances, be found south of the fortieth parallel of north latitude, that is to say, south of the latitude of Columbus, O., and Spring- field, Ill. The varieties heretofore introduced have not been grown with any marked success north of the line which marks the southern boundary of Min- nesota, or, in other words, north of the forty-third parallel. This means that in the meantime it has no important mission as a food crop for any of the provinces of Canada or for any of the states that border on Canada. But some of the varieties at present grown may become so acclimatized that the limit of successful growth may be pushed consider- ably further northward. The necessity for this, however, would not seem to be so vital as further south, because of the ease with which other green Digitized by Microsoft® i222 SOILING CROPS AND THE SILO. foods may be grown in the northern states that are more easily managed than the soy bean. In the intervening area between the parallels named the early maturing varieties only can be suc- cessfully grown, and of course with highest success toward its southerly limit; and in that part of the prescribed area which lies in the Mississippi basin the crops will be superior to those grown in other portions of the same, and chiefly for the reason that the summer temperatures in the said basin are rela- tively high. While the soy bean will grow well in the hot summer temperatures of the Rocky moun- tain valleys under irrigation it is not so much needed in them because of the luxuriance with which other legumes may be grown that are more easily handled. The climate of the Pacific slope west of the Cascade mountains is ill adapted to the growth of | the scy bean. Soil.—The soy bean will thrive at least meas- urably well on almost any kind of soil, providing this soil has in it a liberal supply of potash, phos- phoric acid and lime. It will, however, thrive best on soils which may be termed medium in texture. Nearly all classes of soils found on the open prairie have high adaptation for the growth of this plant, and the same is true of all soils that will produce good crops of Indian corn. It may be successfully grown on land too low in fertility to produce clover or cowpeas. Instances are recorded in which plants have been grown in disintegrated trap rock and in coal ashes, and yet some of the light soils of the southern states may be so deficient in phosphoric acid and potash, and even nitrogen, as te Digitized by Microsoft® OTHER LEGUMINOUS PLANTS. 123. make it worth while to apply those ingredients before planting the crop. Nor should it be planted on soils in which hardpan comes uear the surface, since in such instances the roots which naturally feed deeply could not easily penetrate the soil. Swamp lands well drained, produce an abundant growth, especially of stems and leaves, hence these are specially adapted to growing soy beans for soiling food. Even peat soils, under certain conditions, may be made to produce paying crops, and owing to the excellent drouth-resisting properties of the plant, it may be grown on soils too deficient in moisture for the successful growth of the cowpea. But it is not wise to grow it on soils already rich in nitrogen. To do so would be a waste of that very important ele- ment of fertility. Place in the Rotation.—Since the soy bean must be grown in warm weather, where it is to be grown at all, its place in the rotation is all the more easily defined. Since the soy bean may be grown with highest success when given cultivation, it should gen- erally be grown as a cleaning crop; since it is a legume and has much power to increase the nitrogen content in the soil, it should precede grain crops; and since it can make progress amid heat and during dry weather it may frequently be grown as a catch crop. It will, therefore, naturally follow such crops as have been grown in southern latitudes to provide autumn, winter and early. spring pasture, as winter rye, winter oats and winter barley; and this plant may be made to follow grain crops that have been harvested at maturity, as, for instance, rye, winter wheat or winter oats; and it may even be made to Digitized by Microsoft® 124 SOILING CROPS AND THE SILO. follow spring grain that has been matured, providing there is yet moisture enough in the soil to bring about successful germination in the seed. The ground does not as a rule of necessity require to be plowed when preparing it for the grain crop that is next to be sown, since the bean crop generally leaves it in a loose condition. Preparing the Soil.—Since the soy bean is fre- quently grown as a catch crop, the seed bed for it must in such instances be prepared with dispatch. This calls for a free use of the harrow and roller after the land has been plowed. But it may not be necessary in all instances to plow the land when pre- paring it for soy beans. The surface should be made smooth and fine for the reception of the seed. When the soy bean crop is the only plant to be sown on the ground for the season, a fine opportunity is furnished for freeing the land in a single season from the pres- ence of many kinds of noxious weeds. This may be done in part by plowing the land for the soy bean crop in the autumn or in the early spring and then running the harrow over the same as often as the weeds begin to grow until the beans are planted. The subsequent cultivation given to the crop will tend to complete the cleaning process so well begun before the planting of the same. It is not usual to apply any fertilizer when growing this crop, but as previously intimated, it may be necessary in some instances to apply potash, phosphoric acid, or lime, if not indeed all three of these ingredients. Sowing.—When designed for soiling uses, the soy bean should be planted in rows and usually with the corn planter, the bean planter or the grain drill. Digitized by Microsoft® OTHER LEGUMINOUS PLANTS. 125 The distance between the rows will vary according to the strength of the soil, the variety of the bean and the date of planting. The extremes of distance may be placed at about twenty-four and forty inches and the mean distance at thirty inches. When grown for seed, the distance should be more than when the crop is grown to provide green food or hay. The variety planted will depend on such conditions as soil, climate and the uses for which the crop is grown. Asa rule, what are known as the dwarf varieties are preferred for grain production in the north and the medium varieties are preferred in the south. Of the former the Early Dwarf is a favorite and of the latter the Medium Early Green. The last named variety has proved satisfactory when grown as soiling food as far north as Amherst, Mass. The Medium Early Black is also in favor in many locali- ties. It is almost impossible, however, to give the names of varieties with precision at the present time, as the same variety is frequently spoken of under different names. The large varieties are adapted only to situations in which a long period of growth can be given to them. The medium varieties will frequently mature under normal conditions in from ninety to one hundred days, but oftentimes they require a longer season in which to complete their growth. When growing this crop, much attention should be given to the variety chosen. Many of the failures in attempting to introduce the crop have resulted from the planting of varieties not suited to the conditions of the locality. Considerably more seed is used in growing the zrop when it is to be fed in the green form than in Digitized by Microsoft® 126 SOILING CROPS AND THE SILO. growing it for the grain. From about sixteen. to twenty-four quarts will suffice for the latter purpose, while not less than thirty-two quarts are usually sown to provide green food. Some growers favor thick planting to encourage an upright and tall rather than a branching growth, because of the greater ease with which plants of the former type can be harvested. The soy bean should never be planted until the arrival of warm settled weather, and the planting may proceed as long as there is a reasonable hope of sufficiently maturing the crop before the autumn frosts arrive. In Kansas, for instance, crops planted on wheat stubble in July have been matured. Cultivation.—Wherever the soil does not lft with the wind, the roller should both precede and follow the planting of soy beans, unless where mois- ture is abundantly present. The cultivation given should of course be generous and prompt, since the beans grow so quickly that this work cannot be very long continued. In some instances it is possible to use a harrow on the land between the time of plant- ing the seed and the appearing of the young plants above the surface. The instances are also frequent in which the harrow may be driven over the ground with much advantage to the plants after they have got four or five inches above the surface of the ground, but it should be driven along rather than across the rows to prevent the horses from treading down the plants. But when the harrow is so used, the teeth should be set with a backward slant. Feeding.—When the crop is grown for the seed it may be cut to much advantage with a self rake Digitized by Microsoft® ‘wie, Jusuttiadxg AySI9AlUA BJOSOUUITL (lz1) Bullog 10y suvag A0S ‘ST ‘SId Digitized by Microsoft® 128 SOILING CROPS AND THE SILO. reaper. But when grown for soiling or for hay it is more commonly cut with the mower. When fed green, the cutting may begin as soon as the period of early bloom, and it may continue until the crop is sufficiently matured for making hay. When cut for hay, the seeds should be about half grown in the pods. If the cutting be deferred to a later period, many of the leaves will drop off and the stems will become woody. Any excess in the crop of green food should be cut for hay rather than allowed to ripen. Since the yield of seed from crops thus grown will not be abundant, the crop should not be allowed to wilt overmuch when it is fed green, lest there should be some loss from the leaves dropping off. The method of feeding is much the same as that followed in feeding peas. When soy beans are fed to swine, the season of feeding may be continued until the crop is matured. But it is more common to allow the swine to gather the seeds for themselves when the crop has reached an advanced stage of maturity. THE COWPEA. The cowpea (Dolichos Chinensis) has been grown for many years in the south, hence it has long since been carried past what may be termed the experimental stage of growth. It is fast coming to be regarded as an indispensable factor in any system of cultivation that can be adopted in the southern states and which is likely to prove eminently suc- cessful. Its great value to the farmers of the south arises from, 1, its ability to grow on poor soils; 2, Digitized by Microsoft® OTHER LEGUMINOUS PLANTS. 129 its power to grow under adverse conditions; 3, its great value as a pasture and a fodder plant for live stock; 4, the magnificent service which it renders to the soil when plowed under as a green manure. There are but few places in the entire south where the land is tillable in which this plant may not be grown with more or less success. The proper use of the cowpea and of its complement, the soy bean, to the greatest extent possible, would revolutionize the agriculture of large areas in the south, where the soil is sandy and lacking in fertility. The cowpea furnishes excellent pasture for cat- tle, sheep and swine, but when pastured by cattle the waste of vines is greater than when fed as soiling food. It also furnishes good hay, when properly cured for horses, cattle and sheep. But it is not as easily handled as the common field pea in the north, nor is it so easily cured. The grain is also excellent for milk production and for growing swine. Its use for these purposes in the form of meal has not become general, owing first, to the considerable labor involved in handling the crop, because of the long and intertwining nature of the growth in many of the varieties grown, and, second, because of the incomplete machinery for harvesting the crop in the best manner possible. There would seem to be no valid reason why the pea harvester should not be generally used in harvesting the cowpea. It is scarcely possible to give figures that would represent the average yields of the crop per acre in the green form, owing to the many varieties that are grown and to the great difference in the habits of ) Digitized by Microsoft® “WAIe,, JUoWTIadxy] AJISIAATULE, LJOSOUUTTY spadMoy uo Bulinzseg days “Oy “Bid (ot 1) Digitized by Microsoft® OTHER LEGUMINOUS PLANTS. I31 growth in these. With the large varieties it is some- times possible to grow twenty tons per acre, but the average will be much less than that amount. Distribution.—The northerly limit of successful growth in the cowpea would seem to be the southerly limit of successful growth in the common field pea. The line which forms this border-land of high devel- opment will run irregularly across the continent, but it is not far distant from the fortieth parallel. The cowpea has been grown in the northern areas of Nebraska, Lowa, Illinois, Indiana and Ohio and even in Connecticut, but in these localities the aim is rather to grow it as a soil renovator and to a less extent as a soiling food than as a grain crop. In the southern half of the states named, Connecticut excepted, it is grown by many farmers, but the most favorable conditions for completest development in the large varieties is found further to the southward, as far south probably as the latitude of St. Louis in Mis- souri, that is to say, south of the thirty-eighth parallel In the warm valleys of the Rocky mountains the cowpea will doubtless grow vigorously under irrigation, but it is not likely to come into general favor in these areas, because of the presence of alfalfa in so great abundance, and yet in the more southerly of these valleys, it may come to be grown extensively to provide a grain eminently suited to the finishing of pork reared upon alfalfa. When thus grown, swine could be made to harvest the crop where it grew. But in these valleys it is not at all probable that the cowpea will soon be produced as a soiling food. In Canada and in the states bordering on that country, any variety of the cowpea that has been Digitized by Microsoft® 132 SOILING CROPS AND THE SILO. introduced has not been grown with highest success, and the same is true of the western slope of Oregon. But recent experiments conducted by the author at the Minnesota experiment station have been decid- edly encouraging. They were made with such varieties as the Early Black and the Red Ripper. Soils.—Soils that are suitable for growing soy beans are also suitable in nearly all instances for growing cowpeas. (see Page 122). Loam soils and more especially clay loams, will produce the largest crops. Fairly good crops may be grown on soils too low in fertility to produce good crops of grain. Place in the Rotatiou.—As with other legumes, the aim should be to grow the cowpea so that it will prove a renovating crop to. the soil. It should, therefore, come as a rule between two grain crops. But it may also be grown as a catch crop, where a crop previously grown has failed; or it may be grown as an intermediate crop after a crop has been harvested and before another autumn or winter crop has been sown. The cowpea can be grown with much satisfaction on land from which early vege- tables have been removed and also after a crop of such fruits as strawberries. It is also grown on soils that have become too unproductive for success- ful cropping with grain. When thus grown it is usually plowed under to renovate the soil, but even though the crop be used for soiling purposes or for hay, or even though it be matured for its grain product it will still leave the land in a much better condition as to fertility than before the crop was grown on it, Digitized by Microsoft® OTHER LEGUMINOUS PLANTS. 133 Although cowpeas will grow luxuriantly on overturned sod lands, it will usually be a mistake to grow them on these, as the vegetable matter which they contain may be turned to excellent account in growing grain crops. But it may be wise in some instances to grow cowpeas after crimson clover, in the hope of further enriching the land for the next crop. The cowpea is also frequently sown among the cotton and corn plants while they are yet imma- ture. In latitudes far south, one crop of cowpeas may be grown for soiling uses if cut early and a second crop from the same plants for being plowed under. Preparing the Soil—In preparing the soil for the cowpea the aim should be to secure a fine and a moist seed bed. The roller and harrow, if judiciously used, may be made greatly helpful in securing both, and more especially after the arrival of the dry sea- son. When sown after garden crops, it may not be necessary to plow the land, but simply to disk and harrow it. It is seldom necessary to apply nitrogen to the soil in which this crop is grown, but in some instances it is necessary. Since the cowpea takes considerable quantities of potash and phosphoric acid out of the soil and since it does not restore these when the crop is removed from the soil on which it grew, except in so far as it brings them up from the sub- soil, the fertilizers applied should contain these ele- ments in liberal degree. It will be in order, there- fore, to apply such fertilizers as ground bone, bone ash, fish guano and superphosphate when fertilizers are needed. Farmyard manure will usually give Digitized by Microsoft® I34 SOILING CROPS AND THE SILO. excellent results, but it can seldom be spared for the crop of cowpeas. Sowing.—Cowpeas are commonly sown with the grain drill. If sown broadcast and covered with the harrow, and rain should fall soontafter the crop has been sown, many of the peas will lie upon the surface and will fail to sprout. When sown for pasture, all the drill tubes are used in sowing the seed, but when the land is measurably clean and the other conditions are favorable, it may be advanta- geous to sow only with alternate tubes. The same mode of sowing is sometimes adopted when the crop is sown for soiling uses or for the production of hav or grain. But when ground is to be cleaned, or when moisture is not abundant, the crop ought to be drilled in rows far enough apart to admit of cultivation. With the large varieties these rows may in some instances be made as distant from one another as thirty inches, and even thus far distant, the vines will in time completely cover the ground. But the distance between the rows must be measurably deter- mined by the variety of the peas and convenience in cultivating them. In growing this crop for soiling food, it will oftentimes prove advantageous to sow the seed of some other forage plant along with them, as, for instance, millet, sorghum, or Kaffir corn. These plants help to sustain the peas and consequently to improve the quality of the vines and to increase the quantity of the grain. Naffir corn is very suitable for being grown thus, owing to the stiff growth of stem which it sends upward and to its power to grow in dry weather. About ten pounds of seed Digitized by Microsoft® OTHER LEGUMINOUS PLANTS. 3 La will usually be sufficient to mix with one bushel of the peas. The quantity of peas that should be sown will depend chiefly on the objects sought in sowing. But more seed will be required of the large varieties and by soils low in fertility. From one to one and one- half bushels are usually sown when the crop is to be pastured or plowed under. In a majority of instances, one bushel of seed per acre will suffice to grow soiling food or hay. When cultivation is to be given between the rows, the quantity of seed required will be proportionately reduced. When the crop is to be plowed under, the large and late maturing varieties ought usually to be sown in the southern but not in the northern states. The Wonderful, sometimes called Unknown, is one of the best of these. But when soiling food, hay or grain is sought, the kinds known as “bunch” varie- ties—that is to say, branched and bush-like rather than vine-like—should usually be sown. They are more productive of grain than the former and are more easily harvested. The best of these, especially for northerly latitudes, are the Whippoorwill, the Early Black, the Red Ripper and the Black Eye. The Clay variety is in favor farther south. But there is yet some confusion in the various names applied to the cowpea. If cowpeas are sown before the weather and soil are warm, the seed will rot in the ground, or the plants will start so feebly that they will not grow subsequently into a vigorous crop. After the corn has been planted it will be sufficiently early to plant cowpeas. In latitudes far south they can be sown Digitized by Microsoft® 136 SOILING CROPS AND THE SILO. . even months later, but not in the north. The bunch varieties will often mature in ninety to one hundred and twenty days from the time of planting. | Cultivation.—W hether cowpeas are sown broad- cast by hand, by the grain drill with all the tubes in use or in rows far enough apart to admit of subse- quent cultivation, the harrow may in many instances be used with advantage before the plants push up through the surface of the soil. A light harrow may also be used when the plants are four or five inches above the surface, and more especially when the peas are planted in rows so that subsequent cultiva- tion can be given to them, as then the horses may be driven along the rows when drawing the harrow so as not to tread down the peas. When subsequent cultivation is given between the rows, it must be done with promptness, as the peas, owing to the vine-like character of their growth will soon lie along upon the land and so preclude further cultivation. \When strong weeds of a nox- ious character infest the line of the rows they ought to be removed if they are likely to mature their seeds before the peas are harvested. Due attention should be given to this particular, whatsover the kind of crop that is being grown. Feeding.—The feeding of cowpeas may begin as soon as the first bloom appears. When cut thus early the crop will grow up again, though not under all conditions, and may be cut a second time if the growth will justify using it thus. .A second advan- tage from early cutting is found in the greater ease with which the green food may be handled when it is being fed, since the intertwining of the vines is Digitized by Microsoft® i 4 Digitized by Microsoft® Cowpeas Grown for Soiling Fig. 17. Minnesota University Experiment l’arm. 138 SOILING CROPS AND TIIE SILO. not so pronounced as at a later period. It should be remembered that at the period of early bloom the plants have not nearly reached that stage when they possess a maximum of nutrition. The feeding may be continued until the crop is nearly mature. Any residue not wanted for green food may be cut and cured for hay. When the major portion of the pods contain peas more than half grown, the crop is ready for being cut for hay. It may also be harvested for the grain as soon as one-half, or more than that, of the pods are fully ripe. The ripening of the pods, as with the common field pea, is more or less uneven. The cutting on a large scale is commonly done with a field mower. But when the crop is not in any way supported by another crop sown along with it, the mower very frequently leaves more or less of the peas uncut. The pea harvester will do the work of cutting much more cleanly and economically. Because of the difficulty of handling the crop when feeding it green, there is a disposition on the part of many to allow the stock to do the harvesting. The waste resulting is not all loss, since the soil is enriched more or less when the waste is buried with the plow. As in feeding other green foods, this crop may be fed on a pasture, in a paddock, in sheds or stables, in fact, wherever it is most convenient. Digitized by Microsoft® CHAPTER VN. PLANTS OF THE BRASSICA GENUS. But two plants of this genus have heretofore been grown to any very considerable extent on this continent to provide soiling food or pasture for live stock. These are rape and cabbage. It is possible, nevertheless, that other plants of the same genus may yet be introduced that will prove quite helpful in pro- viding green food for the same. Some of these, as kale for instance, have been thus utilized in Europe, and there would seem to be no good reasons why they should not be so used in some areas of this coun- try, but until more is known as to their behavior under American conditions, they could only be dis- cussed in a speculative way. Rape and cabbage, therefore, will only be considered in this chapter. RAPE. There are several varieties of rape (Brassica napus,) but only one of these, viz., the Dwarf Essex, has been found possessed of sufficient value to give it the place of distinct precedence among all the varie- ties tried under American conditions. All varieties of rape are annual, that is to say, they complete the mission of life within twelve months from the date of sowing. But there may be instances, as when certain varieties are sown early one season, where 139 Digitized by Microsoft® 140 SOILING CROPS AND THE SILO. they will not mature their seeds until a later period the following season. The varieties which are chiefly grown for seed only, and which are used principally in making oil, usually mature the seed within sixty to one hundred and twenty days from the date of sowing, but those which are grown rather for pasture or for soil- ing uses, will not mature seed the same season they are sown. The former are possessed of but little value as food plants. The Dwarf Essex rape bears a close résemblance to the rutabaga in the first weeks of its growth. So close is the resemblance at this time that it probably would puzzle an expert to tell the two plants apart. As time goes on, however, the growth of the rape is more upright, and it becomes more stalky and tall. Ordinarily it grows to the hight of eighteen to twenty-four inches, but it may be so stimulated by fertilizers as to make it reach nearly twice that hight. The root is strong, the branches of the same being numerous and some of them go a considerable distance downward as well as laterally in search of food. Dwart Essex rape furnishes most excellent soiling food for horses, cattle, sheep and swine. Its feeding value has been stated by high authority to be fully twice that of clover, although chemical analysis does not give to it so high a value. As soon as ant- mals become accustomed to it, they grow exceedingly fond of it. Its power to produce milk when fed to wilk-giving animals is very high, and its power tc produce fat is, ina sense, remarkable. \Vhen it is fed to cows in milk, some caution must be exercised as to Digitized by Microsoft® Fig. 18. Dwarf Essex Rape Plant (141) Minnesota University Experiment l’arm. Digitized by Microsoft® La2 SOILING CROPS AND THE SILO. the manner in which it is fed, or the milk will be tainted more or less. Many dairymen, who send their milk regularly to a cheese factory, feed it to their cows once or twice a day after the cows have been milked. These dairymen state that no complaint has been made as to the quality of the milk. But some dairy authorities claim it should not be fed to cows giving milk at all, as the danger of taint is imminent. The truth will probably be found, in this as in so many other instances, to occupy middle ground. If the rape is fed just after the cows have been milked and in moderation, while the milk flow will be well sustained, there will probably be no perceptible taint in the milk. But if fed in excess, while the milk flow will be further increased, the milk will carry in it more or less of the odor of the green rape. The vield of the mature crop is proportionate to the favorable nature of the climatic conditions, the richness of the land, and the nature and extent of the cultivation given to the plants. Ten tons an acre is a very moderate vield. Twenty tons an acre are frequently obtained, and there are instances in which the yield has been increased to thirty tons per acre. When the exceedingly rich character of the food is kept in mind and when this fact is coupled with the large yields that can be obtained, the conclusion is legitimate, viz., that but few crops can be grown that will yield a greater food value per acre. Distribution.—It is questionable if there is any state in the Union or any province in Canada in some part of which this food cannot be successfully grown at some season of the year. It may with no little propriety be termed a cool weather plant, hence Digitized by Microsoft® PLANTS OF THE BRASSICA GENUS. 143 the best yields are obtained north of the fortieth parallel of north latitude. All the states of the Union bordering on Canada, and likewise all the provinces of Canada bordering on the United States, have high adaptation, though not equally high, for the growth of rape. In the states further south it ought to be grown in the early part of the season, before the weather becomes dry and hot, or in the autumn after rain has begun to fall. In mild winter latitudes this plant should be made to provide soiling food through all or nearly all the winter. Rape also growsinfine forminthe higher Rocky mountain valleys when it is irrigated, and sometimes in the absence of irrigaton, but the great abundance of the alfalfa crops in these makes. the growth of rape less essential than it would otherwise be. The highest adaptation for this plant will probably be found on the Pacific coast from southern Oregon to Alaska. The humidity of the climate there and the mild character of the season makes it possible to grow enormous crops of rape. Soil—Rape will grow freely in any soil that will produce a good crop of turnips, that is to say, it will make a vigorous growth in deep, moist loam soils, with a considerable mixture of sand in them. It will also grow with even greater vigor in some classes of soils not well adapted to rutabagas, as for instance, the black humus soils found in sloughs, and the muck soils of marshes, that have been drained. It would probably be correct to say that in these, rape finds its highest adaptation. It grows luxuriantly in nearly all the varieties of soil found in the prairies of the west, also in the sandy soils of the Digitized by Microsoft® 144 3OILING CROPS AND THE SILO. Rocky mountain valleys when supplied with mois- ture. It does not usually make a good growth in unyielding clays, and light infertile sands have still less adaptation to the growth of rape than stiff clays. It is almost useless to sow rape on a poor soil. On the other hand, the yield of the crop is likely to be proportionate to the richness of the land when the other conditions that relate to growth are favorable. Place in the Rotation.—The place given to rape in the rotation will in no small degree be dependent on the object for which it is grown. When grown to provide pasture one can scarcely imagine a rota- tion in which it may not with propriety be given a place. It is probably without a rival in its adapta- tion for being sown as acatch crop. But it is rather as a soiling crop than as a pasture crop that its place, in the rotation, is now to be considered. Whenever the crop is cultivated it ought to be made a cleaning crop, and, therefore, may be sown with no little propriety on land that is foul. In all, or nearly all, such instances it ought to be followed by a grain crop on which grass seeds also are sown. But when sown broadcast, and on many of the rich soils of the west, it may be thus grown with perfect propriety. It should only be sown on land that is measurably clean. This crop will grow nicely on overturned sod, old or new, timothy, clover, blue grass, or indeed any other kind of grass, since it is a ravenous feeder on decaying vegetable matter in the soil. Rape may be made the sole crop grown on the land for the season, or even for soiling purposes it may be made to follow some other crop, as rye pastured or barley harvested, or clover from which Digitized by Microsoft® PLANTS OF TIE BRASSICA GENUS. T45 one cutting has been removed. When sown thus late, in very many instances cultivation should be given to the plants to stimulate growth. © When sown after any of these crops, the results will largely depend on the character of the weather that follows. There may be seasons when the attempt to grow rape in this way will not be successful. Preparing the Soil—tIn preparing the land for rape the aim should be to secure a fine, firm and moist seed bed, with as much cleanness as can be attained under the circumstances. When rape is the sole crop grown on the land for the season, usually the above conditions can be attained, unless the crop is sown very early in the season. More commonly they can best be attained by plowing the land in the autumn. The exceptions are climates with rainy winters. It being more common to sow rape to provide soiling food for late summer and autumn rather than for early summer feeding, a sufficient interval tran- spires between the opening of spring and the sowing of the crop to sprout many of the weed seeds lying near the.surface of the soil, and in time to destroy them by the occasional use of the harrow. But when the crop is broadcasted early in the season, as ig often done, the aim should be to sow it on clean land. When rape follows another crop harvested the same season, the interval for preparing the land is too short to give opportunity to clean the same. Within a few hours of the plowing of the land it should be impacted with the roller, or with the roller and harrow, to keep in the moisture. | This should never be omitted, unless when the soil is abundantly Io Digitized by Microsoft® 146 SOILING CROPS AND THE SILO. moist. And when the rape crop is planted in drills on such Jand with enough distance between them to admit cultivation, the said cultivation, when given, is further very helpful to the retention of moisture, as well as to the more vigorous growth of the plants. It is, also, peculiarly helpful in such a season in cleaning the land. Rape should not be sown in sum- mer weather on cloddy land as the seed will not germinate under such conditions. When rape is grown for soiling food, the aim should be to secure all the growth possible. Hence it should be sown on land naturally rich, or made so by applving fertilizers. Rape has special adaptation for being grown on lands enriched with heavy appli- cations of farmyard manure. In fact, the luxuriance in the growth of the plants is usually proportional to the degree, to which the soil has been enriched. This plant would almost seem capable of growing in a manure heap. And because of its great power to appropriate food, manure applied in the fresh form would seem to answer the end sought about as well as when it is applied in the reduced form. But to this there are some exceptions. Manure, fresh and con- taining much litter, should not be applied in great bulk, except in rainy climates, lest it hinder to so great an extent the impaction of the soil as to allow the too rapid escape of moisture. Slough and swamp soils are oftentimes so rich that an application of a fertilizer on these would be thrown away. Commercial fertilizers are of course helpful to this plant when farmyard manure cannot be obtained, and also when it can be obtained, but not in sufficient quantities. A light application of farmyard Digitized by Microsoft® PLANTS OF THE BRASSICA GENUS. 147 manure in conjunction with a light application of artificial fertilizers is probably superior to a heavy application of either alone. On lands which require such treatment superphosphate is oftentimes drilled in with the seed, but not in too close proximity to it. Nitrogenous fertilizers, on which rape feeds rav- enously, are usually applied on or near the surface, and just at the time of sowing the seed or later. But in moist weather only should nitrogenous ferti- lizers be applied on the surface. Sowing.—Rape seed is sown by one of two methods, that is to say, it is broadcasted, or sown in rows far enough apart to admit cultivation between them. The second method is preferable when land is possessed of only moderate fertility, when it is foul with weeds, and when the period of growth is short. The cultivation stimulates growth some- times in a remarkable degree, and cleans the land. The first method will answer very well, however, when the land is reasonably clean and rich, and more especially in moist climates. | Where the seed is sown in rows, these are placed variously from twenty to thirty-six inches apart, according as there is present a prospect of an average or more than an average crop. The stronger the growth the wider apart do the plants require to be. In some instances the drills are raised. In other instances they are made on the level. When raised they are commonly made with a double mold board plow with a marker on it, to mark the line of the next plow furrow. The raised drills render cultivation somewhat easier, more especially when the plants are young. But Digitized by Microsoft® 148 SOILING CROPS AND THE SILO. where moisture is less than normal, the germination of the seed will be much more certain if sown on the level. The seed is usually sown in raised drills by the ordinary turnip drill, drawn by one horse. Two rows are thus sown at once. But the hand drill can be used in the absence of a horse drill. © When sown on the level the land may be marked out and the seed sown with the hand drill, or it may be deposited with certain of the grain drills, when driven by a driver sufficiently skilled to make rows straight, and evenly distant; varying widths between the rows and crooked rows greatly lessen the effectiveness of the subsequent cultivation. The most perfect machine for doing this work has prob- ably not yet been invented. |The seed should be buried from less than one inch to two or even more in depth, according to the character of the soil and climate. \When sown broadcast the seed may be scattered by hand, or sown with a hand grass seed sower. In either instance it is covered with the harrow, whether the seed is sown in drills or by hand, unless when the ground is quite moist, it should be rolled before and also immediately after sowing the seed, to hinder evaporation near the surface. Rolling the land thus in dry weather is greatly important, but there may be instances when a light harrow should follow the last rolling given the land. The quantity of seed to be sown will depend upon varying conditions, usually from one to two pounds per acre will suffice when the crop is grown in drills. When broadcasted the quantity will vary from three to five pounds per acre. The first men- Digitized by Microsoft® PLANTS OF THE SBRASSICS. GENUS. I49 tioned quantity will suffice when the soil is rich and clean, but when these conditions are not present the last named quantity may be preferable, to admit of harrowing the crop to some extent after the plants have made a good start. The time at which this crop may be sown varies exceedingly. In all climates it may be sown as early in the spring as grain crops, and in moist climates it may be sown as late as the end of summer. The crop usually requires from eight to ten weeks to complete its growth, sometimes however, a shorter period will suffice and again a longer period is necessary. Keeping in mind this thought one can decide when the crop should be sown. The early sown crops may be turned to excellent account in providing pasture or soiling food for swine, when clover does not grow readily. In mild climates it may be sown in the autumn. To provide soiling food when most needed, the seed is usually sown in May or Jume. But by varying the dates of sowing, this one plant may be made to furnish soiling food almost without interruption from the close of spring to the end of autumn. In the dry, hot summer months it is sometimes impossible to get a stand of plants. But even though the seed should lie in the ground without germinating for weeks, it will start up vigorously as soon as moisture reaches it. Ciltivation.—When the crop is broadcasted the only cultivation possible is to harrow it after the plants have obtained a fine hold on the soil. The harrowing should be done with much care. It will destroy some of the plants, but when the seed has been sown thickly enough, this will be no rea! 4 Digitized by Microsoft® 150 SOILING CROPS AND THE SILO. detriment to the crop. A light harrow should be used, and the harrowing must not be deferred until the young weeds get a firm hold upon the soil. ‘When the crop 1s sown in rows, the cultivation should begin as soon as the young plants can be dis- tinctly traced along the line of the row. It should be shallow and as frequent as once a week or once in two weeks, until the tops of the plants have so reached out as to preclude further cultivation. The harrow may also be used with advantage in some instances on a rape crop sown in drills and on the level. When so used it should be draavn across the rows and prior to the cultivation ordinarily given. The effect will be to take out myriads of weeds along the line of the row that would otherwise be undis- turbed. The plants will be somewhat thinned, but this should not result in the injury of the crop. It © is not usual to hand hoe rape, not even along the line of the row or to thin it, but if so treated the plants will grow all the stronger. © Whether the labor would give an adequate return will depend upon conditions. When the cleaning of the land is one of the chief objects sought in growing rape some hand hoeing should be found profitable. Feeding —The cutting and feeding of rape plants may be commenced as soon as they have made sufficient growth to justify such a course. More especially is this true of rape that is to be fed to swine in the absence of-other green food. It may be cut and fed thus when not more than one foot high. If not cut too near the ground, it will grow up a second and even a third time. If mowed closely, however, the growth will be much weakened. Digitized by Microsoft® ‘wie Jusutiadxy Ayisioalup, vjosauuTy Sulflog Joy odey xessq preMqg ‘oT *3I4 (Sr) Digitized by Microsoft® 152 SOILING CROPS AND THE SILO. More commonly, however, rape is virtually allowed to reach its growth before the feeding is begun, and it is questionable 1f more or even as much food can be obtained by cutting this crop once or twice when immature, as when it is allowed to practically mature before the feeding begins. By maturity is meant, in the present instance, a stage when further growth ceases. This point once reached, there will likelv be greater or less loss in hot weather before the crop can be fed, as the lower leaves, especially, will be- come yellow and crisp, and in some instances, the plants will be attacked by the white aphis. When indications of such attack are present, the crop should be fed with all haste, otherwise it may soon become valueless. To avoid such risk, in hot weather it may be well to commence feeding the plants before they have completed their maturity. But in cool moist weather a large majority of the plants will so retain ~ their greenness, that the feeding of the crop may be made to cover two months, at least without much loss in food value. It may be well to mention here, that any unused residue of the crop in the late autumn may be cut before severe frosts arrive, thrown into heaps and fed from these, even after the snow has fallen to a considerable depth. But where the cold of winter is usually intense, this could not be done with profit. The plants like those of sorghum are slow indeed to spoil when thus handled. The crop may be cut with scythe or mower according to the amount wanted. and if put into heaps soon after it is cut, in the field, the feed yard or the sheds, it will retain its palatability for several Digitized by Microsoft® PLANTS OF THE BRASSICA GENUS. 153 days. Ifthe crop is cut with the mower, better work can usually be done when it has been sown broadcast, as then none of the stems lie so near the ground as to escape being cut. When the drills have been raised it is not easy to cut the crop with the mower. Rape may be fed as other green food, that is to say, on a pasture, or in a paddock, feed yard, shed or sty. But care should be taken not to feed too large a quantity at first; not to feed when wet, and not to feed to hungry animals all they will take, lest bloating should be produced, which, if not speedily relieved, will almost certainly lead to the death of the animal. There is some danger also that scouring will be produced when green rape is fed in large quantities. The scouring is not nearly so likely to manifest itself when the stock is also being pastured on grass more or less dry, or where there is being fed at the same time a considerable quantity of hay. And it is not a little surprising how much dry food, stock will consume when being freely fed on green rape. Nature seems to furnish a craving for food that aids in correcting the ten- dency to an unduly lax condition of the bowels which may have been induced by feeding rape. And this will be found true also when other kinds of green food are being fed. So certainly does this craving manifest itself that it is questionable if it would not pay at all times to feed some dry food when animals are being fed an abundance of juicy green food. It may not be generally known that this plant can be fed green with much profit to young colts more especially after they have been weaned. It is equally good for calves under like conditions. If Digitized by Microsoft® 154 SOILING CROPS AND THE SILO. given an abundance of green rape calves or colts will grow very quickly and will also improve in flesh. It makes a grand food for sheep being fitted for the fairs, for weaned lambs that are wanted in good form for early selling, and for lambs that must needs be confined to avoid infection from parasites on cer- tain pastures. When fed as soiling food, the feeding can be so regulated that the element from bloating will be completely eliminated. Rape is also possessed of peculiar value when fed as soiling food to swine. When so fed a large saving is effected in grain food, development is more continuous, and the vigor of the animals is better sustained. The rape plant is oftener pastured than cut and fed as soiling food, frequently it will be more advan- tageous to use it in the latter form. There is really no limit to the extent to which this plant may be used other than that which is fixed by the desires of the owner. CABBAGE. Cabbage (Brassica oleracea) is probably seldom grown for the express purpose of providing suste- nance for live stock. In nearly all instances crops of this plant are grown to provide food for the human family. Yet in certain areas it may be grown with much advantage to furnish soiling food for various classes of live stock. Because of the great power which the mature plants have to withstand frost, they will furnish green food at a season of the year when it can seldom be obtained from any other source outside of the silo. By exercising some care and forethought in storing cabbage, as described Digitized by Microsoft® PLANTS OF THE BRASSICA GENUS. 155 under the head of feeding, it may be used as green food for several weeks after the ground has frozen. But even though the crop has been grown chiefly as human food, when the areas thus planted are large, the residue of the crop after the heads have been taken, 1s possessed of a value for feeding uses that will far more than repay the labor of feeding it to live stock. This residue, though it varies greatly in relative value, is frequently worth fully fifty per cent of the whole value of the crop, when used as food for live stock. In growing cabbage, therefore, the recommendation to “gather up the fragments that nothing he lost’’ is peculiarly fitting. Because of the considerable labor involved in growing cabbage the crop is adapted to intensive rather than to extensive conditions. The farmer having a small farm located near a town or city, and having on that farm few animals, can usually grow this crop to better advantage than the man whose conditions are the opposite. Cabbage furnish excellent food for horses, cattle, sheep and swine. It has a nutritive ratio of 1:5.2 and, therefore, is in itself almost a perfectly balanced food for milch cows. It is not only relished highly by the various classes of animals mentioned, but when fed to those giving milk, as to cows, ewes and brood sows, it has much power to produce an abundant flow of milk. The heads when chopped fine furnish a peculiarly grateful and appetizing food for young lambs. The yields obtained per acre are in some instances simply enormous. Crops of forty to fifty tons have been grown, but these figures are much above the average. Digitized by Microsoft® “ULTE S| J JUoWTIadx a AVsroaluy) vjyosouurypy BuUI]I0S 10; aBeqqey ‘07 “B14 (981) Digitized by Microsoft® PLANTS OF THE BRASSICA GENUS. 157 Distribution.—This crop is wide in its distri- bution. There is probably no state in our republic and no province in Canada in which it may not be grown, and with considerable success. While it has highest adaptation for cool and moist climates, it will, nevertheless, grow better relatively in warm climates than rape. But in these the enemies of the plant, such as the aphis and the cabbage worm, are much more troublesome than in northern latitudes where the mean summer temperature is lower. This crop may be grown in best form in the states of the Union which border upon Canada and in the provinces of Canada which border upon the United States. But excellent crops can be grown under certain conditions in states much further south, In fact, there are but few states in the Union which, in some of their more elevated valleys, do not furnish just the right conditions for grow- ing cabbage. Where the crop can be successfully grown as human food, it may also be successfully grown as food for live stock, for the requisite conditions to produce either crop are essentially the same. But it should be carefully observed, that because a cabbage crop has given a financial profit when grown for the human family, it does not follow it will also give a financial profit when grown as food for live stock. Such an assumption would not, of necessity, be cor- rect, since it involves the consideration of relative values of cabbage in the market and of meat and milk produced by the cabbage when fed. Soil—Cabbage like all plants of the Brassica genus luxuriate in a fertile soil, and more especially Digitized by Microsoft® 158 SOILING CROPS AND THE SILO. in one abundantly supplied with humus. The alluvial soils of narrow valleys and river bottoms furnish for them a most congenial home. The same is true of the deep rich black loams of the virgin prairie and of slough lands. They also revel in the muck soils of swamps that have been drained. They can be grown on rich loams in fine form, and good crops can even be obtained from clays of no little density, but not without much labor. Fair crops can also be grown on all lands well adapted to the production of Indian corn, but more fertility, relatively, is required to grow a good crop of cabbage than will suffice to grow a good crop. of corn. The lands with least adaptation for cabbage are those which are light, leachy and low in fertility. Good cabbage soils are usually if not always underlaid with clay, not too near and yet not too distant from the surface. Good crops may be grown on upland soils naturally dry in character, but only by the aid of abun- dant fertilizing. Place in the Rotation—The cabbage crop like all other crops that are given much cultivation should be made a cleaning crop. It should invariably be followed by a crop of grain of the non-leguminous order, unless there are good reasons for doing other- wise. The grain crop should have grass seeds sown along with it to produce hay or pasture. But owing to the peculiar power which cabbage, in common with all plants of this family, have to feed upon decaying vegetable matter, there is a peculiar fitness in growing a crop of cabbage on overturned sod. Any kind of sod will suffice, but of course, the more Digitized by Microsoft® f PLANTS OF THE BRASSICA GENUS. 159 dense the better adapted it is for the purpose. Good clover sod has much adaptation for the production of good crops of cabbage. Preparing the Soil—When cabbage is grown specially for soiling food, late crops are much pre- ferred to those that mature early. What will now be said on the preparation of the soil will have more especial reference to the growing of late crops. In preparing the land for this crop the soil should as a rule be deeply broken. To this there may be some exceptions, as for instance, when sod land is over- turned but a short time before the crop is planted on it, and more especially, when the soil has in it a strong admixture of clay. The ideal treatment under such conditions is to plow the sod only moderately deep and to follow the ordinary plow with a subsoil plow. The crop of clover or grass should be allowed to make as much growth as possible before it is turned under. As soon as the land is plowed, the roler should follow the plow as closely as possible. The green mass thus turned under will begin to decay quickly and the young cabbage plants will find in it most congenial food and drink. Good crops of cabbage may be grown after crimson clover has been cut, or even after the medium red has been harvested. The chief difficulty to be met in sowing crops this late is that of sprout- ing the seed, since the weather at that season is usually dry. In other instances cabbage may be grown with profit when green rye has been buried that had been sown the previous autumn. But the rye should be buried while yet quite succulent, or it will not decay with sufficient quickness. There may Digitized by Microsoft® 160 SOILING CROPS AND THE SILO. also be occasions when the ground should be plowed in the fall, as for instance, when the land is very foul. It may then be at least partially cleaned in the spring before the seed is sown. And when old sod lands are covered with a dense turf, it may be a good practice to plow them in the fall, to give the roots more time to decay before the planting of the crop. When such lands have been plowed, the surface soil should be cut up deeply and finely by some implement adapted to such work. The roots of the young plants can then push their way through the soil much more readily and the decay of the sod will be much hastened. It is not easy to make the land too rich for cab- bage by the application of fertilizers, but it would be easy to so apply fertilizers that there would be waste of the same. For instance, if farmyard manure, commercial fertilizers, or both were applied in excess of the needs of the crop on a leachy soil and in an area possessed of a rainy climate, much of the excess of fertility unused by the crop would be washed out of the soil before the planting of the next crop. That the plants may be abundantly supplied with food, and that such waste may be avoided, the practice has become common when growing cabbage to apply much of the fertilizer along and near the line of the row where the plants are to be grown. But where fertility has thus to be distributed with so much care, it is at least questionable if cabbage can be profitably grown as a food for live stock. On many of the prairies of the west, especially in the slough lands of the same, enormous crops can be grown without the application of any kind of fertilizer. Digitized by Microsoft® o PLANTS OF THE BRASSICA GENUS. 161 Farmyard manure is an excellent fertilizer for cabbage, but unless applied some time before the planting of the crop it should be somewhat reduced before being used. Many eastern growers compost farmyard manure with night soil and muck, or cer- tain forms of fish waste, and when sufficiently near the sea they add kelp. Purely commercial fertilizers will not give returns so satisfactory, in the entire absence of farmyard manures, as when the latter is present. When both are applied the manure is com- monly plowed in and the commercial fertilizer placed in and near the line of the row which is to receive the seed. ‘These fertilizers are thus made specially help- ful to the plants while they are young and the barn- yard manure is more helpful at a later period. Such fertilizers as guano, superphosphate with much nitrogen in it and hen manure are excellent for such a use, and so are wood ashes. Cabbage feeds freely upon the three essential elements in complete fer- tilizers, but most freely on potash. In any case, 1f the soil is not rich where a crop of cabbage is to be grown, it should be made so, since an ample supply of fertility not only fortifies the crop against such vicissitudes as unduly dry weather, for instance, but it is also necessary in order to pro- duce a profitable crop. Sowing.—It is, at least, questionable if it will pay to grow cabbage for green food only, in locali- ties where they cannot be easily and surely grown by the method of sowing the seed in rows rather than by that of transplanting. Of course it is dif- ferent when the crop is grown mainly for the mar- ket, the residue only being fed to live stock. II Digitized by Microsoft® 162 SOILING CROPS AND THE SILO. In some localities plants grow so readily and so surely, that the crop may be grown by sowing the seed where the plants are to remain. It may be thus grown in many instances as surely and easily as a crop of turnips or rutabagas. The western and northwestern states have special adaptation for the growing of cabbage crops by this method. In other localities their insect enemies are so numerous that it is almost necessary to start the plants where they can be given protection, and then after they have made a good start to transplant them into the field. The seed may be sown by first marking off the ground, then using a hand drill which deposits the seed in the line of the marks that have been made; some grain drills may be used to sow the seed with- out the seed beng mixed with anything. With other patterns of drills it is necessary to mix the seed with some such bulky substance as salt. The rows should not be closer to one another than thirty inches, nor more distant than thirty-six inches. The seed should be buried to a depth varying from less than one inch to more than two inches, according to the nature of the soil. A roller should also in nearly all instances be run over the soil before and after sow- ing the seed. The late varieties are to be preferred, and among these the larger sorts; as for instance, the Drumhead and Savoy. The early varieties do not grow suffi- ciently large. They are also lacking in an abundance of leaf growth, nor do they keep so well as the large and late varieties do. The best variety for each particular Incation, however, can only be ascertained by actual test. Digitized by Microsoft® PLANTS OF THE BRASSICA GENUS. 163 From one to two potnds of seed per acre will be sufficient. The first mentioned quantity should be ample under average conditions, but it may be necessary sometimes to sow fully twice that amount. The time for sowing the seed will depend con- siderably upon the place which is given the crop in the rotation. The young plants are somewhat tender for a time, hence hard frosts in the spring will destroy them. But they will withstand slight frosts without harm. The seed should not be sown, therefore, much sooner than the regular season of corn planting. There may be instances where the crop sown thus early will mature too soon to best - serve the end for which it was grown. When plants reach a maximum growth in hot weather, many of the outer leaves wither and are lost as food. Sow- ing should not be done at a period so late as to hinder the crops from making good heads, since the food value lies more in the head than in any other part of the plant. But this crop may, with more propriety than some others, be sown somewhat late, owing to the great power which it has to continue to grow in the late autumn Should the small black beetle (Epitrix spec.) attack the plants when young, they ought to be dusted promptly, and while the dew is yet on, with air-slaked lime and wood ashes. And should the plants suffer later from the attacks of the cabbage worm (Picris rapae, Linn.) they ought to be sprayed once or twice with kerosene emulsion or paris green. Paris green would be the more effective application of the two and there will not be any real danger in using it thus when the cabbage are not to be fed for Digitized by Microsoft® 164 SOILING CROPS AND THE SILO. some weeks subsequently. These remedies will prove effective unless under extremely adverse conditions. Cultivation.—The relation, between abundant yields, and the nature and extent of the cultivation that is given to the cabbage crop, is both close an.! intimate. As soon as the young plants distinctly mark the line of the row the cultivation should begin. And when weeds are superabundant, if the land is stirred by the hand hoe close up to the plants and for a short distance on both sides of them, the labor thus expended will be amply rewarded in the more vigorous growth of the plants, and in the greater ease with which they can be thinned. The culti- vation should be frequent and should be continued as long as it can be done without breaking off any considerable number of the lateral leaves of the plants. The thinning of the plants should ordinarily begin while they are not yet more than three or four inches high. If left unthinned for a much longer period they become more or less spindling and do not produce so large a head. But when the cutworms are numerous it may be well to defer thinning to a later period than would be advisable in the absence of such an enemy. The thinning is almost entirely done by the use of the hoe. The individual using it strikes forward and pushes backward as in thin- ning turnips; the plants not wanted fall hefore the hoe. The distance to which they should be thinned will depend upon the variety, upon the time during which the crop may continue to grow, and upon the nature of the soil and season. The distance will vary, say, from eighteen inches to thirty inches. Digitized by Microsoft® PLANTS OF THE BRASSICA GENUS. 165 The average may be stated as twenty-four inches. When thinning the plants, the skilled workman will - detect at a glance a single plant growing about the right distance from the ene last left to grow. He can then without hesitation cut out all the interven- ing plants. Though this single plant should varv one, two, or even three inches from the exact distance fixed upon, it would be better to leave this plane than to leave one of a cluster in the exact spot, but from which the plants around it must needs be pulled out by hand. And if a blank should occur it can easily be filled during the thinning precess. The workman strikes his hoe downward into the soil and lifts out the earth above it. He then strikes it down beneath a single plant which other- wise would be cut out and lifting it up on his hoe with the adherent earth sets it down into the hole previously made. Young plants may thus be re- moved at almost any hour of the day, and without much wilting of the leaves. Feeding.—When the crop is sold in the markei, the feeding of the unused portion should begin at once, the leaves being gathered with a fork and conveved clirectly to the stock, or stored in a flat pile for subsequent feeding, not more than a foot in depth. If allowed to lie on the ground underneath a hot sun, they would soon wither and entirely lose their feeding value. But when the crop is to be fed in its entirety, .the plants may first be cut off at the surface of the ground or underneath it by the use of a sharp hoe or spade. A strong spud would probably do the work more effectively than either the hoe or the Digitized by Microsoft® 166 SOILING CROPS AND THE SILO. spade, and with more ease to the operaior. The plants are then carted to the feeding place, whether it be in a pasture, paddock, yard, shed or stable. All classes of live stock will devour the plants, leaving only the woody stalks, unless in the case of young lambs. For these they should be minced. When fed to cows giving milk, care should be taken lest too many be fed, and the cabbage should be given just after each milking. When thus fed to milch cows a considerable proportion of the whole ration may consist of cabbage without imparting to the milk any disagreeable taint. | Every care should be taken to avoid feeding cabbage leaves which are partly decayed to cows giving milk, or most unpleasant odors will arise in the milk. The feeding of the crop may begin as soon as it is mature or a little previous to maturity. The feeding may continue without interruption until the crop is entirely consumed. If winter threatens to close in before the crop has been all fed, it should at once be carted to some place convenient for feeding, and also sheltered from the cold winds, as by the side of a straw stack, and there piled up 1f need be several feet deep and then covered with straw. The feeding from this pile may go on without interrup- tion until the crop is consumed. The duration of such feeding, however, is largely affected by climate. In latitudes where the winters are mild, cabbage may be stored for future feeding by stacking them in the form of a ridge roof on the surface of the ground, or from some distance below it, and may be covered with one or two feet of straw, rough litter, or marsh hay, according as one or the other of these may be Digitized by Microsoft® PLANTS OF THE BRASSICA GENUS, 167 convenient. To economize space it will be well to break off the outer leaves before the plants are thus stacked with the heads downward. If cabbage freeze when thus stored, no serious harm will follow. While thus frozen, cabbage should never be fed to any kind of live stock, not even swine. And it should be remembered that alternate freezing and thawing are greatly injurious to this plant. Cabbage may be kept even more surely and probably more simply in some climates, by lifting them with the potato fork and standing them in a double or treble line, with the root upward and with all or nearly all the leaves retained. The cabbages are brought to a ridge by adding a third row when there are shut two rows on the ground, or by adding two rows and then another when there are three rows on the foundation. They are then covered as described above. And sometimes a plow furrow may be turned toward the cabbage on either side with manifest advantage. Digitized by Microsoft® CHAPTER VIIL THE COMMON CEREALS. The chief of the common cereals grown in this country, are wheat, oats. barley and rye. They are produced as winter, or spring varieties according to the circumstances under which they are grown. All of these may be grown singly for soiling food, or they may be grown in various combinations. Peas and vetches may also be included in some of these combinations, and when they can be so in- cluded, much is added to the value of the food; as shown in Chapter VI. The least valuable of these crops for soiling uses are rye and barley. Rye turns woody so soon after the ear has formed, that it becomes unpalatable; and the feeding value of barley is lessened soon after it somes out in head, because of the presence of the beards found in nearly all varieties of this cereal. For feeding pur- poses these mixtures are usually valuable in propor- tion to the peas or vetches which they contain. This arises from the more nitrogenous character of the latter, their greater palatability, and the large yields of the fodder which they produce in pea and vetch soils. The combinations in which these crops may be grown are various. There may be instances in which several of them mav he grown together, but usually only two or three varieties are thus grown. Digitized byl Brosoft® ‘Wuie,y JUsUITIodxY Ajisiaalus, ejosouUryy Joppog 10 Zurpiog 10f WOYAA PUR SIV “IZ “BIA (601) Digitized by Microsoft® 170 SOILING CROPS AND THE SILO. Three of these combinations stand higher in favor than the others. I, .\ combination of peas and oats; 2, a combination of vetches and oats; and 3, a com- bination of wheat and oats. The Jast named combination is frequently grown where peas or vetches cannot be relied upon to furnish soiling food. Several advantages arise from growing these plants in combination. 1, Usually there is a greater production of food from a given area. 2, They can be grown more thickly, hence the straw is finer and is better relished by stock.- 3, They furnish a better balanced food than when grown alone. The green food produced by these mixed crops can be fed to all classes of live stock, but it has relatively higher adaptation for dairy cattle, be- cause of the free milk giving that results from feed- ing it. Mixed crops may be fed to sheep and swine, but only when in a quite succulent stage of growth, or when it is almost entirely composed of peas or vetches. Wheat, oats. barley and rye become so woody when well advanced in growth, that sheep and swine do not relish then. It is more common to pasture both on these mixtures than to feed them in the form of soiling food. The yields will of course vary with the con- ditions. The minimum crop that it would be profit- able to grow may be fixed at, say, six tons per acre. A good crop should run from ten to twelve tons per acre. But it is sometimes possible to double these amounts. Distribution —Wheat, oats, barley and rye possess a wide distribution. The distribution of Digitized by Microsoft® THE COMMON CEREALS. 171 peas and vetches has already been considered in Chapter VI. All these grains unless it be peas, can be grown in both the winter and spring varieties. The four first named can be grown in some portion, or portions of every state in the Union and of every province of Canada. South of the fortieth parallel they do not generally grow so freely as north of that line, hence they are not so valuable for producing green food as some other crop or crops better adapted to soils that are frequently low in plant food, or lacking in moisture. Wheat is usually considered too valuable to be used as soiling food, and yet there are some localities, where it can be more cheaply grown for such a use than almost any other kind of food. These localities include much of the land in the northerly portions of the semi-arid belt east of the Rocky mountains, the Palouse and Walla Walla areas of Washington, and limited areas in northwestern Oregon. In all these areas wheat is grown as lay, and where it furnishes a highly prized food for hay it will also furnish a very suitable soiling food. There are other areas so perfectly adapted to the growth of immense crops of oats that this plant can be made to furnish green food more cheaply than any other. Such are certain river valleys west of the Cascade mountains. Barley, although it grows very rapidly, is commonly too low in production to make it a profitable soiling crop, but it will produce green food under a greater - variety of conditions than any of the other cereals ander consideration. In addition to its being low in palatability there is the objection that it is com- monly in season for feeding when grass is plentiful. Digitized by Microsoft® 172 SOILING CROPS AND THE SILO. Soil.—Whaeat, oats, barley and rye may be successfully grown on a wide range of soils. Each kind, nevertheless, has its favorite soil. | Wheat luxuriates in deep, moist, pliable loam soils, well spiced with clay and well stored with vegetable matter. The loose lying soils of nearly all the west- ern prairies have high adaptation for wheat pro- duction. Soils ill adapted to the growing of wheat include those that are sandy and poorly supplied with nitrogen, those that are shallow, with hardpan coming near the surface, and those that contain an excess of water at any time during the growth of the plants. Oats also grow most luxuriantly on soils that are best suited to the growth of wheat. But since the oat plant is a more gross feeder than the wheat plant, it will produce a better growth relatively than wheat on soil ill conditioned, me- chanically and imperfectly supplied with plant food. Barley will grow better relatively on soils rich in humus and in readily available fertility. Black loam soils, with enough sand to keep them in a good mechanical condition, have high adaptation for barley, and since this grain feeds near the surface rather than far down, much depth of subsoil is less essential to the growth of barley than to the growth of wheat and oats. The soils with least adaptation for barley include those deficient in humus and which ~ contain an excess of clay. Since the crop grows rapidly, if it is to be a success, the young plants must be able to send their rootlets quickly and in all directions between the soil particles. Rye is beyond all comparison the most vigor- ous feeder of the four cereals under discussion. It Digitized by Microsoft® THE COMMON CEREALS. 173 will stand more abuse than wheat, oats or barley; that is to say, it will grow better than any of these when sown on soil not well prepared, poorly sup- plied with plant food, and under adverse climatic conditions. Rye will grow well on all soils pos- sessed of high adaptation for wheat, oats or barley. It will also give a fairly good return on soils too light and poor to produce good crops of those cereals. When these plants are grown in combination the aim should be to grow them on soils generously supplied with plant food. The value of a soiling food is usually largely proportionate to the abun- dance of the yield, hence the mistake of sowing under conditions that do not give promise of an abundant yield. One variety will find its favorite food in such a soil and will appropriate the same. A second variety will do likewise. and so with a third and fourth. Since these appropriations draw in differ- ent degrees on the same food elements, each is enabled to get its share and thus to contribute to a large aggregate yield. In growing these crops as green food, it should be remembered that since the object is to get a large amount of green food with- out regard to grain production, the best soiling crops will be obtained on lands too rich for the high- est grain production. Place in the Rotation.—These crops may be given almost any place in the rotation, since they are cut before weeds can ripen in their midst. A foul condition of the land at the time of sowing, though objectionable, is not so seriously objectionable as in growing some other crops. These crops may be Digitized by Microsoft® 174 SOILING CROPS AND THE SILO. grown in a sense as catch crops; that is to say, after early pasture crops, as winter rye. Or they may be sown early and be followed by some other crops; as for instance, rape, winter wheat or winter rye, and in certain areas by winter vetches or crimson clover. When these crops precede a winter crop, there is usually ample time to prepare the land well before the winter crop is sown. ‘They may also be followed by the bare fallow. And in some instances they may be sown late in the season to provide green food late in the fall. These crops are essentially clean- ing crops, and they thus help to clean the land with- out special effort on the part of the grower to reach such a result. Preparing the Soil—The preparation of the land for these crops is simple, as it is for all crops that fit in almost anywhere in the rotation. Usually the deeper, the finer, the more moist, the richer and cleaner the seed bed, the more satisfactory will be the results when the crop has been sown. And as a rule these conditions can be more perfectly secured when considerable time elapses between the plowing of the land and the sowing of the seed. But there are soils in which deep plowing but a short time before sowing the seed would be harmful rather than helpful to the crop. Such are light sands and heavy clays. When these crops are to be sown after another crop previously harvested the same season, moisture in the soil will be conserved to a much greater extent by using the roller and harrow freely as soon as possible after the land has been plowed. On lands of average fertility these grain crops may of course be grown quite sucessfully without Digitized by Microsoft® THE COMMON CEREALS, 75 further enriching the land. But it may be profitable to add fertilizers when the facilities are at hand, to stimulate abundant production. Farmyard manures are excellent when applied in a form suitable to the needs of the land. Where much rainfall is expected the manure may be applied in the fresh form, but when moisture will probably be deficient, it should be applied in the reduced form. The commercial fertilizers most commonly used are those which are designated complete fertilizers, but the nitrogen content in them should usually be high to meet the need of these crops. And when moisture is present in a sufficient degree, these crops may be further stimulated by sowing on them nitro- gen in some form, after the plants have made a good start. It is not usual, however, to go to much ex- pense in specially enriching the land for this class of green crops, because of the short duration of the period of growth. Sowing.—The seed may be broadcasted when the facilities for drilling it are not at hand, but in nearly all instances it will be found preferable to sow the seed with the drill. The drill buries it more uniformly as to depth and covers it more perfectly. Ordinarily when these grains are sown as mixtures, it is labor saving and more satis- factory in various ways to mix them before they are sown. The most suitable kinds to sow will be those which past experience has shown to be the most vigorous growers. These will vary with variations in climate and soil. No one variety of any kind of grain can be found that will grow equally well in all Digitized by Microsoft® 176 -SOILING CROPS AND THE SILO. parts even of a single state. In choosing varieties preference should be given to those which stool much, and produce growth of a fine character, pro- viding they are not too weak in the straw to prove satisfactory. When these grains are sown singly, the quantity of seed that may best be used can be given only approximately. The same is true of them when sown incombination. In some soils the plants stool much more than in others and grow with much more vigor. The quantity of seed therefore, that will best serve the end sought will have to be ascertained by actual test. It will seldom be found profitable to sow less than two or more than three bushels per acre. The latter quantity or a close approximate to it will usually prove more satisfactory than a less quantity of seed. But when vetches form a chief factor in the crop, a‘less quantity of seed may suffice, because of the small relative size of thé vetch seed. When wheat and oats are sown together, it is customary to sow about equal quantities of each. This will give a preponderance of the oat element in the crop, because of the greater stooling power of the latter, and this is so far satisfactory since green oats are considered more palatable than green wheat. When peas and oats are sown together, the most suitable quantity of the seed of each will be de- termined chiefly by conditions which relate to the soil adaptation, as previously intimated. Because of the nitrogenous character of the peas and because of their high palatability, the aim should be to have the peas form the preponderating element in the food. The same is also true of vetches. It may be Digitized by Microsoft® THE COMMON CEREALS. ie necessary, therefore, to sow the peas or vetches as three to one or two to one by measure, as compared with the oats in the mixture. On the other hand certain soils may be so much better adapted to grow- ing peas or vetches than cats, that in order to secure the necessary support for the former, more than half ‘of the seed by measure must needs consist of oats. When peas and vetches are both sown along with oats, the proportions that ought to be sown of each in the mixture should be determined by conditions that relate to soil and climate, and to the character of the food sought. Usually the common cereals are sown to pro- vide soiling food as early as possible in the season, though of course they are frequently sown later; in certain instances as late as midsummer. To prolong the season of feeding, it is common to sow a portion only of the seed at first, and the remainder two or three weeks later, or it is sown at two intervening intervals rather than one. The chief objection to the plan is found in the decreased production of ‘the later sowings, but to this there are some ex- ceptions. -, Another plan sows a quick maturing variety as barley, and at the same time a mixture that grows. more slowly, as peas and oats. The period of feed- ing may thus be made to cover from, say five to eight weeks, and if the quantity sown should he in excess of the needs of the stock, it can be turned to excellent account by harvesting it for winter fodder when the grain, or much of it, is in the milk stage. Barley is probably the most suitable of all the com- mon cereals to provide green food in the autumn: 12 Digitized by Microsoft® Digitized by Microsoft® Oats and Peas for Soiling Fig. 22. Minnesota University Experiment Farm. 6 a THE COMMON CEREALS. 179 and in moist climates only, can it be sown for such a purpose, as for instance, in New England. Cultivation —Ordinarily no cultivation is given to these crops after they have been sown. But there “may be instances when the harrow can be used on them to advantage, more especially when peas and oats have been sown together and buried with the grain drill at an even depth. If harrowed with more or Jess thoroughness just as the first young plants begin to appear, the growth of weeds will be checked and the moisture in the ground will be better conserved. Before the weeds can make a good start again the plants get so far ahead of them as to materially hinder their growth. But if the ground is unduly moist, the harrow cannot of course be used thus. A light harrow should be used, generally, having teeth slanted backward. There mav also be instances when it would be more profitable to plant the crop in rows sufficiently distant to give them more or less horse cultivation. Such a method of growing these plants would be especially helpful where moisture is not present in sufficient quantities to produce a maximum growth. Crops thus cultivated would no doubt produce much more abundantly in a dry region, but the system belongs rather to the future than to the present. The machinery for bestowing such cultivation has not yet heen perfected. Feeding.—With regard to the best method of feeding these crops, much that has been said under the head of feeding in the chapter on corn will be equally applicable to them. The cutting of rye asa soiling food should begin as soon as the first growth Digitized by Microsoft® “WEP JUSTO NST APISHOATY) LpOSOULIL TY BuULOS 10J UMOID UY ‘poinjsed 184114 $180 "eZ *BId Digitized by Microsoft® THE COMMON CEREALS. 181 will justify such a course, and it should not be fed for any considerable time after it has reached the earing stage, unless it is to be run through a cutting box and fed with other food, as “‘chaffed” hay. \When thus prepared, and meal 1s added to the mixture, it would then be possible to feed green rye until the grain began to form in the ear, and possibly for a longer period. If fed alone after it has fully come out in head, animals do not relish it sufficiently to make it a desirable soiling food. Barley also should be fed at a stage before the beards begin to stiffen. When food is grown in mixtures the grains composing these will not always be possessed of equal advancement, careful discrimination is neces- sary on the part of the grower as to when the cutting should begin. Usually when peas, or vetches in the mixture have produced some blossoms and when the heads of other kinds of grain are ready to leave the leafy envelope which surrounds them, the cutting of the crop may begin. At the stage indicated as suitable to begin cutting these crops, they have not reached that stage when they contain the highest food value, but to leave them longer before begin- ning to harvest them would, too much, curtail the duration of the period in which they could be fed with profit in the green form. Like other green crops they are cut with the scythe or mower, and drawn in the usual way. When these crops grow very rankly they are occasionally thrown down with storms which in- creases the labor of cutting them. In some instances the mower can only be driven on two sides of the plot or field, if the crop is to be cleanly gathered. Digitized by Microsoft® 182 SOILING CROPS AND THE SILO. The food when cut may be lifted with sufficient cleanness when a fork is used, with several tines in it, that is to say, a fork made somewhat after the plan of a barley fork. The green food may be fed without any wilting, but a moderate amount of wilt- ing is in no way injurious to it. When there is a surplus of green food it may of course be allowed to reach a stage of early ripening, and may then be harvested for winter use. In harvesting the same the mower or the binder may be used according to the attendant circumstances, but if the binder is used the sheaves should be made small rather than large, tied loosely rather than tightly, and cured in oblong rather than in round shocks. Wheat and oats grown together ought to be cut for winter food at a stage somewhat earlier than peas and oats to insure enough palatability in the straw. When the stems of the plants turn yellow for a short distance above the ground, the crop is ready for harvesting. Peas and oats thus harvested make a splendid fodder for winter feed- ing. It is easily cured and handled, and is at once highly palatable and nutritious. Digitized by Microsoft® CHAPTER IN. MILLETS. Millet is one of the most important and valuable soiling crops grown in this country. Its great value as soiling food arises, Ist, from the palatable and nutritious character of the food which it pro- duces; 2nd, from the shortness of the period re- quired to grow it; 3rd, from the large amount of food that can be grown upon rich land; 4th, from the wide distribution of the crop; and 5th, from the many and various places which may be assigned to it in the rotation, consequently when it becomes better known, it will be used as soiling food to a much greater extent than it is at the present time. Millet is of many species and varieties, not a few of which have been but little tested in this country, and consequently they are not as yet well understood. The classification of the millets is still regarded as incomplete by the Department of Agrostology at Washington, but for the present the said Department has grouped them as the fox- tail, the barnyard, the broom corn and the pear! groups. To the foxtail millets belong such sorts as the Common, the German, the Hungarian and the Golden wonder varieties. These are relatively small and fine in their habit of growth. German millet is characterized by an abundant leaf growth. Hun- garian millet produces heads of a dark shade, hence Digitized by Bibrosoft® “HIE JUIWUTIOdxXs, ApIStaATU A) BJOSOUUITY SUIIOS 40} J21NW UBUD “eT Bld (rr) Digitized by Microsoft® MILLETS. 185 it may easily be distinguished from other foxtail millets after the earing stage. Golden wonder millet is a great seed producer but it 1s probably less valuable as a soiling food than the other varieties of the foxtail class. The barn yard millets include the varieties de- rived from the common barn yard grass (Panicum crus-gall:). The African millets are also included in this class. They are characterized by an abundant growth, but are somewhat coarse in character The broom corn millets are rather grown for the grain they produce than to provide soiling food, but they also may be made to furnish soiling food. The pearl millets are but little grown as yet in this country. Some of the varieties produce an abun- dant growth, but they are not considered so palatable as cultivated millets of the foxtail class. They have not been much introduced as yet into American agriculture, hence little can be said as to their adapta- tion and value. But one variety of this group will be considered in Chapter XIII, when discussing plants whose value in providing soiling food has not been fully demonstrated. Distribution.—Few plants grown as food for live stock on this continent are of wider distribu- tion than millet. Since it can be sufficiently ad- vanced in growth for being cut as soiling food in from fifty to ninety days from the date of sowing, there are but few localities in the United States in which it may not be grown with entire success. And since it is in a pre-eminent degree a plant of the sun, the climatic conditions least favorable to its growth in our country will probably be found in Digitized by Microsoft® Digitized by Microsoft® Fig. 25. Hungarian [lillet for Soiling Minnesota University Experiment Farm. (186) MILLETS. 187 Oregon and Washington, between the mountains and the sea. In all the other portions of the United States the season of high summer temperatures is sufficiently prolonged to force millet crops quickly into maturity, unless it be upon the mountain up- lands. The climate of ail the central and southern states is markedly favorable to the growth of millet. The highest adaptation of soil and climate together are probably found in the Mississippi basin, from Lake Itasca to the Gulf of Mexico. Millet is an indispensable adjunct to the hay crops grown within this basin, and it is an indispensable factor in growing soiling foods for stock. The less favorable the conditions for the successful growth of hay crops the more indispensable does the millet crop seem to be. The climatic conditions in what are usually spoken of as the southern states are equally favorable, but not so of the soil conditions, hence the growth of millet is not so common in these as it would otherwise be. The crop has not been grown to nearly the same extent in New England and the adjacent states as in the Mississippi valley, because of the stiffer soils, and in many instances because of the more hungry soils of the former. The millet crop can also be grown with a fair measure of suc~: cess in nearly all of the cultivated parts of Canada. The lowest adaptation is found in British Columbia and in the Maritime Provinces beside the Atlantic, | and the highest adaptation in the prairie provinces eastward from the Rocky mountains to Lake Superior. Soil—Millet in all its forms requires a rich soil and a soil easily penetrated by the roots of the Digitized by Microsoft® 188 SOILING CROPS AND THE SILO. plant in order to grow it in the best form. Soils abounding in vegetable matter and naturally warm and friable, and which furnish plant food abundantly in a readily available form, are best adapted to the growth of millet. Such soils abound in much of the prairie region which extends from the Gulf of Mexico far northward, although in seasons that are moist, good crops of millet may be grown even on stiff clays. But these soils are not well suited, as a rule, to the growth of millet. In nearly all instances too much labor has to be bestowed upon such soils to prepare a seed bed sufficiently fine and moist. They are not sufficiently penetrable to the roots of the millet, and the plant food in them is not suff- ciently available. Light and hungry sandy soils are ill adapted to the growth of this crop, and the same is true of soils unduly moist and cold. But immense crops can be grown on the muck soils of drained sloughs and marshes. Millet can be grown nicely under irrigation in the warm mountain valleys of the west. But in these it is not specially needed because of the abundant product of alfalfa obtained from them. Place in the Rotation.—Millet in nearly all its varieties may be given almost any place in the rota- tion. It may be the sole crop for the season, or it may be grown as a catch crop. It is more com- monly grown as a catch crop, since in many sections . the season is amply long to grow a crop of millet after another crop has been removed and before an autumn crop has been planted on the same land. Millet is seldom made the sole crop grown upon the land, except in instances where the husbandman has been unable to sow other crops in season, because Digitized by Microsoft® MILLETS. 186 of excessive wetness in the soil, or because of some other reason. But when it is thus grown it may ina sense be made a cleaning crop, even though sown broadcast, since there is more or less time for sprout- ing the weed seeds near the surface of the ground before the millet is sown, and when the seed is sown in rows and cultivated it may always be made a cleaning crop. Millet may be sown with much propriety after such winter crops as rye, the winter vetch, the winter oat, or crimson clover when these have been pastured or cut for green food. Under favorable conditions it may be sown after the first cutting of medium red clover or even after grain crops that have matured early, and it fits in nicely after newly sown meadow crops in which the “stand” of grass has been a partial failure, and which in consequence has been grazed down. With equal fitness it may come after spring sown grain which from any cause may have failed. Fall wheat is sometimes sown after millet, but the plan of sowing it thus is not a good one, since millet, like flax, preys heavily upon the fertility of the soil. It has also been noticed that it leaves the soil much depleted of its moisture. It may with much greater propriety be followed by winter rye, which has greater power than winter wheat to gather food in the soil, and with equal pro- priety it may be followed by a leguminous crop, as the common winter vetch or the sand vetch. Preparing the Soil.—-Since millet is grown so variously in the rotation, only directions that are general rather than specific can be given relating to the preparation of the land for the seed. It should Digitized by Microsoft® IQO SOILING CROPS AND THE SILO. be the aim of the grower to prepare a seed bed clean, moist, fine and smooth. ‘The clean seed bed can only be reached by the frequent use of the harrow for some time previous to the sowing of the seed. But when millet is grown as a catch crop the season for prepar- ing the seed bed is usually too short to admit of thus cleaning the land. The means used to secure a clean seed bed will also tend to conserve moisture in the same, and the judicious use of the roller will also tend to secure the same end. In cloddy soils, a fine seed bed can only be secured by the judicious use of some form of clod crusher or harrow and roller. Ina dry time it would be labor lost to sow millet in cloddy soil. A level seed bed is secured by careful plowing and by supple- menting such plowing with drawing some form of leveler over the soil. When any considerable period elapses between the plowing of the land and the sow- ing of the seed, the land may be fitted as desired, but it more often happens that the seed must be sown so soon after the plowing of the land that it hinders the fitting of the same in the very best form. It is not usual to apply fertilizers directly in sowing a millet crop, more especially in the north and west. In the north, fertilizers are applied to crops that are considered more important: In the west they are not much needed. But on ordinarv soils the yield from this crop will be greatly increased by the judicious use of fertilizers. When they are used it should he in the readily available form, owinz to the shortness of the season in which millet makes its growth. If farmyard manure is applied it ought to be in the reduced form and incorporated as much Digitized by Microsoft® MILLETS. 191 as possible witn e surface soil, since millet gathers its food near the surface rather than far down in the soil. When commercial fertilizers are used, they should usually contain a relatively high content of nitrogen, and there are instances in which what are termed nitrogenous fertilizers are needed. Sowing.—M illet is more commonly sown broad- east and hy hand. But it may be sown by certain kinds of grain drills in common use. The following objections apply to hand sowing: 1, The seed is not buried so evenly, hence the germination is less per- fect than when the seed is sown with the drill; 2, a considerable proportion of the plants start so near the surface that the loss of plants is greater if the harrow is used subsequently; 3, the plants have also less power to withstand drouth. Whether all the drill tubes should be used in sowing millet or only a part of them depends to a considerable extent on the kind of the millet. The small sorts are usually sown with all the tubes in use, but the larger ones are frequently sown in rows far enough apart to admit of easy cultivation. These rows are in some instances made thirty-six inches apart, but more frequently the distance is not more than thirty inches. The small millets, as the Com- mon, the German, the Hungarian, the Golden \Won- der and the Broom Corn, are more commonly sown when the crop is not to be cultivated. But the larger kinds, as the Japanese, should be preferred when subsequent cultivation is to be given. The smaller sorts furnish the more palatable food, but the larger ones produce the hetter yields, and the crops that are cultivated can withstand dry conditions much better Digitized by Microsoft® Ig2 SOILING CROPS AND THE SILO. than those that are not so cultivated. The kinds best suited to the needs of any locality can only be determined by positive test. When millet seed is sown broadcast by hand, not fewer than sixteen quarts of seed are sown per acre, nor more than thirty-two quarts. From twenty to twenty-four quarts may be called average quan- tities. Thick sowing results in a finer growth in the plants, but it is only to be practiced when enough moisture may be looked for to supply the needs of the crop. When the seed is sown in rows far enough apart to admit of cultivating the crop, a few pounds of seed will suffice per acre. © It is useless to sow millet before the ground and weather are both warm. \hen the weather is raw and cold for some time after sowing the millet, the germination is pretty certain to be imperfect, and the subsequent growth unsatisfactory. It is usually better not to begin to sow millet until the corn plant- ing has been finished. Cultivation.—Millet that is sown broadcast can- not even be harrowed with a light harrow after the seeds have sprouted, without destroying a consider- able proportion of the plants. But when sown with the drill, the plants will not be thus disturbed if the harrow is drawn over the ground with the teeth at a considerable angle, before the plants have reached the surface of the same. And the crop may even be harrowed at a later period if the work is done with sufficient care. But on many soils some form of weeder will do the work more satisfactorily when the seed has been broadcasted. When millet seed is not dear, if more seed were sown than would be Digitized by Microsoft® MILLETS. 193 deemed sufficient, then the crop can be harrowed with benefit to the same after the plants have become well rooted. | Notwithstanding the destruction of plants, there will still be enough left, and they will grow much more vigorously than if the crop were not harrowed. Cultivation should begin on the crops sown with that object in view soon after the harrowing has been completed. It ought to be frequent and thorough, and shallow rather than deep. It will not be neces- sary to give the crop any hand hoeing unless it is infested with some form of perennial weed which it is desirable to exterminate, as usually it will be ready for being cut before annuals growing in it will have matured their seed. Feeding. —The cutting of millet as a green food may begin as soon as any considerable number of the heads have appeared and it may be continued until the crop is ready for being made into hay. Any portion of the same not wanted as green food should be thus disposed of unless it is wanted to produce seed. Millet is sufficiently advanced for being made into hay when all the heads are fully out. As it usually heads out unevenly, the tiny heads appear considerably later than the large ones. Or it may be cut when the heads present a slightly golden tint on looking over the field. If the crop is cut earlier than the stage mentioned, it is lacking in “body,” that is to say, weight and full nutrition. If cut at a later period the stems become woody and the seeds shatter more or less while the crop is being cured and stored. The scythe or the mower are to be used in cutting millet as green food. It is drawn and fed £3 Digitized by Microsoft® 194 SOILING CROPS AND THE SILO. as other green food, in the pasture, paddock, yard, feed rack or stable mangers. It is better not to allow the crop to wilt overmuch before being fed. But wilting millet of a growth rank and coarse in character will add to its palatability. There is vir- tually no danger from feeding it green. If two kinds of millet which mature at different periods are sown separately and at the same time, the period of feeding will be prolonged. The same end may be attained by sowing the same sort with an interval of three to four weeks between the periods of sowing the seed. The period for feeding green millet may thus without difficulty be made to em- brace from six to eight weeks except where the sea- son of growth is very short. When the season of growth is long, the period of feeding may be pro- longed accordingly. But care should be taken to harvest millet before the autumn frosts arrive, as it is easily injured by frost. Digitized by Microsoft® CHAPTER NX. FIELD ROOTS. More commonly field roots are grown to pro- vide winter food for live stock, but in some instances they are also grown to provide soiling food. The chief of these are rutabagas, turnips, mangels, sugar beets and carrots. Parsnips are too deeply rooted to admit of their being profitably grown as soiling food, and the same is somewhat true of sugar beets and carrots. The growing of these crops involves much more labor than the growing of a crop of rutabagas, turnips or mangels. And since rutabagas require a period considerably longer to mature than turnips, the latter are preferred for summer feeding. Turnips and mangels are therefore more highly adapted to providing green food than any of the other field roots that have been named. No one of these crops has been grown to any considerable extent in the United States for green food, nor has any one of them been grown for any purpose to anything like the extent to which its feeding value would justify. Ontario, Can., is beyond all comparison the greatest root-producing district in North America. The labor involved in growing and feeding these crops will probably form an effective barrier against their general introduction as soiling food, and yet there may be instances when it would be the part of wisdom to grow them. While for all kinds 195 Digitized by Microsoft® 196 SOILING CROPS AND THE SILO. of live stock kept upon the farm, roots furnish excel- lent food, they are more commonly fed in the green form to swine, though sometimes also to cows and calves, also to sheep that are fitted for being shorn. They are eminently suited to the needs of young animals, such as calves and lambs, whether fed in winter or summer. Since these crops can oftentimes be grown as a catch crop, and since they furnish 2 large amount of food per acre, an adequate return may frequently be obtained for the considerable amount of labor involved in growing them, espe- cially when the holdings are small and when green food is to be provided for a limited number of animals. As the tops and roots are both fed as green food, large yields are often obtained per acre, in some instances as much as twenty-five tons, but the aver- age crop is considerably jess than that amount, the yield depending largely on the variety grown. Distribution.—The rutabaga, sometimes called the Swedish turnip, is best adapted to cool and moist climates. On this continent, the best crops can be grown north rather than south of the forty-third parallel of latitude, that is to say, north of the south- ern boundary of Minnesota. The turnip (Brassica rapa), sometimes called the fall turnip, since it is fed in the fall rather than in the winter and spring, can be grown in nearly all the states of the Union, in several of its varieties, but it, too, is hest adapted to moist and not exces- sively hot climates. In the southern part of the United States, turnips can be grown in best form on the uplands, unless when grown chiefly in Digitized by Microsoft® FIELD ROOTS. 197 the autumn after the hottest weather for the season has gone. The mangel (Beta vulgaris) will endure more heat than the rutabaga, or turnip, hence it has a wider distribution than those crops, but the mangel also may be grown more satisfactorily where the summer temperatures are not excessive, hence the best mangel crops may be looked for north of the fortieth parallel. The sugar beet may be grown in good form in what may be termed “wine climates,” that is to say, in climates well adapted to the production of the grape. But, like mangels, sugar beets may be grown much further north than grapes, except when vines of the latter are specially protected in winter. The carrot (Daucus carota) also grows best where the summer weather is moist and temperate, but, like mangels, carrots can be grown in season in some part or parts of every state in the Union. The highest adaptation for field roots in North America is found in Oregon, Washington, the New England states, British Columbia. Ontario and the Maritime Provinces of Canada. Soil.—All kinds of field roots can be grown in - good form on deep, moist, loam soils, and possessed of that degree of admixture of clay and sand which keeps them in a friable condition. But the exact soil conditions best adapted to the growth of each are not exactly the same. Clay soils, for instance, may be made to produce good crops of mangels, but not of turnips, and the proportion of sand in the soil that would aid in furnishing high adaptation to the growth of carrots would be excessive for the best results in growing mangels. Heavy clays are not Digitized by Microsoft® 198 SOILING CROPS AND THE SILO. well adapted to the growth of any kind of field roots for soiling uses, since the labor in preparing them for the seed is usually over-much, and the plants grow slowly in them. On the other hand, infertile sands do not produce enough growth. Black loam soils, such as abound on the prairie, have high adaptation, but they are apt to be much infested with weeds. Slough and swamp soils will produce large quanti- ties of such food after they have been drained, but in them the growth of top is relatively greater than in other soils. Peat soils, until reduced, are usually not good root-producing soils. But the gray sands of the Rocky mountain valleys will produce field roots abundantly when supplied with water. Place in the Rotation.—Field roots should always be grown as a cleaning crop, whether grown for the roots only or for the roots and tops; in other words, whether they are grown for winter feeding or for summer and autumn feeding. But when grown for the last named use, they cannot, for vari- ous reasons, be made so complete a cleaning crop for the land, unless they are the only crop grown on the same during that season. The natural place for field roots, therefore, is after grain crops and on soils that need renovation, not only in the sense of being cleaned, but also in that of being fertilized. These crops take much fertility out of the land and therefore cannot be successfully grown on depleted soils, unless these soils have first been enriched. But it is a very propitious time to enrich lands when root crops are to be grown upon them, since, owing to the cleaning given to the soil, the crops which follow are enabled to feed upon the Digitized by Microsoft® FIELD ROOTS. 199 unused increment in the manure rather than weeds. Grain crops naturally follow root crops, and where clovers and grasses grow well, these are usually sown at the same time as the grain, singly or in various combinations. But field roots, more espe- cially turnips, may frequently be grown as a catch crop. For instance, a good crop of turnips may frequently be produced after the removal of the first cutting of the clover. The clover roots furnish very suitable food for the turnips. Preparing the Soil—lf{ the roots are to be grown for winter feeding, the soil may be plowed in the fall or spring, according to the climatic condi- tions and the kind of the crop. When the winters are open and accompanied by considerable rainfall, spring plowing will be the best. But where the ground remains frozen from autumn until spring, autumn plowing will be the best. The condition of heavy soils may in some instances be improved by plowing both in the autumn and in the spring. The aim should be to secure a clean, fine and moist condition of the land, as the seeds will not germinate in cloddy surfaces with but scant mois- ture. The more free from weed seeds the soil can be made before sowing the seed, the less will be the labor of tending the crop while it is growing. There is no time for sprouting weed seeds after spring opens in growing a crop of carrots, since they must be planted early. Nor is there time for the same when any of these plants are grown as a catch crop. But in growing mangels and sugar beets as the sole crop for the season, there is time for at least a partial sprouting of the weeds. There is more time for Digitized by Microsoft® 200 SOILING CROPS AND THE SILO. ~ this in growing rutabagas because of the late plant- ing season, and still more time in growing turnips, since the turnips are planted later than the rutabagas. Farmyard manure is excellent for such crops. Where the land is plowed in the fall, the manure should be applied before the plowing is done, except when the soils are leachy. The manure should then be spread on the surface after the land is plowed. It may also be spread on the land in autumn or win- ter when it 1s to be plowed in the spring. When thus applied in the fresh form in the autumn it becomes incorporated in the soil-by the cultivation given to the land before sowing the seed. But unre- duced manure should not be thus applied in climates over-dry. Complete commercial fertilizers are the best for the production of field roots. They require a liberal feeding of phosphates, hence finely ground bones have been found specially helpful in the pro- duction of field roots. Sowing.—In localities with ample moisture it is considered preferable to sow the seed of all kinds of field roots in raised drills when grown as food for live stock. But where moisture is not abundant in the growing season, it is deemed preferable to sow the seed in unraised rows, as the needed moisture escapes more readily from the former. But when sown in raised drills the cultivation given may begin somewhat earlier and the hand hoeing is more easily done. The raised drills can be more quickly made by using a double mold-board plow and a marker. The distance between them will vary with the kind of roots grown and with other conditions, but usually it is not less than twenty, or more than thirty inches. Digitized by Microsoft® FIELD ROOTS. 201 The seed is commonly sown in the raised drills with a machine which deposits the seed in two rows at atime. This machine is drawn by one horse and is furnished with two rollers, each of which fits down over one raised drill and impacts it in advance of the drill spouts, and also with a light roller which runs behind. In some instances it will prove advan- tageous to run a heavy land roller over the drills before and after sowing the seed. When the weatheris dry, the more closely the seed drill is made to follow the drill plow the surer will the germination be. When sown in rows on the level, the ground may first be marked out by some kind of marker and sown with a hand drill when the area is not large. But when the area is extensive, the seed should be sown by seed drills adapted to such work. Some kinds of grain drills will sow seeds thus small. With other drills it is necessary to mix the seed with some more bulky substance, as salt or road dust, before using it. But whatever the mode of sowing adopted, the straighter and more uniform the rows the more easily and perfectly can the cultivation be done. The variety that should be sown will vary with localities and can only be determined by actual test. The most popular variety of turnips at the present time, especially in the northern and northwestern states, is the Purple Top Strap Leaf. The favorite variety of mangels in the same is the Mammoth Long Red. As rutabagas, sugar beets and carrots are seldom grown as soiling food, it is scarcely neces- sary to add more on the subject of varieties. But in passing, it may be mentioned that much soiling food per acre may be obtained from some of the half Digitized by Microsoft® 202 SOILING CROPS AND THE SILO. long varieties of carrots and without great labor when they can be sown on clean land. Such carrots are easily lifted. The same amounts of seed may be sown whether the roots are used for soiling food or for winter feeding. These amounts will vary with the variety, the soil, the condition of the same and with the climate and weather at the time of sowing. But the following may be named as approximately rep- resenting the maximum and minimum quantities of seed to be grown per acre of the different species of field roots that are being considered when grown as food for domestic animals: Rutabagas and turnips, two to four pounds; mangels and sugar beets, four to six pounds; carrots, two to four pounds. The time for sowing the seed will vary accord- ing to the varieties and other conditions. Carrots should be sown as a rule early in the season, mangels and sugar beets a little later. Rutabagas are usually sown two or three weeks later than the normal season of corn planting, and turnips still later than rutabagas. The last named crop will frequently attain a maximum of growth in ninety days. Car- rots, on the other hand, require much of the growing season to complete their growth, and in many cli- mates all of it. Cultivation.—As soon as the plants have become far enough advanced to distinctly mark the line of the row, the cultivation should begin. Horse cultivation is usually given first. It should, of course, be shallow and should come as close to the line of the row as possible without giving disturb- ance to the plants. The remaining weeds should Digitized by Microsoft® FIELD ROOTS. 203 n then be cut out on both sides of the row with the hand hoe and without waiting to thin the plants. If the hand hoeing thus given is carefully done, it may not be necessary to bestow upon the crop any more hand labor until it 1s ready for being fed. If the plants are thinned as when they are grown for winter feeding, the proper distance at which to thin them will vary with circumstances. The following may be given as the maximum distance at which the plants of the various species may be thinned: rutabagas and turnips, twelve inches; mangels, twelve inches; sugar beets, nine inches; and carrots, eight inches. The average distance to leave between the plants is about two-thirds of the distance named as the maximum. It is seldom necessary, how- ever, to thin the plants when they are grown as soiling food. The horse cultivation given should be frequent and should continue until the leaves of the plants come together or nearly together between the rows. Feeding. —The feeding of field roots is a very simple but somewhat tedious process. They are pulled up by hand and laid in piles, or thrown directly into a hand barrow, or some form of wagon or truck drawn by horses. Field roots should only be thrown in piles for future drawing when it is not convenient at the time to have the means of conveyance at hand, or when there may be opportunity to lift the plants a few days in advance of the feeding. This may be done in late autumn without serious injury to the plants, but not when the weather is warm. The roots are of course handled with forks after they have been lifted. Digitized by Microsoft® 204 SOILING CROPS AND THE SILO. They may be fed in a pasture or paddock with much advantage when the surface is well sodded and the ground is in consequence clean. They may also be fed in the cattle manger or pig trough, but when so fed some watchfulness is necessary in cleaning out the loose earth from both manger and trough, that drops off the plants. The feeding of the crop may begin at any time after the roots have made a growth somewhat ad- vanced. If the feeding begins too early, there will be a loss of nutriment from want of advancement in the growth of the crop. If such food is fed in excess and more especially at the first, it will induce scouring in the animals so fed. lt should only be given to cows in milk after the milk has been withdrawn to avoid taint in the milk. These crops can probably be fed with more relative advantage to such animals as calves, sheep and lambs and swine, than to matured cattle. The former consume so much less per animal than the latter that it is more practicable to feed roots to them. Asa food factor in feeding growing swine and brood sows, they are peculiarly helpful, more especially when the root portion, that is to say, the edible part of the root, has made large development. But in no case should such food be made the sole factor in feeding any kind of live stock. Digitized by Microsoft® CHAP TER 1, MISCELLANEOUS PLANTS. The plants discussed in the previous chapters can all he made to furnish soiling food in some sec- tions of the United States with more or less profit. In addition to these are other plants, possessed of more or less adaptability in providing such food, but their exact value for this use has not been determined. The number of these is not very large at the present time, but it will doubtless be increased as the years moveon. These plants will now be briefly discussed. The following includes those which have been con- sidered as possessed of sufficient promise to merit a place in the discussion; viz.: White or Dutch clover, sweet clover, Japan clover, sainfoin, trefoil, the horse bean, the velvet bean, kale, the sand vetch, the flat pea, white mustard, the lupine, spurry, the artichoke, prickly comfrey and sunflower. Some of these plants will doubtless be found possessed of no little value in providing soiling food when they come to be better understood. Something will also be said of sacaline, the plant whose merits have been so overdrawn by some seedsmen and others interested in selling it. White Clover—White clover (Trifoliuin repens), sometimes called Dutch clover is so well known that it is not necessary to give any detailed description of it. It is native to both Europe and 205 Digitized by Microsoft® 206 SOILING CROPS AND THE SILO. America. It is already distributed more or less over nearly all the cultivated portions of the northern and central states, and in many sections of the south- ern states it has also been successfully introduced. Tt would seem to have the highest adaptation for clay loam soils which were formerly covered with forests of hard wood trees, or of hard and soft woods grow- ing together. When these were cleared away it seemed to come in, as it were, spontaneously, but never to the extent of becoming a hindrance to culti. vation. The ordinary black loam soils of the prairie are not so well adapted to its growth, although it may be grown on these with more or less of success. The soils of the Rocky mountain valleys would seem to have supreme adaptation for growing this plant when supplied with sufficient moisture, and the same is true of the arable lands west of the Cascade moun- tains. White clover is probably the hardiest of all the species of clover, hence it can be grown far to the north. As is generally known white clover is com- monly grown for pasture and usually in conjunction with blue grass. Where it has been grown in rota- tions that do not cover many seasons, it does not ordinarily require to be sown again when laying down pastures, as in these the plants will soon appear and sometimes to the extent of forming one of the chief food elements. The plants not only produce others from seed, but also by means of runners which at intervals send down roots into the soil and form fresh plants. But when it is to be grown as a factor of a hay crop it ought to be sown along with the other seeds that are designed to furnish the hay, Digitized by Microsoft® MISCELLANEOUS PLANTS. 207 otherwise it is not likely to furnish any considerable proportion of the same the first season. Because of the relative lack of bulk in the crop, it is seldom sown by itself for the express purpose of providing soiling food, nor is it often sown in con- junction with other clovers or grasses for such a purpose. Nevertheless there may be instances when it would be eminently wise to sow it in conjunction with common red, or alsike clover, when it is to be cut for soiling food.’ It adds to the fineness of the food and also to its bulk. It matures a little later than medium red clover, hence there is probably some advantage from sowing it with the alsike. But it should never be sown to provide soiling food, except under conditions of marked adaptation for growing it successfully. When thus sown not more than one or two pounds of seed are required per acre, as the seeds are quite small relatively. The quantity of the seed of the other kind sown should also be reduced by about twice the quantity of the white clover added to the other seed sown. Sweet Clover.—Sweet clover (Melilotus alba) sometimes called Bokhara clover, is branching in its habit of growth, and it is of wide distribution. No plant of the clover family will grow over so wide an area and under conditions so unpromising. The heat of summer and the cold of winter would seem to be alike unable to kill it. While it can be grown on the stiffest clays, it will also grow and thrive on sandy soils so light that the winds will carry them, and so lacking in plant food as to be quite bare of grass during all the year. It will also flourish in regions so dry as to forbid the successful growth of Digitized by Microsoft® 208 SOILING CROPS AND THE SILO. other clovers in the absence of irrigation. And more- over, it is a plant that not only fills the soil with a mass of strong roots which penetrate the same in various directions and which go down deeply into the subsoil to gather food, but it has also much power to gather nitrogen from the air and to deposit the same in the subsoil. Notwithstanding the great powers of growth with which sweet clover is endowed, it has been but little cultivated as yet to provide food for domestic animals. The odor of this plant is highly fragrant, but the stalks and buds possess a bitterness of taste which seems, to a considerable extent at least, to detract from its palatability. The stems also become woody at a comparatively early stage of development. Heretofore sweet clover has been chiefly grown in America to provide food for bees, but in some instances it has been sown to hinder the washing down of the earth from embankments, which wall in the cuttings made in building railroads. More com- monly it is found growing in vagrant fashion along the roadsides and in waste places, where it is main- tained through self seeding. Because of this vagrant habit of growth, sweet clover has been proscribed as a weed pest by the laws of several states. It would seem too bad to allow a plant possessed of so many redeeming qualities to be forever treated as a fugitive. The author cannot but feel hopeful that some time in the future when the seed becomes more plentifuland consequently cheaper, sweet clover will be sown on wide areas in the semi-arid belt along with small grain such as wheat, oats and barley, to help to sustain fertility and to increase the Digitized by Microsoft® MISCELLANEOUS PLANTS. 209 content of moisture in the soil by means of the increase in humus which it brings to the soil. This can be done by _ sow- ing the sweet clover at the same time that the grain is sown in the spring and by plowing the crop under the following spring after it has made a vigor- ous growth and in time to plant corn or sorghum. Whether sweet clover can be made to furnish green food for live stock in the summer season is problematical. No class of domestic animals is fond of it, but taste in animals, as in individuals, is largely the outcome of habit. May it not be possible, there- fore, so to develop in these a relish for this plant which would justify growing it to feed to them as soiling food? In sections where the other clovers will grow, it would probably be a waste of time to try experiments of such a character, but in other localities it may be eminently proper to conduct them. This plant is sometimes made into hay which is con- sumed on the farm. Why then should it be looked upon as a waste of time under all conditions to experiment in feeding sweet clover as a soiling food? Japan Clover.—Japan clover (Lespedesa striata) has been grown in some of the southern states for several years. Little or nothing has been published regarding its behavior in the. northern states. But in such of the latter as produce the leading sorts of clover in good form, it is pretty certain that it would not be profitable to grow so diminutive a plant as Japan clover, even though it should be able to withstand the rigors of the winter climate. That it can withstand those rigors is not probable, since notwithstanding the number of years I4 Digitized by Microsoft® 210 SOILING CROPS AND THE SILO. during which it has been grown in the southern states no one apparently is growing it in the northern states. Japan clover is a low growing plant which seldom exceeds the hight of sixteen inches. It is an annual, but when not grazed down too closely or cut. too early it has much power to reseed itself. Since it grows readily on hard surfaces, this property may be turned to good account. It is considerably branched and has a blue flower. It may be grown on dry soils, but will of course make a more vigorous growth on good loam soils. On the former it only attains the hight of a few inches, and 1s used as pas- ture. On the more productive soils it is grown for hay. From twelve to fifteen pounds of seed are sown per acre. Where Japan clover furnishes sufficient bulk to justify growing it for hay, it may also be grown as soiling food. Jt will not of course produce nearly so much food per acreasthe sorghums, either saccharine or non-saccharine, but it may be grown on soils where these would not produce abundantly without being fertilized. And it may also be grown with much less outlay for labor. Sainfoin.—Sainfoin (Onobrachis sativa) is a plant that grows rapidly and vigorously under suit- able conditions. It is sometimes called Aspersette or Esparsette. It is a legume of the clover family, and is much branched and spreading in its habit of growth. The flowers are of a beautiful crimson tint and it seeds profusely under favorable con- ditions. In some parts of Europe, notably in the south of England and in France, it has long been Digitized by Microsoft® MISCELLANEOUS PLANTS. 211 grown to provide pasture for sheep and green food for horses and cattle. It has special adaptation for dry calcareous soils. Sainfoin bears no little resemblance to alfalfa in its habit of growth. Like alfalfa it will pro- vide two or more cuttings of soiling food or of hay in a single season, and when established will retain its hold upon the soil for a number of years, though not for so long a period as alfalfa. The same care is also required in making it into hay, or many of the leaves will be lost while it is thus being cured. Because of its early and quick growth it is ready for being cut earlier than red clover. It is thought to be adapted to conditions more dry than would be suited to growing alfalfa in the absence of irrigation. It is rather adapted tu mild than to cold climates. But little can be gleaned from the reports of the agricultural experiment stations with reference to the growth of sainfoin. It would almost seem as though it had entirely escaped the attention of experi- menters in this country, and yet there is likely to be a place for it in our agriculture as a pasture and also asa soiling crop. It is claimed that when pasturing it there is no danger from hoven or bloat as when pasturing alfalfa, or red clover. Sainfoin has been grown with much success in the neighborhood of Deer Lodge, Mont., and it 1s not improbable that it can be grown with equal success in nearly all the Rocky mountain valleys northward from Montana and also between the coast range and the Pacific. The seed is frequently sown while yet in the sac, and when thus sown from Digitized by Microsoft® 212. SOILING CROPS AND TIE SILO. four to five bushels of seed are used per acre. Much care is necessary in saving the seed, as it shatters out easily and it also heats readily when stored. The loss in germinating power in the seed when it is thus managed is responsible for many failures in growing this crop. Trefoti—Trefoil (Medicago lupulina) some- times called yellow clover is of several varieties. There are but few places in America in which it has come markedly into favor. Like white clover (Trifolium repens)it is of wide distribution, but the localities are still very numerous in this country in which trefoil has not been tried. It has much affinity for limestone soils when once introduced into these. So persistent is it oftentimes in its habit of growth that it is in a sense troublesome where growing crops are to be cultivated. Trefoil is recumbent in its habit of growth, and in many localities it is a diminutive plant, but in congenial soils it attains a considerable size. It is more commonly grown along with various other plants in pastures that are intended to be permanent in character. Its ability to maintain itself in these helps to increase its value as a pasture plant. _Be- cause of want of bulk in the growth produced, tre- foil is not likely to become popular as a hay plant or as a soiling food. But doubtless there are areas in the United States and in Canada where it would pay to sow more or less of the seed of trefoil along with other clover seed that is sown to furnish soil- ing food. When thus grown it would add to the bulk and to the fineness of the growth in the crop. It may yet be sown on the western slopes of Oregon Digitized by Microsoft® MISCELLANEOUS PLANTS. 213 and Washington between the mountains and the sea. The Horse Bean.—The horse bean (Vicia faba) is doubtless so named from the extent to which it can be used in feeding horses in countries where its growth has been found profitable. It is sometimes called the Scotch bean, from the extent to which it is grown in that country even almost to the ex- clusion of all other sorts of the bean family. The damp and temperate climate of Great Britain and especially of Scotland has peculiar adaptation for the growth of the horse bean. It is a hardy and vigorous grower. The plants sometimes attain a hight of four feet and even a greater hight. The pods are numerous and contain from three to five beans of a large size. The average yield per acre in Scotland is not far from thirty bushels. The Scotch bean has been found to furnish an excellent food for horses and other domestic animals. It is best adapted to strong loam soils of good drain- age. It is usual to grow the beans in rows twenty- four to thirty-six inches distant from one another, and to cultivate the crop as other beans are culti- vated. The aim is to have the beans about two inches apart inthe row. To grow them thus would require from two to three bushels of seed to the acre. The horse bean has not been much tried under American conditions. It has been grown to a con- siderable extent however by dairymen in the vicinity of Montreal, Can. In the more dry climate of western Ontario, however, the crop has not proved a success. The author has not been able to secure a good growth of straw or of leaves in western Digitized by Microsoft® 214 SOILING CROPS AND THE SILO. Ontario or in Minnesota, but has seen plants growing vigorously in the Puget Sound country in Washing- ton. Wherever the summer temperatures run high. the horse bean will not succeed. In this fact we have the explanation of the greater success which attends its growth in Scotland than in the south of England or in Ireland. In North America the climatic conditions best adapted to the growth of this plant will probably be found in the New England states, in the Mari- time provinces of Canada, and in the country bor- dering on the Pacific north from Portland, Ore.. and west of the most northerly range of the Rocky mountains. In those areas this plant’ should cer- tainly be tried as a soiling crop. In growing it some large variety of peas sown along with the beans would probably add to the bulk of the fodder without lessening the quality of the same. The Velvet Bean.—The velvet bean (Mucuna utilis) is a vine-like plant which has been grown for several years past in some sections of the Gulf states as a trellis shade. During recent years it has come to be regarded with more or less favor as a food for live stock, as a mulch for orchards, and as a means of fertilizing and otherwise improving them where the land can be tilled. While it is not considered suitable for providing pasture, it is favorably spoken of as a soiling food, and the hay is said to be superior to that made from cowpeas, since it is less coarse in character. The seeds are very rich in protein, and both vines and grain are said to be much relished by live stock. It has been given very high praise as a source of fertility, owing to Digitized by Microsoft® MISCELLANEOUS PLANTS. 205 the great power which it is said to possess of draw- ing nitrogen from the air. When grown as a food crop the velvet bean sends out runners in every direction as watermelons do, and the vines thus thrown out are frequently ten to twenty feet long. They eventually cover the ground with a rank mass of vegetation fifteen to twenty inches deep. The seeds should not be planted nearer to fruit trees of a dwarfish habit of growth than five or six feet, lest trouble should arise from the vines climbing up into the trees and extending around the branches. It begins to fruit not far from the root of the plant, and pods appear in clusters at intervals all along the length of the vine. These pods are brown and velvety in character, hence probably the name, velvet bean. It has been affirmed that the yield of seed on average soils is from twenty to thirty bushels per acre. Because of the dense shade which the velvet bean produces, it has been found valuable in smoth- ering various kinds of noxious weeds and grasses, particularly Bermuda grass (Cynodon Dactylon) and nut grass (Cyperus rotundius). The dense cov- ering which it furnishes to the ground retards in a marked degree the escape of moisture. In dry weather therefore the service thus rendered is in- valuable to orchards. The velvet bean is commonly planted in rows. Five feet has been named as a suitable distance between them. From three to five beans are planted in hills at short intervals along the line of the row. The seed should be planted early in the season bui not until the weather has become warm. The Digitized by Microsoft® 216 SOILING CROPS AND THE SILO. cultivation given is the same as for other beans until the runners extend so far that it cannot be longer continued. It has been claimed that the velvet bean can be successfully grown when all the conditions are quite favorable to the growth of Indian corn, but this claim is probably extravagant since even in Louisiana the plants do not always mature all the seed produced. It is questionable if the velvet bean — in its present form can be made to render substantial benefits to agriculture as far north as the fortieth parallel of latitude. That it will be greatly helpful to the farmers of the Gut states is more than prob- able, but rather as a soil cleaner and a soil renovator than in producing soiling food. Owing to the vine-like habit of growth which it possesses it is likely to prove somewhat difficult to harvest. It will not be easy to cut the vines cleanly, and it will be more difficult still to handle them when cut. Kale.—Kale (Brassica oleracea) is of the same’ species of plants as cabbage. In fact, kale may be said to mean any variety of headless cabbage with curled or crinkled leaves. And yet, paradoxical as it may seem, there is a variety of kale grown in Great Britain popularly spoken of as the “‘thousand-headed kale.” It is so called from the many miniature heads which it produces on its numerous branches. It is much prized by flockmasters as a food for lambs. Some varieties of kale are very attractive in color and also in the crinkled character of the leaves. In the United States kale has been chiefly grown here- tofore in gardens for its leaves which are boiled as Digitized by Microsoft® MISCELLANEOUS PLANTS. 217 potherbs. Thousands of acres are grown annually but chiefly for culinary uses. The author has not been able to obtain any in- formation with reference to growing it for pasture from an American source other than what has been furnished by the Minnescta University Experiment station. The experiments there conducted have sustained the view that kale has much of adaptation for our conditions, but not more probably than Dwarf Essex rape. When sown early in the season at the aforementioned station, the plants reached a maximum of growth by early midsummer, and when not fed soon after reaching that stage of develop- ment, not a few of the leaves shrank and withered, but not to the same extent as dwarf essex rape leaves grown under similar conditions. When sown later, the plants retained their greenness and freshness until the closing in of winter. The growth was on the whole not quite so rapid as the growth of rape, but the pasture furnished was equally relished with rape pasture. There is but little doubt that kale can be grown with more or less success in the climate of the United States wherever rape can be grown in good form. It would also,seem to be equally probable that it will furnish soiling food that may be fed in the same way as rape. So far as tried in this country, kale does not seem to have any advantage over rape as a food plant, that would justify discarding the latter and growing the former in its stead. The Sand Vetch.—The sand vetch (Vicia wvil- Josa) is being tested by several of the experiment sta- tions, more especially by those in the southern states. Digitized by Microsoft® 218 SOILING CROPS AND THE SILO. It has also been tested in a limited way by individual farmers. Some who have tested this plant speak en- couragingly of its value as a hay crop. In the judg- ment of the Author its highest use as a food plant for stock will be found in the pasture which it furnishes, and this opinion is based on the results ob- tained from growing it in various ways at the Minnesota University Experiment station. - It is an annual but should be sown in the autumn rather than the spring in climates where it will sur- vive the winter, but when sown in the spring a good growth is frequently made. The plants grow but slowly for a time, but when once firmly rooted run- ners are thrown out in ail directions and the ground is covered with a dense mass of vegetation. But the runners become so intertwined that it is almost impossible to cut them or to pull them apart when cut. Because of this the sand vetch is not likely to become popular as soiling food when sown alone. But if sown as a mixed crop, as with oats or some other kind of grain, the grain acts in a considerable degree as a support to the tendrils of vetch. When thus grown, the mixed crop may be cut without much difficulty and used as soiling food or as hay. When sown in the spring and thus used the plants make much aftergrowth which may be pas- tured until the advent of winter by sheep or cattle. When sown alone not less than four pecks of seed should be used, but when sown with another crop the amount of the vetch seed to use should be decreased proportionately as the seed of the other crop is used. The relatively dear price of the seed in the past has hindered the extensive growth of this plant. Digitized by Microsoft® “wie wJ JUsuIadxy AVISIBATUA, eJOSaUUTT 49}0A pues 9% Bld Digitized by Microsoft® 220 SOILING CROPS AND THE SILO. The sand vetch will probably survive the winter except in situations much exposed north of the forty- third parallel, and in certain areas it will probably live one or two degrees further to the north. It has always perished in the winter in thg trials made at the Minnesota University Experiment farm, but on the Pacific coast it ought to succeed as far north as Alaska. East of the Rocky mountains it is not likely to prove of much value to the agriculture of Canada. As the name implies, the sand vetch has much power to grow on sandy soils, and soils low in fer- tility. Its highest use will probably be found in enriching such lands since it is a legume. Its next highest value will probably be found in the pasture which it furnishes, more especially in southern lati- tudes. But it will also be grown more or less for soiling food and for hay and more especially in con- junction with some other crop. The Flat Pca.—The flat pea (Lathyrus sylves- iris), although tried more or less fully by not a few of the agricultural experiment stations in the United States, has not come into much favor. Some of the experimenters pronounce against it and others speak discouragingly with reference to it. No one who has tried this plant in America is enthusiastic over it. In no instances have more than two good cuttings been reported per year. The flat pea isa perennial. It is partly upright and partly vine-like in its habit of growth. The stems intertwine considerably but not so much as do those of the sand vetch (Jicia villosa). The plants bear no little resemblance to those of the grass pea, but are considerably larger and coarser. They Digitized by Microsoft® MISCELLANEOUS PLANTS. 221 are slow in becoming established, but in soils adapted to their growth they will live for many years, although American experience has not yet determined how many, unless in states where the winters are too cold for growing it successfully. Though it stands the winters of southern Ontario it cannot be de- pended upon to endure those of northern Minnesota. The seed is more commonly sown in rows from thirty to thirty-six inches apart, and in sowing the same the aim is to have the plants only a few inches apart in the row. The seed germinates slowly. When this fact is linked with the slow growth the plants make the first season, the necessity for clean cultivation during that period of the development will be apparent. The plants gradually extend so as to occupy all the ground. In some areas they produce seed but shyly, more especially where the rainfall is abundant and the growth of the crop is vigorous. That the flat pea will ever be extensively grown as a producer of soiling food in the northern states and in the middle states east of the Mississippi river is at least problematical, and for the following reasons:—1I, The plants do not usually produce a full crop until the third year from the time of planting, and the seed is likely to be dear for several years to come; 2, other crops can be grown more easily, that are quite as productive of forage, that are more easily handled and that are more highly relished by live stock; 3, the lack of palatability which experimenters complain of will tell against the introduction of the plant, but this may be overcome in part at least by persistent Digitized by Microsoft® oe SOILING CROPS AND THE SILO. feeding for a period more or less prolonged; 4, the plants are not easily harvested owing to the in- tertwining habit of growth in the tendrils. Never- theless it would not be prudent to claim that there is no place for the flat pea in our agriculture. It may yet be grown to provide soiling food or pasture in the south and also in the far west. The sands of the semi-arid country may yet be made to produce this crop where, in the absence of irrigation, they will not produce much else. It is at least worthy of further trial in the volcanic soils of the western mountain plateaus. White Mustard—V\hite mustard (Sinapis alba)is grown more or less as a food for live stock in many of the countries of Europe. Heretofore it has been grown chiefly in gardens, only, in America. But in this country, as in Europe, it may doubtless be turned to good account in furnishing food for live stock. But when so fed it should be as a part of a ration rather than as the whole. When thus fed in proper combinations, it acts as a corrector of digestion. When fed with rape, for instance, it lessens the danger from bloating. When grown as a green food therefore it should be along with some such crop as rape, and the two plants can be cut and fed together. But there is a higher value from growing white mustard along with rape which is to be pastured off. \When thus grown the tops of the mustard plants being taller than those of the rape are likely to be eaten first, so that the danger of bloating is thereby lessened. Mustard is not suffi- ciently nutritious to rely upon it as the sole food fed for any prolonged period. Since it is a quick Digitized by Microsoft® MISCELLANEOUS PLANTS. 223 growing plant, it will in time come more or less into favor as a crop to grow for plowing under, but not until the price of seed falls lower than it has been in the past. White mustard may be sown any time after the danger of spring frost is past. And the crop should be fed or plowed under before the frosts of autumn blight it. Since it grows rapidly it may be grown as a catch crop and in various ways.