1a Co -— aww 44 H3 *”* FOR MORE AND HARDIER ALFALFA INTHE NORTHWEST THE DAWN OF A NEW ERA Se, ay pa yep g 7”, j y V1), fr, UY La ZL Med Ufhs nit a d iy Y, yo Q x4 i, y t/a Bo My v Se : 4 ( fh i I! 1 t +) Agricultural Extension Department International Harvester Company of New Jersey : CHICAGO USA COPYRIGHTED 1914 BY THE AGRICULTURAL EXTENSION DEPARTMENT INTERNATIONAL HARVESTER COMPANY OF NEW JERSEY “ly FOR MORE AND HARDIER ALFALFA IN THE NORTHWEST Alfalfa now being successfully grown in every county where tried intelligently.—The value of this crop is not appreciated.— Alfalfa and corn with live stock means prosperity for the Northwest By J. G. HANEY* Agricultural Extension Department, International Harvester Company of New Jersey While alfalfa is one of the oldest known agricultural plants, it is apparently just beginning to be recognized and its true value appreciated in the western hemisphere. The land devoted to alfalfa in the United States at present is between five and six mil- lion acres or an area about equal to the small state of New Jersey. It seems strange to those who are familiar with this wonderful plant that as late as the beginning of the twentieth century it should come, as it does as an agricultural revela- tion. Alfalfa is successfully grown in every state in the Union and in most of the provinces of Canada. It is grown below sea level in the valleys of California and on alti- tudes of more than eight thousand feet in the mountains of Colorado. It is quite safe to assert that alfalfa can be grown successfully wherever small grains are now being grown in the northwest. J.G. Haney * Mr. Haney has charge of demonstration work in the Dakotas and Minnesota, for the International Harvester Company of New Jersey. Requests for additional copies of this bulletin and for information on local conditions should be addressed to him at Grand Forks, N. D. A E38 4 Alfalfa Should be Grown On Every Farm History | The alfalfa plant is designated by many different terms— alfalfa and lucern (the latter being the French name) are the most common. It has been cultivated as a forage crop for more than twenty centuries. It is believed to be a native of the cen- tral district of western Asia and is still found in an apparently wild condition in the regions of the south Caucasus. It was introduced into Greece at the time of the Persian war, about 470 B. C. The Romans carried it from Greece to Italy. From Italy it was introduced into Spain and the south of France. It was carried from Spain to Mexico at the time of the Spanish invasion, and ‘thence to the west coast of South America. It was brought from Chili to California in 1854, and from there it spread over the arid regions of the Pacific coast where it is now cultivated almost to the exclusion of other forage plants. It was introduced into the state of New York as early as 1820, but is not yet grown extensively in the eastern states. Grimm Alfalfa Grimm alfalfa is a very hardy strain, adapted to growing in the - Northwestern states where conditions seem too severe for the common alfalfa. The seed of this variety was brought to Min- nesota from Germany in 1857, bya German farmer named Grimm. Professor W. M. Hays, while with the Minnesota Agricultural Experiment Station about 1890, found Mr. Grimm growing this alfalfa and at once began calling attention to its hardiness and excellence for Minnesota conditions. Pro- fessor Hays stated that atone time they had advised farmers it was not worth while to attempt growing alfalfa in the North- west as conditions were too severe for it. Mr. Grimm had never heard of this advice and in his twenty-five years’ experience with alfalfa had not yet discovered that it was not adapted to Minnesota conditions. A.B. Lyman, of Excelsior, Minn., was one of Mr. Grimm’s neighbors and perhaps the first to recognize . the hardiness and value of this alfalfa, and has been very active in extending its growth. So valuable is this variety that when possible to secure the seed it should be grown in the northwest in preference to all others. Varieties While there are numerous varieties of alfalfa, and more are being added each year by selection and introduction, for the Northwest, the Grimm alfalfa is proving to be all that could be desired. This variety isso well adapted that no one need hesitate to plant it, or wish for anything better, Alfalfa Increases Farm Values 5 Alfalfa seed from Montana also gives very good satisfaction in most of the Northwest. It is probable that this seed is a \ ee fk s i \ f . | ‘ J Ps AN \ é / ¢3 Et * Z j A 3 : \ : \ \ ee [ if \ \ A good root system on a 4-year-old alfalfa plant from Northern Minnesota, Polk county descendent of Grimm or from a source which renders it hardy. While it is not to be expected that much can be accomplished in 6 Alfalfa The Most Profitable Farm Crop acclimating alfalfa in a short time itis very reasonable to ex- pect that seed which is produced in the Northwest will be more hardy than seed from a Southern climate. The alfalfa plant is so old and has undergone so few changes in the centuries past that theonly hope of procuring hardier varie- ties is in introducing them from regions with climatic conditions similar to ours. The question of hardiness is so important that it is considered useless to attempt to grow alfalfa in northern Minnesota or North Dakota from seed of the varieties common to the principal alfalfa regions. Grimm alfalfa holds first place as to hardiness, while seed from Montana and Canada, and from the varieties known as Baltic and Turkestan, seem to give satisfaction in about the order named. Uses and Value of Alfalfa—Feeding Value Alfalfa, either green or in hay, as feed for all kinds of farm animals, is the most highly nutritious and palatable that can be raised in the Northwest. The following table from Farmers’ Bulletin No. 339 shows its value as compared with several other kinds of feed: Digestible Nutrients in Alfalfa and Other Forage Crops Digestible nutrients Dry Matter) Protein in 100 pounds Kind of Forage in 100 in 100 “Se =a pounds pounds Carbohy- Ether drates Extract Pounds Pounds Pounds Pounds Green: Alfalia =i. 2 > eee 28.2 3.9 1237 0.5 Fresh Clover =.) ae 29.2 2.9 14.8 0.7 AAfslta Haye ae 91.6 11.0 39.6 12 Clover (Way: sci ce ee 84.7 6.8 30.8 1.7 TimOthy Saye = ste ss 2 ees 86.8 2.8 43.4 1.4 Cow pea ay ook 2 fo. oe ete 89.3 10.8 38.6 it bY,"61 gree Papel iter Wap Sea gen ay ene MA) 88.1 12.2 39.2 Dot Shelled Corns: o28 225. Tota area 7.9 66.7 4, The following table indicates the actual feeding value of eight different kinds of feed, based on the amount of digestible nutrients containedin them. It will be noted that the value of alfalfa hay is slightly more than double that of timothy, and the equal of corn. Actual Feeding Value of Different Feeds Based on Amount of Digestible Nutrients Feed serie Feed ponte Wresh Alfalfa 2002s. $7. 00 1Tiniothy Hay... 2-222) ) nee Fresh Clover205 oi sic. 5 96. |\Cowpea Hay <2 .2222. ATA ia Ae 0d ote 20 16-1] Wheat. Bransss teoeees 22 80 Glover: Way. 2. 2 ose. 14 12. 1Shelled.Corns<°cu-23 v=: 20 16 Alfalfa Out-ytelds Other Crops 7 For Dairy Cows Alfalfa is particularly valuable as a feed for dairy cows. When properly cured, it has more nearly the effect of good June pasture than any other feed. It will be noted that wheat bran is worth only slightly more than alfalfa hay, and when the palatableness of the hay is taken into consideration, this “The Proof of the Puddin’’” Cows like alfalfa A scene which should be more familiar in the Northwest difference also disappears. The dairyman feeding bran with the ordinary roughages such as prairie hay, millet, timothy, or corn fodder, could well afford to exchange one-half of his bran for an equal number of pounds of good alfalfa hay. For Beef Cattle For fattening beef cattle, alfalfa certainly has no equal as a roughage. A large cattle feeder once told the writer that alfalfa hay would save him one-half his corn when compared with other kinds of roughage. It is generally figured that it will require 1,000 pounds of grain to produce 100 pounds of beef with mature cattle and the ordinary roughages such as prairie hay, corn fodder, or millet. When good alfalfa hay is fed with corn, the amount of grain required will be reduced nearly one-half. This same fact holds true with the feeding of all classes of live stock. The alfalfa balances the ration to such an extent that less other 8 Alfalfa Balances the Corn Ration feed is required to make agiven gain. This is particularly true with young stock, which require a large amount of the growth producing element, protein. It is remarked that a field of alfalfa is a hog’s idea of heaven, and the way they respond in gain and thriftiness while pastur- ing on alfalfa, indicates that this must be practically true. The Kansas Experiment Station has shown that an acre of alfalfa will produce 776 pounds of pork during a season. This calcula- tion was made by deducting the probable gain due to a small amount of grain which was fed while they were on the pasture. It is possible to winter mature hogs on good alfalfa hay and only a very small amount of grain. This fact should appeal Alfalfa and corn is all they care for very strongly to the farmers of the northwest as there is such a long period that the brood sows must be kept up and fed. The last cutting of alfalfa should be saved for the hogs as it is usually cut greener and contains a larger percentage of leaves. Alfalfa pasture is the very first green thing on the farm in the spring and remains green all summer. Every farm in the north- west should be equipped so as to keep over a dozen brood sows. There is no great expense connected with building a hog house in which the pigs could be farrowed in early March and be ready to begin making use of the alfalfa pasture as soon as it is large enough. By the first of September they are just the right size to turn into a field of early flint corn which they would convert Alfalfa Rich in Digestible Protein 9 into. ham and bacon at the least possible expense to the farmer. At the same time they would be putting this ten acres of land into such shape that if seeded to wheat the succeeding year, the yield should be twice or three times the average of the state. This plan is gaining in favor very fast in the northwest and is a profitable one. Alfalfa, both green and as hay, is also fed to horses. When beginning to feed alfalfa, care should be taken that horses do not eat more of it than is good for them, as it is so much richer than other hays. If the precaution is taken to limit the amount fed, and also to reduce the grain ration to about one-half, no injurious effects will be noticed. Alfalfa hay alone is too rich a Spring pigs on alfalfa pasture, J. D. Bacon farm, Grand Forks, N. D. What methods more wise could the farmer combine than raising alfalfa and fattening swine. (Silo and winter stock shed in background) feed for horses and cattle. There should always be some grain or roughage such as corn, oats, corn fodder, prairie hay, or millet, fed with it. When fed exclusively, it is liable to pro- duce coarseness, especially in colts. The value of alfalfa for sheep is attested by the fact that the alfalfa regions of Colorado are full of sheep feeding quarters, where large flocks from the mountain ranges are fattened. Alfalfa is a great poultry feed, either eaten green from the fields in the summer time, or chopped and fed in the winter. Chopped hay or meal mixed with a small amount of grain, put into a barrel or tub, and hot water poured over it and allowed to steam for a few hours, will be eaten as greedily as green feed 10 Requisites of Successful Alfalfa Growing in the summer time and will have a good effect in maintaining the egg production. As a bee plant, alfalfa is almost the equal of sweet clover. This is a fact that is not fully appreciated, but the heaviest yields of honey per stand are secured in alfalfa regions. The honey is of excellent quality as is evidenced by its standing in the markets. Bees also have a very beneficial effect on the seed-producing quality of the alfalfa as will be noted later. While the most important use of alfalfa is in producing hay, it nevertheless has a place in the pasture mixture. Owing to the fact that it is liable to produce bloat, it is unsafe to pas- ture cattle or sheep on an exclusive alfalfa pasture; but this difficulty apparently disappears when the alfalfa is sown with other grasses. Alfalfa roots so much more deeply than the grasses, that it will grow among them and be very little affected by their crowding. In the northwest, brome grass, timothy, western rye grass or orchard grass, may be sown with alfalfa with excellent results. About five pounds of alfalfa and the usual amount of grass seed should be sown to the acre. REQUISITES OF SUCCESSFUL ALFALFA GROWING Alfalfa, when well established, is one of the most vigorous and persistent of agricultural plants. It will endure weeds, dry %, pi bg ai Sheep are profitable in the Northwest — Alfalfa and sheep, a good combination Requisttes of Successful Alfalfa Growing Il weather, and other unfavorable conditions to a remarkable degree. It will also crowd into the edges of alkali spots further than most other plants. It, however, responds readily to the favors of soil and climate and because of its great value asa crop should be given favorable conditions to startin. This is similar to the disk harrow except that spikes take the place of disks. Thespring tooth harrow is Harrow After Cutting 23 also a very valuable tool for cultivating the alfalfa and it is claimed by many that the spring teeth will dodge around the plants and do the cultivating without injuring the crowns to the extent that the disk harrow does. Old fields of alfalfa should at least have a cultivation with disk and harrow in the spring as soon as the ground is dry enough. If possible, such cultivation should be before there is any growth started. Occasionally, fields are seeded too thick and it is desired to thin them. This can be done by running furrows through the alfalfa with a sulky plow, one to two feet apart, and then cross-harrowing until the ground is level again. One-half to one-third of the plants can be cut out in this way. In the seed- producing regions this is quite often a good practice. Old alfalfa fields respond very readily to applications of well rotted barnyard manure. This should be applied during the fall or winter and disked and harrowed in in the spring. The applications should be light and frequent so as not to be raked up with the hay crop. There is perhaps no crop grown on the farm that will give better returns for the labor expended in such treatment than alfalfa. Alfalfa a Soil Renovator The first comment usually made on seeing for the first time, the enormous roots of old alfalfa is, ‘‘It certainly must loosen up the soil.”” This is true. Alfalfa roots have been dug out that have penetrated the soil 30 feet. On the College farm in Kansas the writer helped dig out a plant just six months old from seed, and it had penetrated the soil six feet. Alfalfa six weeks old from seed at the I H C farm, Grand Forks, N. D., had penetrated 29 inches. The total length of these plants was 42 inches, or just one inch per day from the time the seed was planted. : To those not familiar with it, the extent of the alfalfa root system is almost unbelievable. Certainly no one will doubt the beneficial effect of the decaying of these large roots in the soil. As the larger part of the alfalfa root system is below the feeding range of ordinary plants, the surface soil is resting and really gaining in fertility during the time it isin alfalfa. Alfalfaisa - creat silent subsoiler, equal in efficiency to tractors or dynamite. Alfalfa as a Seed Crop The fact that alfalfa seed has sold in the vicinity of twenty cents a pound for a number of years, makes the production of seed very attractive. The true Grimm alfalfa has been sell- ing at $1.00 a pound and there seems to be as keen a demand 24 Spring Tooth Harrow Best as ever. There certainly is a great profit in alfalfa seed at these prices and there is no reason why the production should not be increased. Alfalfa does not always seed regularly, the reasons for which are somewhat hard to give. It is noticeable that it seeds heaviest during hot, dry seasons. Too much rainfall seems in some way to hinder the formation of the seed. For this reason it is probable that the seed-pro- ducing area will remain in the drier or so-called semi-arid regions. However, this year (1913), seed seems to be forming well in north- ern Minnesota and the northern part of North Dakota. There is no doubt but that the seed production is influenced to a considerable extent by the number of bumble bees or honey bees which may visit the blossoms. Experiments conducted by Prof. C. B. Waldron at Dickinson, 8. D., show this very conclu- sively. The anthers and stigma of the alfalfa flower are enclosed in glumes which apparently do not always open voluntarily. A light hail storm, heavy winds or the threshing of the blossoms by the wings of bees or any other means, may cause them to open so that they may become fertile and produce seed. If these glumes do not open and allow the pollen to come in con- tact with the stigma during the receptive period, the bloom drops off and there is no seed pod formed. In portions of the West, and in South Dakota, artificial means are resorted to, to trip the flowers. This is done by a revolving reel or by hanging a 2x4 under a buggy so that it will just strike the flowers and then driving over the field at a rapid pace. This feature of seed production is as yet not fully worked out. When it is, it may be possible to increase the amount of seed produced. What Crop to Leave for Seed What crop to leave for seed is an open question, but it is probable that in the northern part of the United States, the - first should be left. 'The second crop is liable to be too late in maturing to give the alfalfa sufficient chance for making growth enough to protect it during winter. The alfalfa should be . carefully watched and if itis seen that many of the flowers are falling off and not forming pods, the field may as well be cut for hay immediately and avoid further retarding the succeeding erowth. The proper time to cut the seed crop must be deter- mined by observing the pods. As they do not all ripen at once, it is impossible to delay the cutting until all are ripe. The length of the season might also determine the time of cutting to some extent. When about three-fourths of the pods are a golden brown is perhaps as safe a rule as any to go by. Inoculation Insures Success 25 The usual method is to cut with a mowing machine, using a clover buncher attachment to gather up the crop. The binder is also used by taking off the binder attachment and allowing the alfalfa to be thrown off loose onto the bundle carrier until good sized bunches are collected. The self-rake is also a very satisfactory means of collecting the seed. In many instances the crop may be too short for anything but the mowing machine and if it is not possible to get a clover buncher, it may be cut and raked similar to hay. The raking should be done soon after cutting so that there will be the least possible amount of shattering due to driving over the crop. It is a general practice to leave the seed crop in windrows until thoroughly dry, then thresh immediately. If this is not possible, the alfalfa may be stacked in long, narrow stacks, but great care should be taken that it is so dry that it will not heat in the stacks as this will damage the seed. A good bottom of brush or poles should be built on which to stack the alfalfa so that it will not draw dampness from the ground. Threshing Seed The clover huller or special alfalfa huller, of course will give best results in threshing, but the ordinary separator is used to a large extent. If corrugated teeth are put in the concaves and these set up close and the machine fed rather slowly so that any pods which are not at first broken open will come back through the tailings elevator into the cylinder again, a satisfactory job can be done. After threshing, the seed should be run through a fanning mill to put it in good shape. If there are a considerable number of pods still unthreshed, these may be run through an ordinary feed grinder with the burrs set so as not to crack the alfalfa seed, and in this way practically every seed recovered. It is probable that the growing of alfalfa seed will be greatly increased, now that the practice of planting it in rows and giy- ing some cultivation has been resorted to. For seed production it appears that the ordinary sowings are too thick; that when individual plants are isolated and given a chance they produce aS much as an ounce of seed. The best method is doubtless that which has been previously described under ‘‘ Methods of _ Seeding.”’ Transplanting Alfalfa One would hardly suppose that a plant with such a root sys- tem as alfalfa has, could be easily transplanted, but it is trans- planted with good results and the practice has gained consider- 26 Leave Fall Growth for Winter Protection able favor in South Dakota. Year-old plants are usually trans- planted, having been taken up in the fall and kept dormant until time to transplant. On the IHC farm at Grand Forks, 4,000 plants were set May 9th, 1913. These plants were year- olds, raised by A. B. Lyman, of Excelsior, Minn. The plants were dug, or plowed up, May 6th, put into bushel baskets, and shipped by express. The land had already been prepared and the rows marked out with a small plow three and one-half feet apart. Witha hoe or spade, holes were opened for the plants about two and one-half feet apart in the row, the plants set by hand, and not watered. The plants were set a little deeper than they grew previously. Notwithstanding the very dry weather, a quite satisfactory percentage of the plants grew. Adjacent to the transplanted acre, we put out an acre, drilling the seed with garden seeder, rows three and one-half feet apart. When these plants were ie He @ OS BE & Hobo & Bee ‘eo 8a & OS SS BP WRN CR a Grimm alfalfa plants transplanted —second growth first year — just beginning to bloom five weeks old, we took enough to replant what did not start on the transplanted acre. We did this just after a rain, and took no more precautions than we would in handling cabbage plants—in fact, handled them similarly, but, as the soil was moist, did not water them after planting. Nearly all of the young plants transplanted, grew, which was not expected. The transplanted plants made a slow growth up to July Ist. Some of them began blooming and were cut off. about June 25th. By July 25th, there was a much heavier growth and all the plants were again cut, except three rows Enemies of Alfalfa 27 which were left for observation. These made a big growth and seeded heavily. August 15th, some ripe seed was collected and planted and now a second generation is growing. Many of the plants were over two feet high and when collected made a bunch that could no more than be spanned by the thumb and fingers of one hand. For seed production, this system has gained much favor in the drier sections. A machine for transplanting is being per- fected at the South Dakota Agricultural College. Prof. N. E. Hanson was first to transplant alfalfa, and is a very strong advocate of this system. The growth that will result from a single plant, when cultivated and given the use of five or six square feet of soil, is very remarkable. Every farmer not familiar with alfalfa should secure 100 Grimm plants and set them in a corner of the garden and give careful cultivation. Single plants have produced more than an ounce of seed. ALFALFA ENEMIES The Enemies of Alfalfa are Few Alfalfa is subject to leaf spot or what is commonly called rust. This does not occur frequently, but when it does, it should receive prompt attention. The first warning is the appearance of small black spots on the leaves. Later these leaves turn yellow and the patches in the field where this starts become larger, and the growth is greatly retarded. Bloom seldom appears after rust has gained any headway. The remedy is very simple and easily applied—mow the alfalfa as soon as possible after the rust appears, and remove the cutting. There are other alfalfa diseases, but they are infrequent and of little consequence. Occasionally, young alfalfais damaged by the blister beetle, and grasshoppers are apt to cause some dam- age. The blister beetle and the grasshopper can be destroyed by spraying with Paris green. Grasshoppers are easily killed by use of a ‘‘hopper dozer’’ and poison baits, which are fully de- -scribed in many of the bulletins published. Squirrels and pocket gophers often damage alfalfa by throw- ing up mounds of dirt which interfere with harvesting. These animals can be poisoned. The gophers are fond of potatoes, sweet potatoes, or apples and the presence of strychnine in these does not seem to deter them from eating the fruit. Take an ordin- ary potato and cut it into small pieces smewhat smaller than for planting purposes, or use small potatoes. Witha thin knife slit the piece of potato and insert into this slit a crystal of sul- phate of strychnine about one-half the size of a grain of wheat. 28 Enemies of Alfalfa Sulphate of strychnine can be bought of any druggist, in small bottles. The 25-cent size will furnish enough strychnine to kill the gophers on 100 acres. It is well to prepare the potato bait as above described, a few hours before it is to be put out. Evening is probably the best | time to distribute the poisoned potatoes as the gophers work during the night or early morning. Sharpen an ordinary broom stick or old fork handle at one end. If there is a great deal of this work to be done, a tool may be made for the purpose, on which there is a place to set the foot to press it into the ground. With the sharp stick, find the newest made mounds and by pushing the stick into the ground, locate the runway. The pieces of potato should be small enough to drop through the hole made by the stick, into the runway. It has been found best to leave these holes open as the gopher will be attracted by the light and thus discover the bait more readily. By going over the fields a few times, a week or so apart, it is possible to get rid of practically every gopher in the field. This had better be done early in the spring as the gophers are more hungry then and will eat the bait more greedily. Occasionally a gopher will not get enough to kill it and he will not touch the bait again. If after two or three applications of different baits, he still continues operations, it may be possible to get him ina trap. This method is so successful that there is absolutely no excuse for permitting an alfalfa field to be overrun by gophers. In the western part of the country the prairie dog may cause some trouble. These are easily destroyed by the use of carbon bisulphate or poison, directions for using which will be given on inquiry. PLOWING UP ALFALFA One of the first questions asked by those who are not familiar with alfalfa is as to how such a strong rooted plant can be destroyed when once established. Under ordinary circumstances, alfalfa will doubtless produce for ten years, although for the sake of rotations it should be sown more frequently. With a good sharp gang plow, plowing 34 to 4 inches deep, there is little or no difficulty in plowing it up. It will require perhaps one-fourth more power if the stand is quite thick. Alfalfa is usually pastured for a year or so before it is plowed up. This weakens the plants to some extent and the field is more easily plowed up. If the ground is wet when plowed and is worked down, it is not uncommon for a good many plants to continue growing. This may be overcome by plowing the alfalfa up after the last cutting in summer when Save the Alfalfa Leaves 29 the land is usually dry and leaving the ground for some time without working down. Another practice isto plow the ground only about three inches deep and then immediately harrow with a peg tooth harrow. This will drag out practically all the roots. After they have been exposed for a week or ten days, the land may be plowed six to eight inches deep and these crowns turned under. They are very rich in fertility and should not be raked off the field. If the ground is to be put into small grain, they of course would not interfere very greatly with the seeding and may be left on the field. ALFALFA IN ROTATION Alfalfa is not considered adapted to use in rotations, but there is very little ground for this assumption. It is just as easy to start asred clover, and if the ground is inoculated and in proper condition it will make as much growth as red clover. Once alfalfa is well established, itis hardly considered practical to plow itup for at least five years. Being a very deep-rooted plant, alfalfa is able to draw on the food supply deep in the soil. This fact renders it more beneficial than any other crop as it allows the surface fertility to accumu- late for succeeding crops. There are on record many instances of the increase in crops following alfalfa. Reports from the northwest show the yields of crops following alfalfa to be greatly increased, in many cases doubled, depending on the length of time the alfalfa was allowed to remain on the field. As the price of alfalfa and clover seed is practically the same, there is little doubt but that as good or better results will be secured by sowing alfalfa in a rotation as are secured with red clover. Sweet Clover There are two varieties of sweet clover that are gaining favor as hay and pasture crops, the white and the yellow flowered. These plants are closely related to alfalfa, but they are biennials, that is, a single plant lives only two years. However, the sweet clovers are such persistent seed producers, the seed of such high vitality, and the young plants so vigorous, that when once established, it appears to live from year to year. The ordinary methods of mowing it at random along the roadsides or on abandoned or unoccupied lots or fields, has little apparent effect. Sweet clover is considered by most farmers as a bad weed. It, however, has long had friends who have learned its value, and recently, especially in the drier sections and on poor soil, it 30 Alfalfa Makes Cheap Beef is gaining much favor as a pasture and hay crop. The fact that it has a rather repulsive odor and taste, and that stock do not eat it to any great extent are the faults usually placed against it. However when stock are confined to sweet clover pasture, they soon learn to like it and fatten. very rapidly, and there seems to be no trouble from animals bloating on clover as there often is with alfalfa. In Colorado, along the railroads, there are many plants of sweet clover that have been eaten off by range cattle. In feeding value, alfalfa and sweet clover are very nearly equal. The white sweet clover seems to give best satisfaction for both hay and pasture. For hay, the plants must be cut early— about the time the first blooms appear. At this time the repulsive odor and taste are not so noticeable as at later stages of growth. Early cutting is best, because a second growth will come immediately and produce a second cutting or a seed crop. The yield of hay is reported to be equal to or greater than alfalfa. The handling of a seed crop is somewhat more difficult than alfalfa, as it shatters very badly. It is also essential that sweet clover be cut high—about four inches—the first time or there is danger of killing many of the plants. The requirements of sweet clover as to preparation of seed bed, method of seeding, amount of seed per acre, etc., are prac- tically the same as for alfalfa. It is not probable that sweet clover will be found better than alfalfa, where the latter can be grown successfully, but in the drier sections or on land that does not grow alfalfa readily, it certainly is worth while making a trial of sweet clover. The agricultural papers lately have published many instances of successful trials of sweet clover. For lack of space these are not reproduced here. SUMMARY 1. Alfalfa is being grown successfully in every part of the northwest, but is not fully appreciated. 2. Farmers are rapidly coming to realize that live stock must be raised on every farm, and that alfalfa is the surest and best feed to be raised. 3. Alfalfa is not difficult to grow — will withstand more heat and drouth than red clover the first year, and when well estab- lished on good land will produce crops for many years, almost regardless of weather conditions. 4. The requirements of the alfalfa plant are easily aoe when its nature is understood. The very small seed, producing a single tap root, requires: a firm seed bed so that the moisture may be brought near the surface; manure for plant food; and Sweet Clover Sef soil from an old field, or pure culture to inoculate the soil. 5. Grimm alfalfa holds first place as to hardiness. Montana isa close second. Only hardy northern grown seed is successful in Minnesota and the Dakotas. Do not experiment with south- ern grown seed. 6. Alfalfa growers agree on essentials. Precede alfalfa by a cultivated crop, potatoes best—and manure land. Plow deep the year previous to conserve moisture. Fall plow and manure. Spring plowing should be very shallow, and packer used to firm the soil. Disk and harrow to kill weeds until the middle of June. If there is plenty of moisture one inch below surface of soil, drill eight to twelve pounds of seed per acre alone, or with three pecks of beardless barley. If season is dry, cut barley for hay before mature. Clip weeds every two weeks, but not so late as to leave field bare. If seed is sown broadcast, use sixteen to twenty-four pounds per acre. 7. Cut the alfalfa for hay when one-tenth in bloom. Never cut or pasture so late that there is not a good growth for winter protection. Save the leaves as they are richer than bran. 8. Try alfalfa in rows for seed production—give frequent cultivation. Transplanting alfalfa has gained much favor—is worthy of a careful trial. 9. Old alfalfa fields need cultivation, disking, renovating, or cultivating with spring-tooth harrow. Manuring alfalfais profit- able—try it. It is not safe to pasture cattle or sheep on alfalfa, but an alfalfa field is a hog’s idea of heaven. 10. Alfalfa excels every other crop, in yield, in feeding value, as a drouth resister, as a soil enricher, is not as difficult to grow as clover and gives double the yield. After you have failed as often with alfalfa as you have with wheat, try sweet clover. Do not expect to know all about this new-old crop at once. It is necessary to grow into growing it, but make a beginning and Grow Alfalfa. svar eorex MMMM The following is a partial list of available uraita a8 Write some of these addresses for such literature as they issue on the subject: North Dakota Ag¢gricultural College Bulletin, 95-3, Fargo, N. Dak. University of Wisconsin, Circular 35, Madison, Wis. The Pennsylvania State College, State College, Pa. Agricultural Experiment Station, Bulletin 113-181, Wooster, Ohio Agricultural Experiment Station, Geneva, N. Y. University of Missouri, Bulletin 106-40, Columbia, Mo. Agricultural Experiment Station, Bulletin 94-120-133-141, Brook- ings, S. Dak. The University of Minnesota, Bulletin 6-18, University Farm, St. Paul, Minn. Michigan Aégriculitural College, Bulletin 271, East Lansing, Mich. Aéricultural Experiment Station, Circular 36, Lafayette, Ind. Iowa Experiment Station, Bulletin 137, Ames, Iowa University of Illinois, Bulletin 76-134-146, Urbana, III. Agricultural Experiment Station, Bulletin 155-176, Manhattan, Kans. ** Alfalfa’? Farmers’ Bulletin 194-339 Utah State Bulletin No. 126 U. S. Department of Agriculture, Washington, D. C. ** Alfalfa Growing¢ in Illinois,’’ Bulletin No. 18, H. A. McKeene, Spring- field, Ill. ** Alfalfa on Every Farm ’”’ ** Alfalfa in the Corn Belt ”’ Press Paége No. 1 6eé 66é 6eé 22 ** For Better Crops ”’ ‘* Alfalfa Growing in Northwest’’ ** Ror More and Hardier Alfalfa in Northwest ”’ Alialfa Studies (for Schools) Lecture Notes for Alfalfa Charts IHC Agricultural Extension Department, Harvester Bldé., Chicago, Il. ** Alfalfa Production,’’? H. G. Bell, Middle West Soil Improvement Committee, Chicago, Il. ** Alfalfa— The Money Crop of the Northwest.’? The Northwestern Line, Chicago, Ill. ** Alfalfa in America’”’ (480 Pages, $2.00), Jos. E. Wins, Mechanics- burg, Ohio ‘‘*The Book of Alfalfa,’? F. D. Colburn (344 Pages, $2.00), Topeka, Kans. **How to Grow Alfalfa in Western Michigan,’’? The Western Rural Router, Grand Rapids, Mich. For Information on Inoculation, write, Bacteriological Laboratory, East Lansing, Mich. Note: If we can help you in any other way feel at liberty to write us. INTERNATIONAL HARVESTER COMPANY OF NEW JERSEY AGRICULTURAL EXTENSION DEPT. Grand Forks, N. D., or Harvester Bldg., Chicago Holling: pH Hollinger Corp. pH 8.5