197 Grasses- Meadows and Pastures, by J. B.l Killobrew. UC-NRLF ;MLTU«E c GRASSES, MEADOWS AND PASTURES, SORGHUM AND THE MANUFACTURE OF SUGAR. BY J. B. KILLEBREW, A. M., Ph. D., (.'<-rtninii<.iiiKr of Agriculture, Statistics and J/f/^.s for ihf State of Tt NASHVILLE: TAVEI,, EASTMAN & HOWELL 1880. Edward MEADOWS AND PASTURES. A COMPENDIUM OF THE GRASSES OF PREPARED EXPRESSLY FOR THE FARMERS OF TENNESSEE, BUT ADAPTED TO THE WHOLE COUNTRY. BY J. B. KILLEBREW, A. M., Ph. D., Commissioner of Agriculture, Statistics and Mines for the State of Tennessee. NASHVILLE : TAVEL, EASTMAN & HOWELL. 1880. To His EXCELLENCY, Gov. A. S. MAKKS : The original work issued from this office, entitled "The Grasses of Tennessee," including Cereals and Forage Plants, was so popular that the means at my disposal were entirely inadequate to supply the demand from the farmers throughout the State. The members of the last House of Representatives having frequent calls for them from their constituents, passed a resolution authorizing me to publish seven thousand five hundred copies for their use, but requir- ing the expense of such publication to be paid out of the annual appropriation made to this department. As this ap- propriation was not immediately available, I was compelled to wait until a sufficient sum had accumulated to the credit of the department before putting this brochure to press. It is believed that for most farmers this little work will be as useful as the larger and more scientific manual, of which this is an abridgement. In this all the scientific terms have been excluded, and descriptions of all grasses of doubtful utility have been omitted. This edition embraces five thou- sand copies, and their distribution will no doubt increase the growing desire of our farmers to engage more largely in the cultivation of the grasses, at once the sign and sup- port of a vigorous civilization. Very truly, J. B. KlLLEBREW. November, 1880. IVIAlf4 LIBRARY-AGRICULTURE DEPT INTRODUCTION. No surer test of the degree of agricultural advance- ment of a country can be found than the relative acre- age of land laid down to grass and devoted to tillage. Wherever the grass is most abundant there is the highest farming. This statement is most strkingly estab- lished by comparing the agricultural systems of France and England. In France 53 per cent, of the tillable land is annually sown in some kind of grain, while in England the grain-bearing per cent, of land is only 25. On the other hand, while France has but 22 per cent, in grass, England has 50. Notwithstanding this difference in the amount of land devoted to grain, the yield of wheat to each inhabitant is almost identical in the two countries. Every acre of grain land in England receives, on an average, the manure from the animals fed off three acres of grass. In France, on the contrary, the manure made from each acre of grass has to be spread over 2J acres of grain. In other words, each acre of grain in England gets nine loads of manure to one load given to the acre in France. A further comparison would show that the acknowledged superiority of English cattle, sheep and other domestic animals, over those of France, or any other country for that matter, is due more to the superiority in quality and quantity of the meadows and pastures of that wonderful island than to anything else. If we turn our attention to other countries we shall find that the amount and character of grasses grown may always be taken as a measure of the degree of advancement to which their agriculture has reached. It must be borne in mind that this statement broom-corn, though really true grasses, are generally classed with the artificials. To one not acquainted with the subject, the facility with which grass scatters and diffuses itself is very surprising. But it seems that so important a vegetation should not be subject to the fancies or caprices of man. The seeds are prepared in such a way, that they are self- sowers. It is this remarkable facility of transportation that has given rise to the surmise of many, that it grows by spontaneous gene- ration. Some of the seeds have hooks, and by these they fasten to any passing animal and are carried for miles. Others lie undigested in the crops of birds, or maws of animals, and are scattered with the dejectse. Snows gather them on the hill- sides and bear them far away on the melt- ing torrents, and scatter them, mayhap, along some foreign shore. The air also assists in this, and lifts them on its wings and they fly in all directions. When grass once stands, even if a passing beast cuts off its annual supply of seed, its rhizomes or creeping roots thrust their tender spongioles through the yielding soil, and thus many a field is clothed with verdure. And besides, many of the grasses are perennials, and though torn and tramped by stock, they gather new strength for another year, and push on their foothold. There is a large class resembling the grasses in general appearance, but very different in the physical structure and nutritive elements. I allude to the rushes and sedges, of which there are over five hundred varieties growing in the United States, and eighty of them are found in Tennessee. What is commonly known as " broomsedge" is not a sedge at all, but a true grass, while the well-known " seed-tick " grass is a sedge. There is a simple method of separating the grasses from these rushes and sedges, which will be briefly stated. The sheath of sedges is a hollow tube, through which the ems pass, and it cannot be removed without tearing it open. This is not the case with grass, as the sheath can be stripped down, it being open to the joint. Besides, the leaves of all grasses are two-ranked, that is, the stem has leaves on each side, some opposite, others alternate, but always only on two sides. The leaves of sedges are three- ranked, or come out on three sides of the circle of a stem. In other words, the stem forms a circle of 360 degrees. The grass leaves are 180 degrees from each other, and the sedge leaves are 120 degrees apart. In the grass-like rush the flowers are divided into six points, within which are six stamens and a triangular ovary containing three seeds. A grass has never but one seed to the ovary. The English farmer is able to take long leases of farms from the rich landholder, at from $20 to $50 per annum rent. How does he pay this extravagant rent and support his family? He could not do it in any other manner than by improving, manuring and increasing the meadows with which they are constantly set. A Tennesseean will manure his garden, and sometimes his corn land, but whoever thinks of spreading manure on his meadows. Yet the Englishman will spend large sums of money, and devote labor through the whole winter, in accumulating a large compost heap to apply to his meadows ! The result may be imagined. While the Tennessee meadows will average from 800 to 1,500 pounds of hay to the acre, English meadows will make from two to five tons on land that has no other ad- vantage than the care bestowed on it by the owner. Besides this, the grass grown in a a damp cold climate is never so sweet and nutritious as that raised under a warm sun and with a quick growth. In this State there is an occasional drought that begins in June or July, interfering seriously with the development of the later crops. But such a condition of climate is scarcely known in the earlier months during the growth of the grass crops. Yet there is with the spring rains a degree of temperature unknown to (10) the Englishman, a degree sufficiently high to give grass all the necessary heat to enable it to attain its full supply of sugar and nitrogen from the soil. The beautiful lands of Kentucky and Missouri, to say nothing of the Northern States, still retain a great value, and are in demand at high prices. It is because these States have more laud in meadows, while broad stretches of valuable pastures and prairies dot the landscape in every direction. Poor land will not make much grass, and with- out a great outlay of capital land cannot be placed in first- class order at once. But it only requires a start, and then the persevering, provident farmer will soon see his farm blossoming as the rose. Land in Europe not infrequently reaches the sum of $1,000 per acre for purely agricultural purposes, while here it is a difficult matter to extract, with our best farming, $50 per acre, and then the expenses are to be drawn from that meagre sum. Let us draw a comparison between our leading staples. Cotton here will make on average land 800 pounds seed cotton per acre. This at the usual price makes $20 per acre. Corn will produce on good land eight barrels per acre, and at $2.00, the laborer will get $16. Tobacco, our most remunerative crop, on good land will make 800 pounds of leaf, which is about $50 to $60 per acre. Wheat will make, on good land, fifteen bushels per acre, and at $1 will yield about $15. Taking the cost of production from these amounts, the average farmer will not have left, at the best, more than twelve dollars per acre. A good meadow, in full bearing, with ordinary care, will yield, with two cuttings, at least two tons per acre. The cost is altogether in har- vesting, while the trouble of sending to market is no greater than either of the other crops. This, at the price for which it has been selling for several years, will be $20 per ton. Here, then, is a difference in actual receipts of almost double that obtained from other crops, nothing paid out for production, and besides the land can be enriched year by (11) year, until it attains an almost fabulous fertility. Nor is this all. The amount of hay produced from a single acre can be increased almost to any extent by the application of stimulating manures. If then, land in Europe can produce five tons of hay per acre, and sell for §1,000 per acre, why cannot Tennessee lands, far better naturally, and in a more genial climate, be made to rival these results? One thing only prevents, and that is the fatal apathy and want of en- terprise on the part of the land owners. It is the thirst for immediate returns. To create this state of tillage, it will e necessary to proceed slowly, and look for no returns of consequence for one or two years. Pressing necessities weigh upon the farmer, and he thoughtlessly drives on in the same interminable furrow, regardless of the loss of time and fertility. The Northern husbandman bales his hay, and is able to ship it to all parts of the South in search of a market, and after paying heavy railroad charges, is still able to sell his produce at a remunerative price. The Southern man has no freight charges to tax his hay, and yet he is content to let his Northern rival enjoy, without competition, this great market. When will our eyes be opened to our interests, is a question often asked, but diffi- cult to answer. A capitalist invests his money in United States bonds, and without risk or labor contentedly cuts off his coupons and enjoys his ease, while the merchant, with the same cap- ital, is harrassed to death meeting bills, collecting accounts, and watching with unceasing vigilance the turn of the markets. So it is with farmers. A prudent farmer will invest his farm-capital in grass, and he contentedly watches the growth of the grass and the browsing of his cattle, while his neighbor raising corn and cotton, is busy all the year in cultivating his crops, watching his laborers, buying mules, bacon and hay from his more prudent friend, and when he counts his receipts at the end of the struggle, he will find his neighbor has absorbed the greater part of them. (12) Not only this, but a stranger appears in the country desi- rous of investing in land, and while he would turn from the cotton plantation at ten or twelve dollars per acre, he would gladly invest in the grass farm at forty or fifty dol- lars per acre. Land that will yield ten or fifteen dollars per acre clear of the expense of cultivation, cannot be supposed, and is not entitled, to the same value with land that will produce thirty or forty dollars on the same breadth. And yet the farmers of Tennessee hesitate to pursue this course. Gulli- ver, in the midst of his extravaganzas, uttered a truism that will go down to all ages, when he said " the man who makes two blades of grass grow where one grew before, is a great public benefactor ; " and when the citizens of Ten- nessee look at their own interest in a proper light, they will realize this truth, and then by acting upon it, double or even quadruple the intrinsic value of the lands of the State. Grass means less labor, less worry, fewer hands, more enjoyment, finer stock and more charming homes, and as a consequence, happier families, more education, more taste and refinement, and a higher elevation of the moral char- acter. Let grasses be sown and our homes beautified, and there will be more contentment, more satisfaction, less gloom and despondency, less carping and discontent. MEADOW GRASSES. The following are the most trustworthy grasses for the meadow in the latitude of Tennessee. I give both the com- mon and scientific names, the average number of pounds in a bushel, the number of seed in an ounce, and depth of soil at which the greatest number of seeds will germinate. : p p *Q 0 * * ¥ o- I'g'l'l Common Names. Scientific Names. a cr1 DB 5* ST8.fi? (b P 1 3 1-3 1 i ^ P_ g> Timothy Phleum pratense 44 74000 \ inch. Herd's-grass or Red Top Agrostis vulgaris 12 425000 \ inch. Orchard Grass Dactylis glomerata.... 12 40000 \ inch. English Rye Grass Lolium perenne 18to30 15000 \ to \ in. Italian Rye Grass Lolium Italicum 15 27000 0 to J in. Millet Gam a Grass Tripsacum dactyloides ]Meadow Oat Grass A vena pratensis 54 118000 0 to i in. IVIeans Grass Red Clover Trifolium pratense.... 64 16000 6 to \ in. Alsike Clover Trifolium hybridum.. 64 16000 0 to \ in. Sapling Red Clover Trifolium erectum.... 64 16000 0 to \ in. Crimson Clover , Trifolium incarnatum 64 16000 0 to \ in. Lucerne Medicago sativa 60 12000 Sainfoin or Esparsette... Onobrychis sativa 26 10280 f to i in. TIMOTHY— (Phleum Pratense.} This grass is known in New England as Herd's grass, from a Mr. Herd, who found it growing wild in New Hamp- shire, and introduced it into cultivation. Further south, (14) however, this name is only applied to Red-top, or Agrostis vulgaris. Mr. Timothy Hanson carried it from New York to Caro- lina, and from him it is known as timothy grass. Its leaves are abundant near the ground, but those on the stalk are comparatively few. Like most other meadow grasses it attains its greatest value as a food before the seeds are ripe. The latter are very abundant and highly nutri- tious. From ten to thirty bushels are made on good land. It ripens late, and consequently favors the farmer very much, as he is able to save his wheat before cutting and curing his hay. It was a common custom at one time to sow it with clover, as it added to the value of the hay, and from the strength of its tall stems it prevented the clover from lodging, but the fact of rip- ening so much later than clover, causing a great loss from shrinkage, has done away with this practice, especially as or- chard grass is so much superior in that respect. Timothy is not suitable for pas- II turing, having scarcely any aftermath. \ Besides, the roots are easily destroyed if the stems are taken off below the first joint, this much being required for their vitality. For this reason, also, it is nec- cessary to be careful to set the blade of the mower sufficiently high to leave the first joint intact. The roots of this grass are both fibrous and bulbous. Its bulbs have but few rootlets starting out from them, the plant depending for its support principally on the store of nourishment laid up within the bulbs. If, therefore, the stem is shaved off entirely, the bulbs, being deprived of all nourishment, throw out tubers all around, and these send up shoots, seeking food in the air, (15) but they are feeble, and if spared by the frosts of winter are so crippled they fall an easy prey to the scorching suns of summer. For the same reason pasturing will effectually destroy a timothy meadow, if persisted in. The stock will bite off all foliage, leaving the roots to perish, or if hogs are allowed to run on it they quickly discover and destroy the succulent bulbs. When about half the blossoms turn brown, and at least the upper part of the spike or head is still pur- ple, a yellowish spot will make its appearance at or near the first joint, and this is the true indication for the harvest to begin, for this spot will soon extend, if allowed to remain, to the spike, and the whole plant will be a stem of wood. The appearance of this spot also tells of the maturity of the bulbs, and they are not so liable to injury from cutting as before. If this joint is left, the tubers will remain green and fresh during the entire winter; but their destruction is inevitable if it is taken away at any time during the year. These remarks do not apply with equal force to timothy when it has a fibrous root, but the two kinds are so inti- mately mingled there is no practical difference. Timothy stands at the head of all grasses in its nutritive qualities. A specimen taken from the field according to the above directions, yielded on analysis, water 57. 21, flesh- forming principles 4.86, fat-forming principles 1.50, heat- producing principles 22.85, woody fibre 11.82, and mineral matters 2.26, in one hundred parts. — (Way.) A compari- son of its relative value as a food will be made further on. But the above nutritious specimen will never be produced, if the plant is allowed to stand too long. On the contrary, as a food it would become woody and worthless, all its starch, sugar, albuminoids, and other nutritive principles having been deposited in the seeds, and the stalk is nothing more than a woody support. Cattle fed on this kind, or on hay that has been allowed to get wet and ferment, will quickly lose their flesh and the hair become rough. (16) Timothy is exhaustive to the soil, and being a heavy feeder, requires attention. No crop can be raised on ground that will not extract a certain amount of its vitality, but unless something is taken the farmer would receive nothing. Therefore, it is the duty of the farmer to supply by ma- nure the deficiency that occurs ; and this is made the more apparent from the fact that the man who applies the most manure will invariably get the best returns for his labor. On good rich land — bottom is best — timothy will make two tons per acre. By a heavy application of compost or ma- nure from the barn-yard, it can be raised to five tons, and the straw lengthened from two feet, its usual height, to five and even six feet, and from the same cause, the heads from two inches to twelve inches in length. It is a great and sure bearer of seeds, but the seeds are easily destroyed by heat in the mow, unless precautions are used in caring for them. The time of sowing is various. If sown in the spring it is liable to be killed by summer heat, and if sown late in autumn it runs the same risk with frost. It is, therefore, bad policy to run the risk of not only losing the cost of seed, but also the labor of preparing the ground. Much must be left to the judgment of the farmer in selecting a suitable day, but it is safe to say that it should always be sown in the fall, early enough to get a root strong enough to resist winter killing. If sown in a very dry soil it will incur the further danger of germinating from dews, and of being killed by the sun. Select the time when the ground is moist, and the days not excessively hot. The quantity of seed per acre. is various, but the sower who spares his seed will reap in proportion. Not less than 12 pounds, if mixed, and if alone, at least three gallons of clean seed, will be required to se- cure a good stand. But it will be better to test the seeds beforehand, for a failure from bad seeds will cause a year's delay. Timothy does best on rich alluvial, moist land ; but any (17) rich land, whether upland or lowland, will produce it, if proper attention is given. Wherever calcareous loam ex- ists it can be profitably put to timothy. It will not grow to any extent at a greater elevation than four thousand feet above the sea, but on any less height there is no grass capa- ble of greater diffusion. In order to secure a stand of timothy, the following sim- ple rules may be adopted : 1. Be sure of your seed by testing them before sowing. 2. Put plenty of seed on the ground; if too thin, it will require time to turf over, if too thick, it will quickly ad- just itself. 3. Sow early enough to enable the seed to get a foothold before winter sets in. Late fall and winter sowings are al- ways precarious. September is best, if there is no drought, otherwise wait for a " season." 4. Unlike other grasses, timothy will not admit of pas- turage. The nipping of stock will destroy the bulbs. 5. NEVER CUT THE SWARD BELOW THE FIRST JOINT. 6. Be sure to have the ground well pulverized. It is necessary to impress one idea that has already been stated. Do not allow the timothy to stand longer than the time that the yellow spot appears near the first joint, as it will from that time ripen very rapidly, and be worthless. General Harding, before the Farmers' Club, called atten- tion to the fact, that the greatest enemy of timothy is blue- grass. If stock is allowed to pass from a blue- grass pasture, at will, to a meadow of timothy, they will quickly sow the meadow in blue-grass, and the latter will, in a short time, supersede the former. In the meeting above alluded to, timothy being the subject of discussion, Gen. Harding being called on for his views, said "he had had considerable expe- rience with timothy. He regarded timothy the most valua- ble of all the grasses for hay, and more especially for hay that must be handled or shipped or baled. He had tried several varieties. Beiore the introduction of blue-grass our 2 (18) timothy meadows lasted almost without limit, and produced year after year for twenty or thirty years. But since we have been growing blue-grass more extensively, it gets into our timothy meadows and in a few years and will root it out; so now, in buying my timothy seed, I look more carefully for blue-grass seed than for the seed of any noxious weeds. I would rather sow dock — I would rather sow anything in my timothy than blue-grass. Still I value blue- grass in its place as the first of grasses, yet it causes more trouble in our meadows than anything else. Again, our seasons have be- come dryer, and there is much greater difficulty in getting a stand of timothy than formerly. When I commenced sowing meadows, I had no trouble in getting a stand of timothy, whether I sowed the seed in the fall or in the spring, whether I sowed in the fall with wheat or barley, or in the spring with my oats. For many years I never failed. Now I sow in the the fall, and the timothy is frequently winter-killed ; I sow in the spring, and it is killed by the long droughts of summer. But these difficulties should not deter us; we should continue to sow, and persevere until we get a stand. Hence if I sow in the fall and my timothy is killed, I sow in the spring ; if it is then killed, I sow again and again until I succeed. I have never given up, and have never entirely failed after repeated efforts. I got a good stand of timothy many years ago with a gallon of seed to the acre, now I would recommend not less than one and a half gallons, or even a peck of seed to the acre. Again, the better the stand you get, and the thicker your grass comes up, the more will it keep out the weeds. The white blossom, like the blue grass, has also increased largely, and seems to be yet increasing. That is a troublesome weed for our meadows, still it is not as pernicious as it seems to the inexperienced. True, you cannot sell white blossom in the market, but if you expect to consume the hay at home, and make your timothy with a large amount of white blossom in it, you will find you will have good hay. Stock will eat (19) it, and readily, mules and cattle seeming to do almost as well upon it as upon the timothy alone. "I know that some differ from me in considering the white blossom as troublesome as any other plant, and throw it away. I have some hands to run along the windrow and pick out the white blossoms, and make hay of the white blossoms alone. It pays very well for the labor of sepa- rating it. I will not throw the white blossom away, for it is valuable. I stack it in my pastures and let the cattle go to it at will during the winter. I also stack my straw, and that helps the cattle. "Now, what is the proper time to cut timothy? Some would say as soon as it blooms, others would say after it has bloomed and the bloom has fallen. If I could cut it all on the day I thought it would make the best hay, I would cut it just about the time it has lost the largest portion of its bloom. If you cut it too green — like green fodder — the stalk will shrivel and, after being cured, the stalk will break short, but if allowed to get a little riper the stalk will bend. " How much sun should it have? This is a question that can only be determined by experience. The proper time to put it up is when it has had as little sun as possible, so you are assured it will not mould. If there is too much moist- ure in it, it will mould, and thereby injure the hay. If the weather is settled, it will cure better in cocks, but all these things must be governed by circumstances." It is highly probably that the reason Gen. Hoarding's meadows fail in six or seven years, is the fact, he admits, of pasturing them. It is a well ascertained fact that timothy will not bear pasturing, and attention to this and leaving the first joint uncut will most probably make our meadows again live twenty or thirty years. At the meeting of the Stock Breeders' Association in February, 1878, Gen. W. H. Jackson said, that the best forerunner of timothy is Hungarian grass. If this is sown (20) in the summer and harvested in August or September, and timothy sown upon the stubble and harrowed in, the best stand could be obtained. The Hungarian grass destroys all DOXIOUS weeds, and gives a certain degree of compactness to the soil necessary to secure a good stand of timothy. BED-TOP— HERD'S GRASS— (Agrostis xulgaris.} It was introduced from England, where it was known as Bent grass. When first cultivated it went by the name of English grass. There are many species now raised in England, which are still known »as Fine Bent. It is scat- tered over the whole State, and but few old pastures are free from it, but there it is so dwarfed by close grazing and treading that it shows to but little advantage. It is com- monly called in these situations fine-top. Next in importance to timothy as a meadow grass stands Herd's grass. Unlike the former, it also makes a good grazing grass — in fact grazing is necessary to its preserva- tion, as, if allowed to go to seed a few years, it dies out. It loves a moist soil, and on swampy places that will grow scarcely anything else, Herd's grass will thrive wonderfully. It is the most permaneent grass we have, and by means of its long, creeping roots, will even, if sown too thin,* quickly take possession of the .ground. It is greedily eaten, while young and tender, in the spring by all kinds of stock, and affords a fine nourishing hay, though in less quantity per acre than timothy. It grows from two to three feet high, and with its purplish panicles, when in full bloom, presents a most charming sight in its soft feathery undulations. (21) It is oftener mixed with other grasses than sown alone, especially with timothy and clover. But it fails to come into harvest as early as clover, and the same objections may be urged against it that are to timothy. It yields, on moist bottom land, from one and a half to two tons per acre, but on uplands it is not a good producer. On thin lands it will not gain a sufficient height to justify harvesting at all. It withstands the effects of drought much better than timothy. In England it is supposed to grow best on sandy soils. Its effects when fed to milk cows are to greatly enrich and yellow the butter, and European dairymen think they can- not do without it in their pastures. By the Woburn experi- ments at the time of flowering, it yielded 10,209 pounds of grass, which lost in drying 5,615 pounds, and furnished 532 pounds of nutritive matter. Cut when the seeds were ripe, it yielded 9,528 pounds of grass, which lost exactly half its weight in drying, and afforded only 251 pounds of nutritious matter. From this it would appear that this grass is doubly as valuable for feeding purposes when cut at the time of flowering. For stopping gullies in old fields it is superior to blue- glass, as it will throw its long, searching roots from the top down the sloping banks of the washes, and fasten to every patch of good soil at the bottom, and then from every joint starts up a stalk to get a fresh hold. It affords a very good aftermath from which, in wet falls, a fair crop may be cut. Unless well tramped in the late fall it is liable to form tufts that rise out of the soil from the effects of freezing, and is destroyed. Therefore, after cutting, let on the stock, and their ieet will insure a good turf, and besides, will destroy weeds. But the cattle should be taken off the pasture after rains have filled the earth with water, or it will become too rough for the proper use of the mower. The quantity of seed pei4 acre, when sown alone, is about one bushel. The seed is usually sold in the chaff, it being difficult to separate it. (22) The time for harvesting is when it is in full flower, or as soon thereafter as possible, when all the elements that are necessary to form the seeds are still in the stalk and leaves. Left to ripen fully, it becomes woody and innutritious. Many pursue the plan of sowing the timothy and Herd's grass together, as they ripen together, and the Herd's grass being much lower than the former fills in well, and the two will make a more abundant yield than either separate. But one requires pasturage and that will destroy the other. It should be sown in September, unless sown on wheat, and then as early as practicable, to enable the roots to get sufficient depth to resist the cold of winter. If sown alone it will, like timothy, make about a half crop the ensuing year, but it is usually sown with grain, wheat, rye or barley. There are a great many marshy spots in Tennessee, es- pecially on the Tennessee and Mississippi rivers, so full of water that nothing can be cultivated on them, and on these fine crops of Herd's grass could be secured every year, which would certainly be far preferable to allowing them to run to waste. These bottoms are usually of surprising fer- tility, and would go far to supply the great deficiency of hay, and obviate the necessity of importing from our more thrifty Northern neighbors. It is a perennial, and if prop- erly tramped every autumn will keep good an indefinite length of time. This grass also finds a most congenial soil throughout West Tennessee, in many places in that division of the State attaining the height of five feet. It is probably better adapted to all the soils of the State than any other grass. I have seen it growing in princely luxuriance 6000 feet above the sea on the bald places of the Unaka Mountains. It flourishes upon the slopes and in the valleys of East Ten- nessee. It yields abundantly upon the sandstone soils of the Cumberland Table-land, and beautifies the rolling sur- faces of the Highland Rim. In the Central Basin it spar- kles in the beauty of its verdure, and is second only to red (23) clover and timothy as a meadow grass. No other grass is sown so much for hay upon the lands lying at the western base of the Cumberland Table-land. In Warren county especially it is highly esteemed for its longevity and iruit- fulness. GRASS — (Dactylis Glomerala.) Whether a native of America or Europe, or indigenous to both coun- tries, it is well known that orchard grass is diffused more extensively than almost any other grass, growing all over Europe, the northwestern parts of Africa, and in Asia Minor. Known as cock's foot in England for many centuries, it was not appreciated as a forage plant until sent to that country from Virginia. It is a perennial, and grows upon congenial soils anywhere between 35 and 47 degrees north lati- tude. It likes a soil moderately dry, porous, fertile and inclined to be sandy. On stiff clay soils, retentive of moisture, the roots do not acquire such a vigor as to give a luxuriant top growth. The feebleness of the roots upon such a soil makes them liable to be thrown up by the earth. It may be grown successfully on a lean, sterile soil, by a top dressing of stable manure, yielding during a moderately wet season from two to three crops. In its rapid growth in early spring lies one of its chief merits, furnishing a rich bite for cattle earlier than almost any other grass. It also grows later in the fall. It is very hardy when well set, makes a great yield, grows rapidly and vigorously upon suitable soils, supplies a rich, nutri- (24) tious hay, which, compaied with timothy, is in value in the proportion of 7 to 10. It starts out early in spring, and comes into blossom about the time of red clover. It attains a height, upon good soils, of three feet, though upon soils of great fertility it sometimes reaches the height of five feet. After being cut, it springs up rapidly, sometimes in rainy weather growing three or four inches within a week. This quality of rapid growth unfits it for a lawn grass unless cut every week. Nevertheless, this very quality makes it stand unrivalled as a pasture grass. The Hon. John Stanton Gould says in his essay upon this grass: aThe laceration produced by the teeth of cattle, instead of injuring, actually stimulates it to throw out additional leaves, yielding the tenderest and sweetest herbage." The chief objection to orchard grass is that it grows too much in stools or tussocks. This can be remedied by sow- ing a larger quantity of seed per acre. Never less than two bushels (14 pounds to the bushel} per acre should be sown, and two and a half bushels would even be preferable. Mr. Gould says that if the meadows are dragged over in spring with a fine toothed harrow, and then rolled this disposition will be completely overcome. The disposition to stool can also be checked by sowing with other grasses. A half gal- lon of clover seed, one gallon of Herd's grass, and two bushels of orchard grass, per acre, sown about the "25th of March, in our latitude, will make an excellent pasture. By the middle of June, upon good soils, the amount of forage will tqual the best fields of clover. It should not, however, be pastured the first season until August, however tempting it may be. In this many Tennessee farmers have made a mis- take. By pasturing before the roots are well established much of the grass is pulled up and destroyed. I have met with many farmers who condemned the orchard grass for want of hardiness and endurance, but in every case the fault was with the farmer himself in pasturing too early. (25) Orchard grass grows well in the shade, and hence its name. It withstands hot, dry weather better than any other valuable grass. Three good crops of leafy hay, if the weather is seasonable, may be counted on after the first year, but only one will blossom. The analysis by Prof. Way of the green grass in blossom gives the following result : Per cent. Water 70 00 Fatty matter 0.94 Flesh formers 4.06 Heat producers , 13.30 , Woody fibre 10.11 Ash 1.59 Analysis by Scheven and Ritthausan gives : Water 65.00 Fat 80 Flesh formers 3.00 Heat producers 12.60 Woody fibre.. 16.10 Ash 2.40 The hay made of orchard grass, as analyzed by Wolff and Knap, gives: Water 14.3 Organic matter , 81.1 Ash 4.6 Albuminoids 11.6 Carbohydrates * 40.7 (/rude fibre 28.9 Fat 2.7 It is of great importance that the seed from hardy plants be sown. In no department of agriculture does the old maxim "like produces like" obtain in a greater degree than in this grass. Seed from weakly, sickly plants will pro- duce the same kind of offspring, however fertile the soil may be. Messrs Lawson & Son, by selecting the best seed, and sowing for several years none but the best of each gen- eration, established a new variety of orchard grass, known (26) by its great size and vigor as the giant cock's foot. Let farmers be careful, therefore, in saving seed to sow from the most vigorous growth. The reason why so many bare spots are seen in pastures and meadows of this grass is due to two causes: 1st, the land is generally not half prepared to receive the seed ; and 2d, there is a penny wise and pound foolish policy in sow- ing too few seed. Let the land be well broken by deep and thorough plowing, and then be finely pulverized by repeated harrowings. Sow the seed, the thicker the better, and run a light brush or harrow over the land so as to cover the seed slightly. To sum the whole matter up, " plow the land deep, pulverize the soil well, be generous as to the quantity of seed, let that seed be good, sow it evenly, give the land as good treatment afterwards as is given to meadow lands in timothy." Its chief superiority over timothy lies in the value of its aftermath. It will improve under depasturing when a tim- othy meadow would be rendered worthless. To sum up the merits of this grass : 1. It is better suited to every variety of soil than any other. 2. It will grow with greater rapidity than any other grass, and for this reason will sustain a large number of animals, and is excellent for soiling purposes. 3. It will grow in the shade. This quality will enable the farmers to utilize their woodlands as pasture, and so make them a source of profit. 4. It will resist drought better than any other grass. The hot summers make this a very valuable quality in any grass. Often in July and August the pastures become so parched as to afford but a small amount of grazing. Orchard grass then comes to the rescue and supplies the deficiency. 5. It is both a pasture and a hay grass. After a crop of hay has been taken off in June, the aftermath will furnish a good pasture throughout the remainder of the summer. (27) 6. It may be sown in the spring or fall with small grain or alone. It is best not to sow it with grain, as the extra production of grass, when sown alone, is worth more than the grain and grass grown together. ENGLISH RYE GRASS.— (Lolium perenne.) This was the first grass cultivated in England, and is a great favorite, occupying the same posi- tion there that timothy does with us. It is but little cultivated in the United States, though some successful experiments have been made with it in Tennessee. It is of quick growth, and will sometimes yield forty bushels of seed per acre. It produces a nutritious 'herbage. There are no less than seventy varieties produced in England. One of the most valuable species of this grass is the Lolium Italicum mentioned below. ITALIAN RYE GRASS.— (Lolium Italicum.) Prof. Way gives the following analysis of this grass: Water 75.61, flesh-forming principles 2.45, fatty matters .80, heat-producing principles 14.11, woody fibre 4.82, mineral substances 2.21. This grass has been lately introduced from Europe, where it is said to be more universally adapted to all sorts of climates than any other grass, and is very popular there. It grows from two to three feet high, and on moist, rich land, will perhaps bear cutting as frequently as a soil- ing or green forage crop, as any other grass, af- (28) fording a succession of green cuttings untillate in the fall. It can be forced by manures and ir- rigation to a greater extent than any other known species of hay. However, as can be seen from its analysis, it has, when green, nearly half less nutrient proper- ties than timothy, and unless the farmer wishes to cut it as a green food, it has no advantages over the latter. It is an annual with a fibrous root, and bears grazing well. The time of sow- ing is early fall, and ten pounds of seed are re- quired per acre, a bushel weighing eighteen pounds. It is a valuable grass for Southern farm- ers, where hay is scarce and high. Being sown in the fall, the farmer will be enabled to cut it early in the spring, thus giving the stock a change from corn alone to succulent hay. It has been fully tested in Georgia, and has given great sat- isfaction. It gives a fine color to the butter of cows fed on it, and they eat it with great relish. It withstands the hottest suns of summer as well as the frosts of the severest winter. It must be sown alone, as it will quickly choke and destroy clover or other grasses. Its yield per acre, ac- cording to received authority, is something im- mense. Mr. Dickens, of England, sowed it on a stiff, clay soil, well- manured, cut it ten times dur- ing one year; the first time, ten inches in March; April 13th again; and May 4th a third time; May 25th a fourth time; June 14th again; July 22 J a sixth time, with ripe seed and three loads hay to the acre. Immediately after each cutting it was manured with liquid manure, the pro- duce of each crop increasing with the temperature of the atmosphere, from three-quarters of a load, the first cutting, to three loads the last. He discontinued manuring now, thinking its growth would be terminated in bearing seed, (29) but he afterwards cut four crops from it. On the 26th Jan- uary following, it measured sixteen inches in height. The last cutting was October 30th; and on the 8th April a crop of twenty- two inches high was cut from it. " I was desirous to know the exact amount taken per acre for the year, and it amounted, on a careful measuring and weighing of green hay, thirteen tons and eighteen hundred and twenty-seven pounds per acre ! " (Coleman's European Agriculture.) It presents a most charming view, with its broad, dark green foliage, and especially in a dry year, when vegetation is parched up all around, it does not show any signs of los- ing its fresh, living, luxuriant growth. Although an annual, a meadow of this grass may be made perennial by scatter- ing fresh seed over the ground every second year, and scratching it with a harrow with sharp teeth. Its unusual ability to withstand the vicissitudes of heat and cold would make it a desirable grass in any thirsty soil, as well as in moist ones, and might possibly be a valuable addition to the soils of the western portion of our State. At least it is worthy of a trial. Mr. Gould thinks the valuable qualities of this grass may be summed up as follows : " Its habit of coming early to maturity. " Its rapid reproduction after cutting. " Its wonderful adaptation to all domestic animals, which is shown by the extreme partiality they manifest for it, either alone or when mixed with other grasses; whether when used as green food for soiling, as hay, or as pasturage, in which latter state its stems are never allowed to ripen and wither like other grasses. " Its beneficial influence on the dairy, not only augment- ing the flow of milk, but improving the flavor of the cheese and butter. "Its uncommon hardiness and capacity to withstand the vicissitudes of both wetness and dryness." (30) GRAB OR CROP GRASS.— (Panicum Sanguinate.) This grass must not be confounded with the Eleusine Indica, also called crab grass, from its supposed resem- blance to crab. This species is so familiar to every Southern farmer, that it would seem to be superfluous to notice it. But as little as it may appear, it is one of our most valuable indigenous grasses. Crab grass is an annual, and so full of seed is it, that it is never necessary to sow it. It is never cultivated alone, which could be easily done by sowing the seed on a smooth surface about the first of June. When the cultivation of a piece of ground ceases, it at once takes possession of it, and soon furnishes a fine pasture. It grows not only in the cul- tivated fields, but in old pastures, yards and woods. It is a fine pasture grass, although it has but few base leaves, and forms no sward, yet it sends out numerous stems, branching freely at the base. It serves a most useful pur- pose in stock husbandry. It fills all our cornfields, and many persons pull it out for hay. It makes a sweet food, and horses are exceedingly fond of it, leaving the best hay to eat it. Should it be desired to secure a good crop of it, do not pasture the wheat or oat stubble, except with hogs, until the crab grass gets a good start, then take off the hogs, and allow it to get into bloom, and if the land is good, there will be a paying quantity to save. It should be sedulously guarded from rain. MILLET.— (Panicum Miliaceum.) There are a great many varieties of this important grass, and almost every year adds to the list of them. The pre- ference for any variety is arbitrary, yet there are many advantages belonging to all. But so far as the planter is (31) concerned, one description serves for all, as the mode of cul- ture is the same, and the only difference is in the botanic characteristics. The first millet cultivated in this State was the kind com- monly called Tennessee millet. In a few years the Hun- garian grass, or millet, became popular. It does not yield so much hay, but it is eaten with more avidity by stock. The Missouri, which is only a modification of the Tennessee, next became the favorite, and then the German millet came and superseded all others. The manner of its introduction was in this wise : Two Germans came to Tennessee in 1861. One of them brought a little sack of millet seed, about a quart, which he kept in his trunk during the war. At the close of the war he took it out one day and handing it to a merchant on Market street asked him to give it to some good farmer for planting. The merchant gave it to Mr. James Allen, of Williamson county, one of the best millet seed planters in the State. The crop was the admiration of the whole coun- try, and he gave a half bushel to Dr. W. M. Clark. He planted the entire amount and wrote concerning it so that the seed sold for from three and a half to five dollars a bushel. It has taken precedence of all other varieties. Last year the Department at Washington sent out a new variety called " pearl millet." It has proved, however, to be a variety that has been planted for many years in the extreme Southern States and is of but little value unless cut as a green forage. It grows rapidly and is eaten with relish by stock. But if allowed to attain full growth, or produce seed, it cannot be eaten, as it becomes woody. It may be cut every six weeks through the season, or when it gets high enough to be reached by a mowing blade. We will now give its cultivation in general and its use, which embraces every variety as well as one. At one period, it was deemed sufficient food for any stock, without the aid of anything else. The fodder was hay and (32) the seed was corn. But later investigations have demon- strated the fact, that when hay ripens to seed, its usefulness as a hay measurably ceases. Were stock fed exclusively on seed- heads, with a sufficiency of good hay, they would thrive exceedingly well, or if the millet is cut while in the flower, or eyen when the seed is in the milky state, and fed to stock in combination with grain, they would do well. But even then, it is much inferior to oats, timothy, or Herd's grass. Its special recommendation is, that it yields a larger proportion of hay than other grasses. It requires a rich, dry soil, and Avill stand almost any amount of droughts, seeming to dry up during the heat, but when it rains it will start off with renewed life, and do as well as ever. It makes large quantities of seed per acre, the Hungarian yielding 30 bushels; the Missouri 40; the Tennessee 50; and the German from 60 to 80 bushels per acre. The Hun- garian millet is a better hay than either of the others, but its yield is much less. The Tennessee millet perhaps yields more hay than either of the other three, but the Missouri has more reputation as a feed for cattle. Should it be wished, however, to sow for a money crop, it will be far preferable to sow the German millet. The Hungarian has a small head, a simple spike, while the others have com- pound spikes, most notably the German. It is easily raised, at less cost than corn, and makes, on good ground, nearly double as many bushels as the latter per acre. For all kinds of fowls it is unsurpassed, and it is a powerful stimu- lant to laying eggs. To sow for hay, prepare the ground in a thorough man- ner, pulverizing it completely, and when the ground is in a sufficiently moist condition, in June, sow the seed, a bushel to the acre. Never sow if the ground is too dry or too wet. If too dry, the seed near the surface will parch in the rays of the sun, and a stand will fail to appear. If too wet, the usual injury to the land occurs and the crop "frenches" or turns yellow and dwarfs. After sowing, harrow well and (33) the labor is over. The millet will require seventy or eighty days to mature, unless it is sown in July, when it will require a few days longer. Two crops of Hungarian grass can easily be raised from the same ground annually. A farmer of Davidson county raised a most excellent crop of Hungarian grass, sown the 1st day of September and cut on the 10th of October. Another, of Williamson county, secured a good crop of German millet sown on the 13th day of August, and cut on the 12th day of October. For seed, prepare the ground as above described, and then, with a light bull-tongue or skooter plow, run light parallel rows thirty inches apart, and with a tin cup or old oyster can that has three or four holes punched in the bottom with a 4-penny nail, walk rapidly along the furrow, and the seed will sift into it from the cup about right for a stand. Cover very lightly with a cotton coverer, and when the seeds begin to sprout, but before they show the sprouts above ground, run over the field with a harrow, so as to loosen the ground and destroy weeds. Afterwards cultivate with a cultivator and double- shovel, one plowing with each being all that is required. It will be necessary to thin out the Tennessee millet with hoes, leaving a mere thread of stems, as it stools prodigiously; but this will be unnecessary with either of the other three, as they scarcely stool at all. To save it for seed, it must be cut with reap-hooks, tak- ing just enough of the head to enable the laborer to make it into bundles; or if preferred, it can be broken off at the head, taking only the seed, leaving the stubble to renew the soil. They are, after treading out in a barn or on a clean spot, separated from the chaff with an ordinary wheat fan. This grass is of great value to the renter who has no op- portunity of continuing in possession of the land long enough to set a meadow. A crop of millet is a good forerun- ner for a meadow, as it destroys all the noxious weeds, and leaves the land in a fine condition for timothy or Herd's grass. 3 (34) GAM A GKASS— (Tripsacum dactyloides.) This is in some sections called sesame grass. It is the largest and one of the most beautiful grasses we have, growing to the height of seven feet. It is abundant through- out the Mississippi Valley, on moist, slushy places. When young and succulent it is eaten with avidity by stock, and makes, from its rapid growth, a good soiling or forage crop, but when it gets large its stem is so woody stock refuse to eat it. Its leaves are very large, equal in size to the leaves of corn, but they are rough and hairy. The grass may be cut three or four times a year, and though in its native state it grows in swamps, it thrives almost equally well on dry or sandy ridges. It will grow where timothy or Herd's grass will not, and consequently is well suited to a large section of our State. The quantity of hay taken from one acre is simply enormous, and resembles very much corn fodder, and as a hay is fully equal to it, and it can be saved at one- tenth the labor required to save fod- der. The roots are strong and large as cane roots, so let it be sown where it will not be desired to remove it. How- ever, close grazing for a few years will destroy it. It is very nutritious and succulent when cut green. The great mass of roots it has will serve to open, loosen and im- prove the land upon which it grows. It should never be allowed to shoot up the seed stem when desired for hay. It is with difficulty the seed can be made to vegetate, and therefore it must be propagated by slips from the roots. Prepare the land well, lay off the furrows with a bull-tongue plow two feet apart, and drop a small piece of root about two feet apart in the furrow, covering with a board. The creeping roots will soon meet, and the ground is quickly turfed with it. It should be planted early in September. Of course, the richer the land, whether upland or bottom, the greater the yield, as the time has never yet come when poor land will make better crops of anything than fertile land. I have seen it growing with great luxuriance in Montgomery county. (35) MEADOW OAT GRASS— (Avena pratemis.) This is a perennial grass, and is a native of Great Britain. It is one of the few grasses that do best on a dry soil. It grows to the height of only eighteen inches in its native pastures. But here it is quite a different grass, and rises to the height of from five to six feet. It will not grow well on moist soils, but on rich upland or good sandy land it grows with vigor. It deserves a place on every farm, as the hay is excellent, and is greedily eaten by stock, and be- sides, the yield is extremely large. Another advantage is that the seed will be ripe before the hay turns yellow, so that not only the hay will be saved, but a large amount of seed can be secured ; upon a barn floor enough will shatter out to supply the wants of most farmers. Or if the farmer wishes to sell the seed, he can cut off the heads with a cradle and let the mower follow for the hay. Should the autumn prove a wet one, a second crop can be cut, but if there is not sufficient aftermath to justify cutting do not pasture it, but allow it to grow on as long as it will, and about Christmas it will turn over and the tops turn yel- low, all prepared for the hungry stock, and it will continue to sustain them until other grasses take its place. However, should it be desired to use it for hay the succeeding year, the stock should be removed about the middle of February. It will seed in the fall after being sown in the spring, which is the proper time to sow it. Sow two bushels per acre. The seed is very light and chaffy. It is a tussock grass, and does not spread from the roots, consequently the seed must be depended on for a stand. After the first sow- ing, there will be no difficulty in obtaining seed, as the yield is large. It affords, both for hay and pasture, perhaps more green food than any grass we have. (36) SORGHUM— (Halpense.) Egyptian Sugar Cane, as its proper name is, is a daughter of the Nile, where it grows fifteen or twenty feet high. So great is its luxuriance there that it has filled all the upper Nile so that a canoe cannot be driven through it. Great Dumbers of cattle and wild animals resort to it, and, in fact, it is the chief sustenance of ruminants in that country. "When young it is very tender and sweet, the pith being full of sugary juice. The leaves are as large as corn fodder, and very nutritious. It has a perennial root, and so vigor- ous that when once planted it is a difficult matter to eradi- cate it. So care must be taken to plant it where it is not in- tended to be disturbed. The roots are creeping and throw out shoots from every joint. It is a fine fertilizer, and sown on a piece of poor washed land will, in a few years, restore it to its pristine fertility. But there is really not much difference where it is sown, for a farmer once getting a good stand will not want to destroy it. It will bear cut- ting three or four times a year, and, in fact, it has to be done, for when it matures, the seed, the stem and leaves are too coarse and woody for use. The ground must be well prepared as in other grasses, and in September, the earlier the better, let it be sown one bushel to the acre. It can be propagated also by the roots by laying off the rows each way, and dropping a joint of the root two feet apart and covering with a drag. It gives the earliest pastures we have, preceding blue grass or clover a month. Hogs are fond of the roots, and any amount of rooting in it will not injure it. In fact, it is a stick tight. It not only thrives well on bottoms, but it will grow just as well on upland, and though poor upland will make but little hay, yet it makes a fine pasture. It disappears in the winter altogether, but the first warm (37) weather brings it up, and it grows with astonishing rapidity. On our lands and in our climate it will grow from five to seven feet high, while in South Carolina it will grow twelve feet high. For soiling purposes it is not equaled by any grass in our knowledge, as it can be cut every two or three weeks. Many persons object to it on account of its great tenacity of life, matting the soil in every direction with its cane-like roots, and the rapidity with which it will spread over a field, and the difficulty of eradicating it. But these very objec- tions should be its recommendation to owners of worn-out fields; and if it is desired to destroy it, it is only necessary to pasture it closely one year, and then in the fall turn the roots up with a big plow to the freezes of a winter, renew- ing the breaking up once or twice during the winter, and then cultivating the next spring. The seeds are quite heavy, and weigh thirty-five pounds to the bushel. Every one who has tried it recommends it to the public. But some allowance must be made for the partiality of friends, and it would be well to give it a trial' before engaging in its culture to any large extent. There would, however, cer- tainly be no risk in sowing it upon those worn-out hill sides, so many of which form an unsightly scar upon the face of nature in Tennessee — the tokens of the past. A proximate analysis made by the Department of Agri- culture at Washington gives : Per cent. Oil 2.26 Wax 61 Sugar 7.37 Gum and Dextrine 5.14 Cellulose , 25.1 Amylaceous cellulose 25.87 Alkali extract 15.58 Albuminoid 13.18 Ash 4.85 Analysis of the ash of the Johnson grass : (38) Per cent. Potassium , 3.68 Potassium oxide 35.72 Sodium 81 Calcium oxide 12.87 Magnesium oxide 0.73 Sulphuric acid 2.96 Phosphoric acid 10,44 Silicic acid 22.21 Chlorine.... ., 4.58 RED CLOVER— (Trifolium pratense.) This valuable forage plant was first introduced into England in 1645, dur- ing the stormy times of Charles I., and rapidly met with favor throughout the kingdom. It properly be- longs to the leguminous family, which includes a considerable number of other forage plants that are called artificial grasses, to distinguish them from the true or natural grasses called graminece. The bo- tanic name trifolium comes from two latin words, ires three, and folium, a leaf, and in England it is often called trefoil. It may always be known by having three leaves in a bunch, and the flowers in dense, oblong globular heads. There is no grass, natural or artificial, that is more useful to the farmer or stock-grower than red clover. It has been styled, with some show of reason, the corner-stone of agri- (39) culture, and this not only on account of its vigorous vitality, but because it adapts itself to a great variety of soils. It is widely diffused, and abounds in every part of Europe, in North America, and even in Siberia. It furnishes an im- mense amount of grazing, yields an abundance of nutritious hay, and is a profitable crop, considered with reference to the seed alone. But beyond all these, it acts as a vigorous ameliorator of the soil, increasing more than any other forage plant the amount of available nitrogen, and so be- comes an important agent in keeping up the productive capacity of the soil, and increasing the yield of o.ther crops. SOILS ADAPTED TO ITS GROWTH. Red clover is a biennial plai.t, and under judicious tillage may be made a perennial, and is specially adapted to argil- laceous soils, but it will grow well upon sandy soils, when a "catch7' is secured, by the application of a top-dressing of gypsum or barn-yard manure. I have seen it growing with vigor upon the feldspathic soils of Johnson county, upon the sandstone soils of the Cumberland mountain, and upon the sandy loams of West Tennessee, but it finds a more con- genial soil in the clayey lands of the valley of East Ten- uessee, on the red soils of the Highland Rim, and on the limestone loams of the Central Basin. The clayey lands of West Tennessee have no superior for the production of clover. It often grows upon these lands from four to five feet in height, and forms a mat, when it falls, of great density and thickness. As much as four tons of clover hay have been taken from a single acre. Probably three-fourths of the lands in Tennessee will grow clover re- muneratively, and of the soils which will not, a large por- tion is included in the old gullied fields that constitute the shame and mark the thriftlessness of too many of the farmers. It may be set down as an infallible rule in the State of Tennessee that good farming and abundant clover- ing go together. (40) SOWING CLOVER. Clover may be sown in the latitude of Tennessee upon wheat, rye, or oat fields, or alone. Instances have been re- ported to me where a splendid stand was obtained by sow- ing after cultivators in the last working of corn in July. This is unusual, however. So is fall sowing. The best time to sow is from the first of January until the first of April. If sown in January or February, the seed ought to be sown upon snow. This is not only convenient in ena- bling one to distribute the seed evenly over the land, but the gradual melting of the snow, and the slight freezes, bury the seed just deep enough to ensure rapid germination when the warm days of March come on. For the same reason, if sown in March, the seed ought to be sown when the ground is slightly crusted by a freeze. If the sowing is de- ferred until too late for frosty nights, the land should be well harrowed and the seed sown immediately after the har- row. It will hasten germination and cause a larger propor- tion of seed to grow, to harrow the land after the seed is sown. With oats, the seeds should be sown after the last harrowing or brushing, with a slight after- brushing to cover them. A better stand of clover, with less seed, may always be secured by sowing upon land prepared for clover alone. I have often obtained an excellent catch upon "galled?' places by breaking the land well, and sowing the seed with- out any previous or after harrowing. Upon good, iresh, rich soils, where clover has not pre- viously grown, one bushel for eight acres will be sufficient. If the soil is thin and unproductive, one bushel for six acres ought to be sown. If the land has been regularly rotated witli clover, one- half the quantity of seed mentioned above will suffice, sometimes much less. The frequent failure to secure a good stand of clover ad- monishes the farmers of the State to exercise more care in (41) the seeding. When sown late in the spring many of the seeds sprout, and are killed by dry weather. It would be all the better if the clover seed could be buried a half-inch (or even au inch on loose soils) beneath the surface after the middle of March. GROWTH AND MANURE. Red clover rarely makes much growth the first season if sown with grain. Should the weather be very seasonable after harvest, and the land fertile, it will sometimes attain the height of thirty inches and put out blooms, making an excellent fall pasture. When sown alone it will always blossom in August. As soon as it begins to grow, in early spring, an applica- tion of two bushels of gypsum or land plaster, upon granitic or sandy soils, is absolutely necessary to get a good growth. Baron Liebig, after numerous experiments made with gypsum upon clover, comes to the conclusion that the action of gypsum is very complex; that it indeed promotes the distribution of both magnesia and potash in the soil. He thinks that gypsum exercises a chemical action upon the soil, which extends to any depth, and that in consequence of the chemical and mechanical modification of the earth, particles of certain nutritive elements become accessible to and available for the clover plant, which were not so before. Though having my mind constantly directed to this point, I have rarely found an application of gypsum beneficial upon clayey loams, but its effects are very apparent on strong limestone soils, such as are found in the Central Basin. Red clover has two growing seasons. It makes its most vigorous growth from the 1st of April until the 15th of June, beginning to bloom usually in the central parts of the State about the 15th of May, and attaining its full in- florescence about the 1st of June. After this, unless de- pastured by stock or cut for hay, the heads begin to dry up, (42) and stems and leaves begin to fall, forming a mat upon the land. Sometimes this mat is so thick as to catch and con- centrate the heats of summer to such a degree as to scald the roots and destroy the clover. Usually it is best after clover has attained its full bloom, either to cut it for hay or pasture with stock until about the first of July. When the stock is removed, or the clover hay cured and taken off, and there is rain enough, a second crop will spring up from the roots. This second crop is the most valuable for seed, the seed maturing about the last of August, and sooner, if there be copious rains. To make the most abundant yield of clo- ver for grazing, it should be allowed to grow all it will, but never let it make seed, always grazing it down when in full bloom. When grazed down, take off the stock until it blooms again. Several successive crops may thus be made during the summer. The crop of August is unfit for graz- ing, the large quantity of seed having the effect of salivat- ing stock to such a degree as to cause them to lose flesh. It is a fact, well attested by English writers, and by ob- servant farmers of this country, that when clover has been frequently sown upon the same land, it not only fails to pro- duce a heavy crop, but fails to appear at all. The land is then said to be " clover-sick." The remedy for this is by extending the number of crops in the scale of rotation, so that clover will not come so often upon the same laud. By Liebig, clover-sick land is supposed to be caused by the roots of clover impoverishing the subsoil. Clover has no superior as a grazing plant. When in full vigor and bloom, it will carry more cattle and sheep per acre than blue grass, Herd's grass, or orchard grass. After it has been grazed to the earth, a few showery days with warm suns will cause it to spring up into renewed vitality, ready again to furnish its succulent herbage to domestic animals. Though very nutritious and highly relished by cattle, it often produces a dangerous swelling called hoven, from which many cows die. When first turned upon (43) cattle should only be allowed to graze for an hour or two, and then be driven off for the remainder of the day, grad- ually increasing the time of grazing, until they become less voracious in their appetites, never permitting them to run upon clover when wet. Clover made wet by a rain at mid- day is more likely to produce hoven than when wet by dew. This is because when wet by rain at midday, or after the stalks and leaves are heated by the sun, when taken into the stomach of a cow, this heat generates fermentation much sooner than when the herbage is cool, though wet with the morning dew. Cattle are more easily affected by clover than horses, because being ruminants, they take in the clover rapidly, filling the stomach at once, without chewing. Digestion is for the time checked, and a rapid fermentation sets in. The remedy found most effective for hoven is to stick a sharp pointed knife about six inches in front of the hip, to the left side of the backbone, and far enough from it to miss the spinal protuberances, and in the thinest part of the flank. A cow should never be run when affected with hoven, as this treatment only intensifies the pain with- out affording relief. Stock should never be turned upon clover until it blooms. The practice of many of our farmers, to turn all the stock upon a clover field early in April, is very destructive. The crown of the clover is eaten out, causing it to perish. The tread of heavy cattle has the same effect. As a soiling crop red clover is excelled by no crop grown within the State. The practice of soiling in thickly settled communities is one much commended by agricultural writers. An half-acre of clover will supply one cow throughout the months of June, July and August, if cut off and fed in a stall, while twice the amount in pasture, ac- cording to some English experimenters, will barely subsist a cow during the same period, and this will depend, of course, upon the luxuriance of the growth. Soiling (that is cutting the grass and feeding it green) is a very desirable (44) practice, near small towns, where many persons own small lots, and desire to keep a milch cow. No other grass, per- haps, will produce a larger flow of milk. NUTRITIVE VALUE AND CONSTITUENT ELEMENTS OP CLOVER. The nutritive value of clover was long known by feeders before chemical research demonstrated the same fact. It contains, when cut in bloom, nearly four per cent, more nitrogenous food than timothy, and four and a half per cent, more than blue grass. According to Professors Wolff and Knop, in its green state it contains 800 parts in 1,000 of water, about 100 parts more than timothy, and 37 parts in. 1,000 of albuminoids or flesh formers. When made into hay, cut when in bloom, and well cured, red clover contains 134 parts in 1,000 of albuminoids, but cut when fully ripe only 94 parts. The albuminoids contain about 16 per cent, of nitrogen. Timothy hay has 9.7 per cent, of flesh-form- ing matter, and therefore contains less nitrogen, in the pro- portion of 15 to 21, than clover hay. Barley has 10 per cent, of albuminoids, Indian corn 10.7, rye 11, oats 12, clover 13.4 per cent., so that it appears clover hay will fur- nish more muscle-producing or nitrogenous food than either corn, rye, oats, or timothy, which gives strength to the state- ments of many practical farmers, that a crop can be made by feeding clover hay alone to the working animals, and they will keep up under it. Professor Way gives the following analysis of the red clover when green : Per cent. Water 81. Albuminoids 4.27 Fatty matter 69 Heat producing 8.45 Woody fibre 3.76 Ash 1.82 One hundred pounds dried at 212 F., gives the following: (45) Per cent. Albuminoids or flesh-formers 22.55 Fatty matter 3.67 Heat-producers (starch, sugar, gum, etc.) 44.47 Woody fibre 19.75 Ash 9.56 The proportion of fat in the various vegetable products is given in the following table, taken from Prof. S. W. John- son's " How Crops Grow " : Fat. Fat. Meadow grass 0.8 per cent. Turnip 0.1 per cent. Red Clover (green) 0.7 per cent. Wheat kernel 1.6 per cent. Meadow hay 3.0 per cent. Oat kernel 1.6 per cent. Clover hay 3.2 percent. Indian corn 7.0 percent. Wheat straw 1.5 per cent. Pea 3.0 per cent. Oat straw 2 0 per cent. Cotton seed 34. percent. Wheat bran 1.5 per cent. Flax seed 34. percent. Potato, Irish 0.3 per cent. It appears from this table that clover hay has not quite one-half the fat of Indian corn, but having more albumin- oids it has nearly three per cent, more nitrogenous food. Both should be fed together, the clover to give muscle and the corn to give fat. It also appears that the clover hay is richer in fat than meadow hay. EFFECTS OF CLOVER UPON SOILS — MANURE FOR. Numerous facts have taught the farmers of every country where agriculture has flourished, that in many cases the value of the after crop depends upon the preceding crop. In other words, a proper rotation is necessary antecedent to successful farming. The cultivation of some crop with extensive root ramifications will prepare the soil for the subsequent growth of a cereal. But the farmer should not deceive himself. JEvery crop takes away a part of the available plant- food, and the field has not increased in fertility, but the plant- food has been made more rigidly effective for the production of a crop. " The physical and chemical condition of the fields has been improved, but the chemical store has been re- duced." " All plants," says Liebig, " without exception, (46) exhaust the soil, each of them in its own way, of the condi- tions for their reproduction." A field, then, which produces more kindly after rotation, is not necessarily more fertile, but is in better physical con- dition. It has already been mentioned, that the mechanical effects of clover upon soils is not the least among its valua- ble properties. The reaction rendered possible by the pen- etration into the soil of the long tap-roots, and the effect of the dense shade upon the land have a tendency to increase the productiveness, but may not add to the fertility of the soil. Guano is found, on clayey soils, to largely increase the growth of clover. When used on a wheat field seeded to clover in early spring, a " catch " of clover will be secured on the thinnest spots, and grow luxuriantly. The greatest benefits from an application of guano upon wheat are often obtained in this way. A good stand of clover, however secured, is the best possible preparation of land for a suc- ceeding crop of wheat. And this arises, not only from the available nitrogen which a clover crop supplies, but from the deep and thorough subsoiling which is effected by the deep, penetrating tap-roots of the clover. They often de- scend to the depth of four feet in search of food, while its broad leaves " absorb carbon from the atmosphere, chang- ing it into solid matter, causing elements in the soil to as- sume organic forms, rendering them more available as food for other crops." If the soil be robbed of its fertility, the deficient elements must be added before clover will "take." The best method of pasturing is to wait until about the last of May, when the clover is in bloom, then turn on stock and pasture during the months of June and July, alternating every two weeks with other clover fields, if possible, and turning off the stock the first of August, and allowing the second crop to come forward for seed. (47) SAVING CLOVER HAY. The precise period of mowing clover for hay is a question about which there has been much discussion. All will agree that it should be mowed at the time when the nutritive ele- ments— those elements which give strength and produce flesh — are at their maximum. Those who are in the habit of feeding stock find that clover cut about the time of full bloom, when a few of the seeds begin to dry up, and just as the reproductive functions are being brought into play for the maturing of seed, will, pound for pound, produce more fat and muscle than that cut at any other time. The only art in curing hay is to retain as many of the life-giving con- stituents in it as possible, or to preserve it as near as practi- cable in the same condition in which it is cut, with the water only abstracted. The plan generally adopted is to mow the clover in the morning and let it lie in the sun several hours until a wisp taken up and twisted will show no exudation of moisture. It is then thrown up into small cocks, say four feet in diam- eter and four feet high. In these, unless there is appear- ance of rain, it is allowed to remain for a day or two, when it may be hauled to the barn and stored away without danger of damage. Care should be taken not to let the dew fall upon it as it lies scattered by the mower. The dew of one single night will blacken the leaves and destroy the aroma for which good clover hay is so much prized. Another plan practiced is to mow it and let it lie just long enough in the sun to wilt, and then wagon it to an open house and lay it upon beams or tier-poles, where it can re- ceive the free action of the air. After a few days it may be packed down without any danger of fermenting. Cured in this way, in the shade, it retains its green color, is fragrant, and makes a most excellent feed. The only objection to this plan is the great amount of room under cover required for curing, and the additional burthen of hauling while green. (48) Another plan is to haul it up as soon as it wilts, using about half a bushel of salt to the cured ton of hay. A layer a foot or more in thickness may be laid down, over which salt is scattered pretty freely, then another layer and salt, continuing to repeat the operation until the space set apart for hay is filled. A rapid fermentation will ensue, and the hay will be cured by the heat of this fermentation, the salt acting as a preventive against putrefaction. Instead of salt, layers of wheat straw can be substituted. By using straw the clover may be put up in the field. The quantity of straw to be used in the rick or stack depends upon the moisture in the clover — the greener the clover the thicker should be the straw. The straw will act as an absorbent, and during the process will itself be greatly increased in value as food for stock, having imparted to it the flavor and aroma of the clover plant. All the wheat straw on a farm could be utilized in this way, and the amount of manure in the farmer's barn largely increased. Still another method of curing clover hay is the one prac- ticed in Ireland. The Irish Farmers' Journal, in giving an account of this process of curing clover hay, says : " The clover intended for hay is mown and left to lie in the swath until 4 o'clock in the afternoon of the following day to dry. Of course these swaths are twelve or eighteen inches thick. They are then raked together in small shocks which are afterwards made into larger ones, such as would require six or eight horses to draw. Two or more men are kept upon the large ones tramping them down, so as to make them more compact and induce a more speedy fermenta- tion. If the weather is warm, fermentation will begin in a few hours, as will be known by the honey-like smell. When a proper fermentation has begun, the cocks, on being opened, will appear brownish and may be spread. After drying it may be carried to the hay loft without any danger of a second fermentation." (49) It should always be borne in mind that clover hay will not shed rain. When stacked out in the field, it should either be thatched or have a thick top-covering of wheat straw or other hay. The tedder is thought by many to be indispensable in saving good clover hay. Unquestionably it is of great service, and the hay made by the use of the tedder in dry, hot weather, is superior to that made without; but good hay can be and is made by many farmers who never saw a tedder. Clover hay is more difficult to cure than hay from any of the real grasses, and this -arises from the fact that it contains more water than other grasses in the proportion of 8 to 7. For this reason also, it is more difficult to keep, being more liable to heat in the mow. It will not bear handling or transportation, and while it will always be a favorite hay for home consumption, it will never be valuable for market purposes. For horses good grass hay is probably better than clover, because it is more digestible, and is not so liable to produce colic. On the other hand, clover is a superior hay for cattle, producing in milk cows a fine flow of milk. The following table, compiled from analyses made by Wolff, Koop and Way, will exhibit the comparative value of clover and grass hays: ^ 7 ; t CD & • r* ^•* • ,£l u SUBSTANCE. 1 C "*""' S 02 ,.? ^ OJ *& 9 £ c "3 •33 a^3 3 o. aJ Red clover, in bloom... 16.7 77.1 6.2 13.4 29.9 35.8 3.2 Red '' ripe 16 7 77 7 56 94 20 3 480 20 White " 167 748 85 149 343 *2o 6 35 Alsike " in bloom... 16.7 75.0 8.3 15.3 392 30.5 3.3 Alsike " ripe 167 783 50 102 23 1 450 25 Orchard grass Timothy 14.3 143 81.1 81 2 4.6 4 5 11.6 97 40.7 48 8 28.9 2.7 30 Kentucky blue grass.... 14.3 80.6 51 89 39.1 3.1 (50) SAVING CLOVEK SEED. It has often been a matter of surprise that Tennessee farmers have not more generally saved their clover seed. The amount of money yearly paid out lor an article which is now considered a prime necessity to good farming, is er- roneous. Were the lands of Tennessee incapable of pro- ducing clover seed, there would be reason for this expendi- ture. In point of fact, however, no section of the Union will produce, acre for acre, a larger quantity of clover seed. Three bushels per acre have often been gathered, although the usual average is about one and a half bushels. As the first crop of clover, coming to maturity in June, will not perfect its seed, it is necessary to take off the first crop, either by feeding or by mowing for hay, and rely for the seed upon the after crop. The quantity of seed of this crop will depend much upon the weather. Should there be much rain or heavy winds, the yield of seed will be small, but when the weather has been fine and calm, and the seed free from dock or other noxious seeds, the crop will be found as remunerative as any other grown by the farmer. A bushel of clover seed will weigh usually about sixty-four pounds, though sixty pounds is the standard bushel in market. The second crop of clover should be allowed to stand until the husks have become quite brown, and the seeds have passed the milky state. It should then be mowed and per- mitted to lie upon the ground until it is well cured. Alter it is cured rake it up into swaths. Rain will rather benefit than injure it, making it easier to separate the heads from the haulm, which is done by passing through an ordinary wheat separator. A clover huller attachment is adjusted to the separator below the vibrator, which hulls the seeds, and they are separated from the chaff by the fan, care being taken to shut off as much air as possible by closing the slid- ing doors. (51) The crop of seed can be largely increased by mowing or feeding off the first crop of clover about the first of June, and then top-dressing with stable manure. The earlier the first crop is cut the larger will be the crop of seed. By treating the clover fields in this way, as much as three bush- els of seed have been obtained from an acre. Uplands will yield more seed than bottom lands, but they should be en- riched by a liberal application of manure. About the first of September is the time to mow for seed, and the straw will thresh all the better for being exposed to the weather for three weeks. The threshing is usually done in the field, though the haulm may be hauled up after being thoroughly dry, and stacked with a good straw covering, or else stored away under shelter on a good tight floor until it suits the convenience of the farmer to thresh. Care should be taken not to run over or tramp upon the clover after it is dried, as many seeds are thus shelled out and lost. The better plan is to haul to the thresher just as soon as the straw i« in a proper condition to thresh. This will save the trouble and expense of stacking. Some farmers prefer to sow in the chaff, believing that a better stand of clover is thus secured. Usually about thirty bushels in the chaff are considered equivalent to one of cleaned seed. Of course this will depend greatly upon the yield of seed, and experiments ought to be made to deter- mine the relative amount to sow when in chaff. CLOVER AS A PREPARATORY CROP FOR WHEAT. No question at the present day pertaining to agriculture is more deeply interesting to the farmers of Tennessee than how to increase the yield of the wheat crop per acre, for upon this depends the profits of this standard crop, one probably more generally grown in the State than any other. It has long been noted that a soil well suited to clover is generally well adapted to wheat, but not until the painstak* ing investigations of Dr. Yoelcker, of England, was the (52) fact established that the clover plant, hy increasing the amount of available nitrogen in the surface soil, is the very- best forerunner for wheat, unlocking, as it were, the ele- ments in the soil necessary to a full and perfect development of the wheat crop. Prof. Way has established the fact that the carbonate of ammonia of rain-water and of manures are so absorbed and so firmly fixed by the soil that no free ammonia can be pres- ent in it. Neither pure nor carbonic acid water can extract this fixed ammonia from the soil. It must be extracted by the roots of plants. A plant, therefore, with extensive root ramifications, such as clover, will extract a much larger quantity than those plants with feebler roots. The clover roots bring this ammonia or nitrogen to the surface, and on their decay these nitrogenous matters are converted into ni- trates in which the wheat plant finds a most congenial'food. In addition to this, the leaves formed by clover contain a large amount of nitrogenous matter, and these are dropped upon Ihe surface^ increasing the amount of nitrogen availa- ble for wheat or other crops. ALSIKE CLOVER— (Trifolium hybridum.) This species of clover was introduced into England from Sweden, hence it is sometimes called Swedish clover. It gets the name Alsike from the parish of Alsike, in the prov- ince of Upland. It is a perrennial found wild throughout many parts of Sweden, Norway and Finland. Alsike clover, as compared with common red clover, has a slf nderer stalk, narrower leaf, and paler colored flowers and foliage. The flower stalks are longer, and the blossoms more fragrant and sweeter to the taste. When first open, the blooms are but faintly tinged with pink, subsequently they deepen into a pale red, and stand up. When tine pe- (53) riod of flowering passes the heads droop and turn brown. The seed pods contain three or four seeds, which are kidney- shaped, and from dark green to violet color, and consider- ably smaller than the seeds of red clover. This clover does not make much growth the first year, and attains full growth only in its third year. It yields less than the red clover, and has but little or no aftermath. It is hardier and sweeter than red clover, and being a pe- rennial, is more lasting, and it makes a finer hay. Wherever it has been tried, experience has taught that it is best to seed it down with red clover, or some grass, prefer- ably orchard grass, for the reasons that it does not occupy the ground the first year, and is liable to fall and lodge badly if sown alone. I have noticed that it is much fre- quented by bees. It does not stand the long dry summers of our latitude well, but seems to like cool, moist regions. As compared with red clover, the hay is richer by two per cent, in flesh formers — both cut in bloom. The analyses of both, as given by Professors Wolff and Knop, show: Red clover : Flesh formers , 13.4 Heat producing substances 29.9 Crude fibre , 35.8 Fat 3.2 Ash , 6.2 Alsike : Flesh formers 15.3 Heat producing substances 29.2 Crude fibre 30.5 Fat 3.3 Ash 8.3 The great difference in the amount of crude fibre is no- ticeable, and shows decidedly in favor of Alsike clover. (54) SAPLING RED CLOVER— (Trifolium ereclum.) This is precisely the same plant as the common red clover, and is used in the same manner and for the same purposes. The only difference in it is, that the stems being stouter, it is not liable to lodge, but stand erect, and so be in a better condition to mow, and admits the sun to its roots better. As to which may be preferable is a mere matter of taste or prejudice. Either is good, the sapling clover being about two weeks later. CRIMSON CLOVES— (Trifolium inearnatum.) This is an annual, presenting a beautiful crimson flower when in bloom. It is principally valuable as a green food, though the hay is thought to be equal or superior to that made of red clover, but being an annual it interferes more with the operations of the farm, it being necessary to sow it as a separate crop. An analysis of the hay cut in bloom, as made by Wolff and Knop, shows: Flesh formers 12.2 Heating properties 30.1 Crude fibre 33.8 Fat 3.0 Ash 7.2 It is said to be earlier than lucerne or the common red clover. It may be sown upon wheat or grain stubble in the fell, the land being simply harrowed and the seed sown. Few things, it is said, in the vegetable world, presents a more beautiful sight than a field of crimson clover in full bloom. It is not grown to any extent in this State, a few bunches appearing sometimes in fields with other clover. Its chief value is in its quick return. Sown in autumn it (55) may be mown early the succeeding spring, and so meet any scarcity of provender. ALFALFA: LUCERNE— (Medicago Sativa.) This is, beyond doubt, the oldest cultivated grass known, having been introduced into Greece from Media 500 B. C., and the Romans, finding its qualities good, cultivated it ex- tensively, and by them it was carried into France when Caesar reduced Gaul. It is emphatically a child of the sun, and revels in a heat that would destroy any other species of clover. But cold and moisture are hurtful to it. On the rich, sandy lands of the South it is invaluable, and will grow luxuriantly, making enormous yields of hay. Its nu- tritive constituents are almost identical with red clover, but it has one property not possessed by the latter, and that is, it is perennial. It, does not stool as freely as red clover, and therefore must be sown rather thicker. It will con- tinue to furnish green pasturage later than red clover. It does not grow well 0n any soil that has a hard pan, nor on thin soils. To secure a stand, the ground must be in a thorough state of tilth, well pulverized and mellow. A want of attention to this requisite has caused many to be disappointed in the result. But in well prepared, rich, gravelly or sandy loam, it succeeds remarkably, sending down its long tap-roots many feet into the subsoil, pumping up moisture from below, and thus will thrive when all other plants are drooping. In this respect it is far superior to clover. For the latter, a suitable surface soil is of equal importance with the subsoil, but for Lucerne a suitable sub- soil is absolutely necessary, as the roots are not fibrous, only rootlets shooting off from the main tap-root. This tap-root grows to be as large as a carrot. This enormous quantity of roots permeating the ground to the depth of several feet, (56) necessarily prepares the land for increased production, the leguminous plants deriving the larger part of their suste- nance from the atmosphere, and storing it in the roots; so that, as a fertilizer, it stands deservedly high. The soil is not only fertilized to the amount of several tons per acre, but it is mellowed from the mechanical displacement of the soil and the admixture of decayed vegetable matter. As a preparation for wheat it is equal to clover, and for corn better. Besides, a large amount of the leaves is neces- sarily strewn on the ground, and they shade it effectually. The seed of Lucerne is yellow, and heavy, when good. If brown, it has received too much heat in the mow, and if light colored, it indicates that it was saved too green. And the same precautions are necessary to be observed in regard to red clover. The time of sowing is the same with the other species of clover, that is, spripg time. It should be sown in drills, and cultivated the first year, so as to keep down the weeds. It is easily smothered. It derives its name, Alfalfa, from the Chilians. It grows spontaneously all over Chili, among the Andes, as well as on the pampas of that country, and of Buenos Ay res. The French and Spanish settlements of the Southern States ad- here to it, and cultivate it in preference to all other forage plants. It would be^a good addition to the farms of West Tennessee, especially in the sandy bottoms. It would also thrive upon the alluvial bottoms of any part of the State where the sun has fair play on the ground. When properly managed, the number of cattle which can be kept in good condition on an acre of Lucerne, during the whole season, exceeds belief. It is no sooner mown than it pushes out fresh shoots, and wonderful as the growth of clover sometimes is, in a field that has been lately mown, that of Lucerne is far more rapid. Lucerne will last for many years, shooting its roots — tough and fibrous almost a those of liquorice — downwards for nourishment, till they are altogether out of reach of drought. In the dryest and (57) most sultry weather, when every blade of grass droops for want of moisture, Lucerne holds out its stem fresh and green as in the genial spring. • Although so luxuriant in France, it will not flourish in England for the want of sun. It has generally failed in the Northern States for the same reason, superadded to the cold, while in the South it is a fine, thriity plant. It has been fully tested in Georgia and Alabama, and has given univer- sal satisfaction. Horses there, it is said, require no other food when not constantly engaged in work. Five tons of good hay have been made to the acre. It is estimated that five horses may be supported during the entire year from one acre of it. It is ready for the mower a month before red clover, and springs up long before the usual pasture grasses. la saving it for hay, care must be exeroiset', as in red clover, not to expose the plant too long to the sun, as it will shrivel and dry up the leaves, and they will be lost. The time for cutting is when it is in full bloom, as in red clover. Occasionally it is attacked by an insect, when it begins to turn yellow, then it should at once be cut, as it will quickly dry up otherwise. Owing to the scarcity of seed, and the small amount cultivated, it is quite expensive, but the farmer can test it on a small quantity of land, and at the same time secure seed for future sowing. The first year it is apt -to be troubled by the presence of weeds, but these can be easily exterminated if the precaution is observed to run the mower over it before weeds go to seed. After- wards no fears need be entertained on that subject. This plant is well adapted to the use ot persons living in small towns or villages, who have a small lot they wish to devote to hay for a single horse or cow. No other kind of clover or grass will equal it in quantity, while the quality is as good as the best. On the whole, the farmers cannot do better than adopt the cultivation of this grass. It has proved, with all who (58) have tested it, worthy of all the extravagant encomiums bestowed upon it. An analysis shows the hay to contain : Flesh formers 14.4 Heating properties 22.5 Crude fibre 40.0 Fat 2.5 Ash 6.4 It will be seen that in flesh- forming constituents it sur- passes red clover by one per cent. SAINFOIN OR ESPARSETTE.— (Onobrychis Experiments have been made with this grass, and though so valuable in France as to be called sacred, it has not proved a success here. It requires two or three years to arrive at maturity, and during that time has to be watched closely, or it will be choked up with weeds or grasses. It does not yield as much hay as either red clover or lucerne, but is of a very superior kind, and is much vaunted as a good butter-making hay. It does not give cows the hoven, however much they may eat of it. Its seeds are also said to be superior to oats, and more nutritious, and are very fine for fowls, inciting them to lay. It does best on lime- stone soils, though succeeding well on gravelly or sandy land, and will stand a large amount of heat, though not much cold. It wor.ld probably suit the country further south better than Tennessee, though I have seen it growing in Stewart county, having been brought there by a Swiss family. It would probably grow on all our calcareous soils. PASTURE GRASSES. While there are over two hundred varieties of grasses cultivated in England for the use of domestic animals, in the occupied territory embraced within the United States there are not more than twenty five, although there is a much greater diversity of soils, surface configuration, climate and latitude. The grasses constituting our meadows are nearly all derived from the eastern continent, where the abundance of the rich pasture lands teem with a great va- riety of nutritious herbage. All the cereals — oats, rye, wheat and barley, are indigenous to the old world. Indian corn is the greatest and almost the only valuable cereal con- tributed by the new world to the old. The great prairies east and west of the Mississippi abound in a charming and luxuriant vegetation, but the supply of food which they afford for the herds grazing upon them, in comparison to the overwhelming quantity of worthless herbage, is very scanty. Exactly the reverse is the condition of the pastures of the eastern hemisphere, where almost every plant that springs from the surface of the earth is rich in nutritive elements. The situation of Tennessee being midway be- tween the East and the West, partakes of both sections. We have in the State many thousands of acres of wild lands, situated not only on the mountain plateau, but on the high- lands of the river lands, called with us " Barrens." These Barrens are covered with a dense growth of timber, and in some sections, where they have not been burned off, with (60) undergrowth of various kinds. Where this undergrowth has been burned off by firing the leaves in the fall and winter, the pastures are as fine as are seen anywhere, not excepting the prairies. It is true there are many species of grasses that are worthless, or that are at least of doubtful value, yet enough of them exist there to make them invalu- able to the stockgrower. In the fall of the year these grasses become tall, will turn over and form a roof or cov- ering to young grass that grows under them all the winter, and stock will paw at it until, the covering removed, they get to the young succulent shoots thus kept alive through- out our short winters. A detailed description of these wild grasses, while it might interest the student, would be out of place in a work of this kind, intended to be entirely prac- tical ; for, however much they may be used in their indi- genous situation, there is no probability of the farmer ever getting them transferred to his fields. The grasses we here treat of as pasture grasses, are alone those that will bear sowing in new situations, and to this class we will strictly adhere. For a more detailed description of the others, I refer the reader to the work sent out from this Bureau on the'" Grasses of Tennessee/7 With this explanation we will describe the subjoined. WIMBLE WHjTj.—(Muhlenbergia di/usa.) It is hardly necessary to do more than mention this grass, which forms, in many sections, the bulk of the pastures of the woods. It does not grow in fields, but in woods, where, in the fall, after rains have set in, it carpets the earth with living green. Various opinions are entertained as to its nutritive qualities. Some farmers contend that their stock are fond of it, and, on a sufficient range, cattle, horses and (61) sheep will go into the winter sleek and fat from this vigor- ous grass. Others regard it as wellnigh worthless. It freely propagates itself in all woods where the cover- ing of leaves is not so great as to exclude the r?jys of the sun from the soil. Like other grasses, it does best on good lands, and the rich,Tblack, loamy woods in many parts of the State are set with it. It is said to be an excellent butter making grass, and gives a particularly fine flavor to this article of food. It has never, to the knowledge of the writer, been sown, though, as it produces seed in a limited quantity, there is no reason why it should not be, if it is really a valuable grass. BERMUDA GRASS.— SCUTCH GRASS.— (Cynodon dactylm.) Bermuda grass is a native of the West Indies, and is the principal grass of that torrid country. It has only lately been brought into notice as a valuable pasture grass for this State. In Louisiana, Texas and the South generally, it is, and has been, the chief reliance for pasture for a long time, and the immense herds of cattle on the southern prairies subsist principally on this food. It revels on sandy soils, and has been grown extensively on the sandy hills of Vir- ginia and North and South Carolina. From the extreme vitality of its long, rhizome roots, it is very difficult to erad- icate when once it gets a good foothold. Occasionally the traveler meets with patches of Bermuda grass in the cotton fields of the South, and it is carefully avoided by the planter, any disturbance giving a new start to its vigorous roots. Some ditch around it, and others enclose it and let shrub- bery do the work of destruction. It is used extensively on the southern rivers to hold the levees and the embankments of the roads. It is the only yard grass in that section. It forms a sward so tough it is almost impossible for a plow to (62) pass through it. There is a saying in the South, " that it would take a team of six bull elephants to draw a thumb- lancet through it." It will throw its runners over a rock six feet across, and soon hide it from view ; or, it will run down the sides of the deepest gully and stop its washing. The parks of the South, set with it, present a very beau- tiful appearance if kept mown, and its pale green color acts as a great relief to the landscape when burning with the summer suns of the South. Hogs thrive upon its succulent roots, and horses and cattle upon its foliage. It has seed, but is always propagated by dropping cuttings in a furrow two or three feet apart, from the fact that the seed rarely mature, so that practically it may be said to have none. It, however, does not endure a shade, and the weeds must be mown from it the first year. In some of the worn and gullied fields of Tennessee, on her mountain sides and on the sandy hills of many parts of the State, the cultivation of this grass would be a grand improvement, making the waste places to bloom, where now only sterility reigns. During the winter it, unlike blue grass, disappears from view, but with the warming influences of the sun it springs up and affords a constant grazing through the spring, summer and autumn months. The farmers of the South, before the war, looked upon it as a curse rather than a blessing, and used every endeavor to destroy it. But a change of opinion has taken place in this respect, and it is encouraged in its growth. It would be a good grass to mix with blue grass, as, when it disappears in the winter, the blue grass and white clover will spring up to keep the ground in a constant state of verdure. It grows luxuriantly on the top of Lookout Mountain, having been set there many years ago. This mountain is 2,200 feet high, and has, as a matter of course, excessively cold winters ; so, it it thrives there, no fear need be entertained as to its capacity to endure our climate. (63) Cattle are very fond of it, and will leave clover to feed upon Bermuda. It also has the capacity to withstand any amount of heat and drought, and months that are so dry as to check the growth of blue grass, will only make the Ber- muda greener and more thrifty. The experiment of mix- ing the two grasses, spoken of above, has been tried with eminent success. It is also used in the South as meadow grass, but Ten- nessee has so many other grasses of more value, that it would not be profitable to employ this, other than as a pas- ture grass. Where it is indigenous, it has a great reputation as a fertilizer, and many fields so worn out as to be worthless, have been reclaimed by it. The labor of plowing it up is considerable, but the many improved plows of the present day would be easily dragged through it. There is a sacred grass in India called the Daub, and it is venerated by the inhabitants on account of its wonderful usefulness. This is said to be precisely the same as the Bermuda, except the changes made by the difference of climate and soil. "Bermuda grass well set, which affords the finest and most nutritious pasturage I have ever seen, will keep almost any number of sheep to the acre — three or four times as many as blue grass/' HAIRY MUSKIT--MEZQTJITE--MESQUIT— (Bouleloua cur- tipendula.) Muskit grass has come into very general use in some parts of Virginia, North Carolina, and, to some extent, in Ten- nessee, and where used, has given much satisfaction. It is the grass of the northern and western prairies, and is very nutritious. In the absence of grasses better suited to this (64) climate, the muskit might become a very popular grass, but such is not the case. Great quantities of it are annually cut and sold as prairie hay. It would be well for some enter- prising farmer to experiment with it. ANNUAL SPEAR GRASS-GOOSE GRASS— (Poo, annua.) This is one of the species of the valuable genus poa to which blue grass belongs, and is a very common grass on all our swards, and known as goose grass. It is so very like blue-grass that, to a casual observer, it would be taken for it. But the florets are not webbed, and in blue- grass the roots are creeping, while this is tufted. It is a valuable grazing grass and sows itself. It is a common pas- ture grass of the Northern States, and is highly prized. It flowers through the whole summer, unless dried up by a drought, to which it easily yields. It forms the principle grazing of the Unaka Mountains in Tennessee. According to Prof. Way, this grass is less nutritious than blue-grass when green, and more nutritious when dry. WOOD MEADOW GRASS— (Poa nemaralis.) This grass grows -in [moist, shady woods, is rank and luxuriant, and is, like the other poos, greatly relished by stock. It will thrive well in thickets and barrens, and is an early grass/.. It^has been treated of under the head of meadow grasses. (65) BLUE-GRASS— (Poa pratensis.} This is the king of pasture grasses in the Central Basin of Tennessee, and on soils suited to its growth it is useless to attempt the cultivation of any other kinds, except as auxil- iary to this. It is valuable both for summer and winter pasturage, and no farmer occupying soils suited to its growth is justifiable in being without it. It is easily started, and the seeds are readily procured, and once started, it is perennial. No amount of pasturing is sufficient to destroy it utterly, and, though eaten until no appearance of it is seen on the ground, with rest for a few days, the earth is again carpeted with its soft green foliage as luxuriantly as ever. " Whoever has blue-grass has the basis for all agricultural pros- perity, and that man, if he has not the finest horses, cattle and sheep, has no one to blame but himself. Others in other circumstances may do well, he can hardly help doing well if he will try." Its parentage is claimed by many States, and it is prob- ably indigenous to some of them, though some authors say it was introduced from Europe. Let that be as it may, it grows readily in all parts of the United States north of lati- tude 40°, and lower down on suitable soils. It flowers in earliest summer, and gives a rich pasturage, except in the driest months, all the year. It varies in size in different localities, according to soil and climate. From the unex- ampled success its cultivation has met with in Kentucky, it has acquired the name of Kentucky blue-grass. The June 5 (66) or wire grass of the North is very much like it in general appearance, but the seed stalk is flattened, and for this reason the botanical name poa compressa is given. The seeds are not so fuzzy as those of the Kentucky blue-grass. In all the middle portions of the United States it forms the principlal constituent of the turf. In some sections it has been used as a hay, and from the analynis hereunto ap- pended, it is full of all the constituents of nutrition. But it is not a success as a meadow grass, its chief excellence being exhibited as a pasture grass. It endures the frosts of win- ter better than any other grass we have, and if allowed to grow rank during the fall months, it will turn over and hide beneath its covering the most luxuriant of winter crop- pings. Many farmers pass their stock through the entire winter on it .alone, feeding only when the ground is covered with snow. As a lawn grass it stands pre-eminent among all others, its rich Paris green foliage, its uniform growth and its con- stant verdure making it beautiful both summer and winter. A farm well set in blue-grass will yield at least ten dol- lars per acre in grazing, and yet men who have farms with all the constituents necessary to produce the best of grass will persistently wear them out in cultivation from year to year, with less net receipts by far than the yield of a pasture. In the work on Wheat Culture, issued from this office, it has been shown that a large proportion of Middle and East Tennessee abounds in limestone rocks, in fact, it underlies the Basin of Middle Tennessee and forms most of the founda- tions of the Eastern mountains. The blue grass of Ken- tucky is made from soil produced by precisely the same strata of rocks seen here. Any farmer having land show- ing an outcrop of limestone with a grayish colored subsoil, may be assured he has the necessary soil. • These rocks are looked upon as a curse, yet, without their presence, we could not have the magnificent parks of blue- grass seen around. Blue-grass lauds do not exist everywhere in the United (67) States, and tha* should increase their value. They will be in demand, and that soon. The wild grasses that now are such an attraction to immigrants, on the table- lands of Ten- nessee, will ultimately be exhausted by the increase in pop- ulation, while the demand for food and every variety o? domestic animals will be proportionably augmented accord- ing to the increase of the population. Then every acre of land that will produce blue-grass will be in active demand, and will be devoted to stock raising, for which it is so well adapted, and sheep and cattle will then fleck every hillside. The fame of the Kentucky blue grass is so great that the majority of people suppose Tennessee cannot produce it so well, and they demand practical evidence of the fact. We have that very evidence here spread out before our eyes in the magnificent pastures of those who have adopted the proper management. Kentucky has famous pastures, be- cause, in the outset of her cultivation of the blue-grass, a system of management was adopted that proved a success. That system has been thoroughly tested both in Kentucky and in some counties in Tennessee, and no one has made a failure who has attempted it. Those who have put them- selves to the trouble of learning that system, and putting it in practice, have made as good grass as can be made IB Kentqcky or elsewhere. As in other crops, the quantity and quality of grass are in exact proportion to the care and management bestowed upon it, and the sod is as good, the blades as wide and long as can be seen anywhere, but this all depends on the ^kill and attention of the farmer. Some will sow a lot and then put in cattle, horses, sheep and hogs to keep it eaten to the ground throughout the year. Under such treatment the grass disappears, and such farmers con- clude their soils are not adapted to grass. Let the grass get a vigorous start, protect it from stock for the first year, and fertilize it with stable manure, or some of the super- phosphates, and be sure not to over-crowd the pasture with stock. This is the true secret of having good pastures. (68) Dr. F. H. Gordon, of Smith county, spent years in study- ing the habits of blue-grass, and finally succeeded in giving the best instructions for securing a stand : "Some seventy years ago," he says, writing in 1871, "two young men named Cunningham came from the south branch of the Potomac, in Virginia, to Strode's creek, in Bourbon county, Kentucky. They had studied and practiced the blue-grass system on the Potomac. They jointly purchased two hundred acres of land on Stroke's creek, and sowed the whole tract in timothy and blue-grass. In a few years their whole tract was covered with a luxuriant coat of grass. They had brought with them the seed, on a pack horse, all the way from Virginia. Their farm soon attracted the at- tention of their neighbors, who began to visit and learn how to manage grass. In 1835, I too went to see the Cunning- hams and many other farmers in the blue-grass region, in order to learn the system. I devoted many weeks to the study of the system — going with the best farmers over their farms and seeing their management, asking many questions and writing down their answers. Then, the Cunninghams, like many others, had grown to be wealthy on the profits of the blue- grass. One of them, Robert, then had two thousand acres in blue-grass and Isaac had three thousand. Nearly all the farmers I visited owed the luxury of their blue-grass to the direct instruction of the Cunninghams. To me it was a feast to travel over and view the fine sod of grass on the first two hundred acres which had caused the whole blue-grass region to become so beautiful, prosperous and wealthy. While learning the blue-grass system, I saw in every neighborhood that those who had studied the system closest, had the best pastures invariably. You can see in all that region of blue-grass some farms where all the lots look like gome of ours in Tennessee, which are gnawed all the year round by calves, sheep and geese. This is because the owner does not think enough about its management. He (69) does all the work and incurs all the expense necessary to make the richest pastures, and then wastes it all by bad and thoughtless management. But there are some farmers in almost every county in Tennessee who well understand the Kentucky system. Those who intend to sow grass may learn the system from them. What a scene of comfort, beauty, luxury and wealth, will this whole Middle Tennes- see present, when it shall be covered with the richest blue- grass! Such will be the future of this fine country." "Blue-grass will always pay a good profit. Every acre set in it will pay its taxes and a good profit besides. We now till too much land. We ought to till less and make more grass. Let not an acre be idle. There is our true interest. Cotton, tobacco, rice, hemp and sugar need la- borers, but grass does not. If we sow our lands in grass we can do without so much labor. The indisposition of farmers to take advantage of experience is shown in the following case, which is in point : " I know a rocky lot of about six acres which I myself sowed in 1835. During last year (1870) it afforded a profit to the present owner of full ten dollars per acre. The owner has no grass on the balance of his land, and does not intend to have any. He has lived during his whole life in sight of rich pastures of blue- grass, and knows that his whole tract will produce as good grass as those pastures, yet he will not sow grass. The reader will say that this farmer, with his six rocky acres of blue- grass, is a singular man. But he is not very singular, because hundreds of farmers here know just as well the value of blue-grass as he does, and yet they do not sow it. It is generally conceded that the lands most productive of blue grass are the calcareous soils. Lime is a natural stimulant to it, and it flourishes best where natural supplies of this salt are found. Go into a pasture that has an occa- sional out-cropping of limestone, and the sprigs of grass surrounding the rocks will be found more luxuriant than (70) anywhere else. Our lower silurian formation then, where- ever found, may be safely sown in this grass. The Basin of Middle Tennessee, and the valleys of East Tennessee, are all well suited for this grass, and I have seen some good sods in Carroll county, West Tenneesee. It also grows upon many places amongst the hills of the rivers, though not so luxuriantly as in the black loams of the silurian and devonian formations. Lime, though a great stimulant to its growth, is not an essential ingredient in the soil. Blue grass will always grow well under walnut and locust trees. We have in Middle and East Tennessee the same charac- ter of soil that exists in the blue grass country of Kentucky, and, owing to our milder climate, can produce a better winter pasturage than can be produced in the colder climate of Kentucky. Little land exists in Tennessee but what will produce this grass profitably. Select the lot to be sown, and clean off all brush, leaves, and briars. If it cannot be done with a stalk rake, use hand rakes, as the seed must come in contact with the soil. Seed sown on a bed of leaves will soon germinate, but the rootlets, being unable to burrow in the soil, will quickly parch up and die. If the land is thickly covered with trees,. it will not thrive well, therefore it is necessary the timber should be thinned out. Leave the tallest trees that are really the more valuable, taking off the low, bushy kinds that make too much shade. It is an admitted fact that blue grass does better in partial shade than where there is none. It does not endure a drought as well as some other grasses, and, consequently, some degree of shade is essential to pro- tect it from the scorching rays of midsummer. So many seasons have been recommended as the proper time of sowing, that it may be said each one, under favor- able circumstances, is a good time. One Kentucky farmer aays: "Any time in the winter, when snow is on the ground, sow broadcast from three to four quarts of seed to the acre. With the spring the seeds germinate, and are very fine and (71) delicate in the sprouts. No stock should be allowed for the first year, nor until the grass seeds in June for the first time the second year. The best plan is to turn on the stock when the seeds ripen in June. Graze off the grass, then allow the fall growth, and graze all winter, taking care never to feed the grass closely at any time." Another authority says: "Follow nature and obey her dictates. The seeds ripen in June, and are scattered by the winds and rains as soon as ripe, therefore, sow the seeds as soon as they can be gathered." This plan might be a proper one in a colder or moister climate than ours, but here it would result in the grass being often dried up by the droughts that are almost in- variable in the latter part of summer. Many sow, as stated in the above quotation, on winter snows, and that is a very good plan, but care should be ob- served to have the ground free from leaves before the snow falls. There are others who sow in the latter part of February or first of March, and this sometimes does as well as any, provided time is given for the grass to get sufficient hold to resist the withering effects of the summer's drought. The main care to be taken is to get the grass large enough to live through freezing or dry weather. It will resist the effects of frost better than heat, however, and taking this into consideration, the most approved time of sowing is in the latter part of August or first of September. If sown at this time the autumnal rains will germinate the seed, and besides, at this season there is comparatively little trash on the ground, the leaves having not yet fallen. The ground being prepared, the seeds are sown broadcast, at the rate of one bushel per acre, and the sower should be followed with a harrow, or, if the ground is very loose, with a stiff brush. This will give them a sufficient covering. It is a fact, demonstrated by actual experiment, as shown in one of the tables herein contained, that grass seeds will vegetate best at (72) a depth of one quarter of an inch. It may be supposed that, with no more covering than will be given by a harrow or brush, a great many seeds will be uncovered. This is very true, but in one pound of blue grass seeds (clean seed) there are 3,888,000 seeds. By a computation every square inch of surface contains from ten to twelve seeds. With this amount on the surface, one scarcely need fear a stand, when, if one or two take root, there will be in a year an excessively close turf. There can be but little difference of opinion in regard to the treading of stock after sowing. All writers and farmers agree, that for one year, at least, it should be kept from all stock. After that there is some difference. Dr. Gordon, who, as before stated, paid more attention to it than any one else in the State, adopted a plan of manage- ment that has been repeatedly tested, with uniform success. It was this : He sowed, either in the autumn or spring months, indis- criminately, as suited his convenience. He usually sowed with rye, wheat, or barley, if sowed in an open field, but if in a woods lot, he sowed with rye, or after a crop of millet. At any rate, the soil must be well cleaned off and broken up, as well as the nature of the land permits, then, after the grain is sown, the land is harrowed, and if possible, rolled. After this the grass seeds were sown and brushed lightly. Immediately afterward, all the cattle, horses, and sheep were turned in that could be secured. If there was not enough on his place he borrowed his neighbor's stock, and let them run on it until the ground was well packed all over the surface, and then, and not until then, were they removed. If after millet (and that is greatly recommended, as it destroys more effectively than anything else all weeds) harrow about the first of September, thoroughly, sow the seed, brush as before, and then turn on the stock. If it is desired to sow in the spring, in the latter part of February or early in March, if not practicable sooner, harrow the (73) grain field, the ground having been well prepared in the fall sowing, sow the seed and then turn stock on the whpat, rye, or barley, as the case may be. Oat land may be sown in the same way. The treading of the stock packs in the seeds and prevents the grass from drying up in the summer heats, or freezing out in frosts. Dr. Gordon considered an open, loose, porous surface to be unfavorable to the safety of the young grass, but if packed as directed, the grass will quickly spring up, get a firm hold, and the loose condition of the subsoil will favor the transmission of the roots to a good depth. The after treatment is simple, and that is to allow no stock on during the first year, but as soon as the seed stalks begin to shoot up the next year, pasture it so closely that it cannot go to seed. Dr. Gordon differs in this respect from other authors, who allow it to seed one time for purposes stated below. He would not let it seed at all. His great success in this branch of agriculture will, in every place where he is known, give weight to his authority. Others say no stock should go on it for at least two years, or at least until after the first seeding, which will take place in June of the second year. Some of the best blue grass lots in Middle Tennessee have been started by following either of the above plans. Of one thing there cannot be a doubt, and that is, the ground should not be well broken up. On the surface it should be as firmly packed as possible to secure a perfect stand, and form a perfect turf. When the surface is too loose, the grass easily dries up, and is much easier frozen out, the seeds not going into a germinating depth. Under favorable weather, seed sown in the spring on a crop of oats will do as well as fall sowing. What is meant by favorable weather is that no unusual dry weather supervenes. But there is always the risk of meeting with unfavorable weather in spring sowing, and on that account we would recommend sowing in autumn. But it is better (74) the sowing should take place as early in the fall as the weather will permit, or, indeed, the latter part of summer, if there is a proper degree of moisture in the soil. Some farmers sow a limited amount of seed daily, and over the same surface sprinkle shelled corn, then turn on their hogs. They root in search of the corn, and thus plant the seed, doing the work of plow and harrow. This, to say the least, is a slovenly plan, and though possibly securing a good stand, the ground is so roughened it can never make a beau* tiful pasture. If the land is loose as some soils are, it will answer a very good purpose to scratch up the surface well with a sharp toothed harrow, and this is especially the case where the roots of undergrowth exist to a great extent. AFTER TREATMENT. Of one fact there cannot be a doubt, and in this lies the whole secret of having remunerative pastures of blue grass, and that is, do not pasture it to death. It is true, it will stand almost unlimited grazing, but there is a point beyond which it will cease to be profitable, and that limit should never be passed. The better plan is to have the lots divided, and allow the stock on one until it is cropped down, and then, when no longer any pickings can be taken from it, do not allow the stock to continue to tread it, simply to have them on a grass lot. It will not only do the stock no good, but, by constant tramping, the grass is unable to throw up any foliage, and in time it will die, for the roots must draw some nourishment from the atmosphere, or they will perish. Allow the grass to recuperate by changing the stock from one pasture to another, and never over stock it. Grass that will keep ten oxen in growing order will fatten five oxen quickly. Stock of all kinds are constant feeders, and there should always be forage enough to enable them to get plenty to eat without the labor of hunting for it. There is much variety of opinion on the amount of stock (75) that ought to be put OD an acre. This arises from the dif- ference in the capacity of the land, some soils, being rich, dry, and porous, will stand much heavier grazing than others. It is safer to err on the safe side, and it is better to put in too few than too many. If stock are fattened quickly, they are more remunerative than when fattened slowly. Then, when one lot is sold out, they can be replaced by others. Ordinarily, two acres of good grass are requisite for one three- year- old ox, and what will fatten one ox will fatten ten head of sheep. Blue grass should be allowed to go to seed once or twice, or until the ground is well set or turfed over, and then never more. It is a grass that propagates itself by its creep- ing roots or rhizomes, and it is the disposition of all plants and animals to lose vitality in the process of reproduction. Though perennial, its vitality may be greatly lowered by the effort of reproduction, so that it may lie dormant for some time afterward, before starting again its vigorous growth. Stock should be kept out at seeding time, or be- fore, in fact, so as not to eat down the seed stalks. It sometimes happens that dry weather sets in during the summer months, and the grass becomes so dry it will burn. Still stock will greedily eat it. The grass having dried full of nourishing juices, it is equal to the best of hay, and stock will still fatten upon it unless the dried grass has been drenched with rains. The fall growth of some lots should be kept untouched by stock, and in this way a fine winter pasturage will be secured. The grass will get high enough to fall over and protect the surface foliage, and stock will keep up their flesh on it during the winter without feed. When snows fall, cattle will require to be fed, but horses, mules, and sheep will paw off the snow, unless it is too deep, and get at the grass. It is the first deciduous plant that puts forth its leaves in the spring. Good fat lambs can be sent into the market earlier than from any other grass. It makes milk (76) rich in butter, and gives the latter a fine golden color, with- out changing its taste, or, like clover, imparting its peculiar flavor to it. The following is an analysis of this grass, as compared with some other well known grasses: (Way.) FIRST. DRIED AT A TEMPERATURE OF 212°. bfi S bJO co x.s-a £»§ **'*!'& 4§Mj . 100 Parts of jg a -3 im- proved can be ascertained, during the wet season, by digging a hole in the fields and watching the height to which the water rises. In many places it will remain almost on a level nearly all winter; in others showing itself one, two or three feet below it. And this, too, on rolling lands that are supposed to be dry enough. Not only are the wet lands made dryer, but the dry lands made wetter. This is effected by the soil becoming porous, so as to better admit the mois- ture of rains and dews. It is made warmer, and conse- quently frosts will have less effect, there being less moisture to freeze on the surface. And besides, by being warmer the crops come on earlier. Our northern farmers practice almost exclusively tile draining. This is a costly mode, and if it were the only way our farmers would be frightened at once from the effort. But so thoroughly is this plan practiced, that it is no longer an experiment. Some counties in Ohio have spent the pub- (92) lie funds in digging and draining the mains, so that farmers and they compare most favorably with them. The polari- scope shows a grade of ninety-five to ninety-eight per cent., the crystals are sharp and well defined, and the cubes are perfect, and this is all that is claimed for the best Louisiana sugar. The syrup will yield about seventy to eighty-five per cent, of its bulk or weight in sugar. A ton of good cane (155) .will make one hundred pounds of sugar, and six gallons of .syrup, according to the testimony of experts. If this be so, the profits of sugar making ; re enormous, as any one can see by a small calculation. The world has never yet had a supply equal to the demand, hence its high price. But if .this business is pursued to its full capacity, the supply will stimulate a greater consumption, as any family man knows. In short, there is no danger of glutting the market. It may drive beets out of the trade, but it will always, let the supply be as great as it may, command a remunerative price. The people of the United States every year send out one hundred millions of dollars to buy foreign sweets. The effect of keeping this immense sum at home, and distribut- it among the farmers, will be felt materially. This economic view alone is a great inducement to this department to stim- ulate the production of sugar. Nor is the production of sugar and syrup confined to sorghum. Lirge quantities have been and are being made from Indian corn stalks. This department would not recommend the erection of machines lor that purpose, but where they exist, and cane is stripped of its corn for roast- ing ears in market gardens, the stalks could be utilized in this manner rather than left to dry up. It does not make so much syrup or sugar as sorghum, but it is as good. Capt. Blakeley has submitted specimens of sugar and syrup to the Merchants7 Exchange ot Minneapolis, and they speak of it in the highest terms as being equal in every respect to the sugar and syrup of commerce. It was then submitted to the polariscope, and it showed the presence of ninety-eight per cent, of sucrose, or true sugar. From repeated experiments made by the Minnesota re- finery, and by the Commissioner of Agriculture at Washing- ton, it costs about two cents to make a pound of sugar. Take the price of ten to twelve cents, its present value, and the profit is apparent. Not only does this new process add sugar to the country, (156) but pure syrup, a thing much rarer. Millions of gallons of adulterated honey are sold every year, as well as other impure syrups. By this refining process pure syrups of de- lightful flavor are made so cheaply they can undersell even the adulterations so common in all stores. The United States make 315,000,000 gallons of syrups from sorghum and Louisiana cane, while the country consumes twice that amount. It has its growth in the laboratories of the adul- terator, instead of the sugar mills of the country. It will add no little to the healthfulness of the people when this vile trade is arrested, which can only be done by making a pure syrup that will undersell the fabricated article. Sor- ghum presents the only solution to this difficulty, and it is to be hoped the time is not far distant when it will be ac- complished. It will require a large increase in the cultiva- tion of cane. If the erection of mills has the same effect in Tennessee as it had in Minnesota, the increase in the amount grown will be enormous. It will be the same here, doubtless, as there are large amounts of land devoted to products that often fail, such as cotton, tobacco, and wheat. Sorghum never fails. When it gets a start it will grow with or without care. The farmers of Minnesota grow early amber to the exclu- sion of all other varieties, and they think no other kind will succeed. But Gen. Le Due has established the fact that no material difference exists between them, one variety being as good as another. It may be well enough to try the early amber, however, and possibly the experience of Tennesseans may discover a difference. The amber is a sport or hybrid of some of the African varieties. Above is stated the difference of the various machines. Supposing that only one refinery will be established, it will be of interest to farmers to know the best process of pre- paring cane for sale to the refinery. The ordinary mill and evaporating pan only are required. Let the syrup be boiled in the pans as usual, until it is of the ordinary thick- • ( 157 ) ness. In this form it 13 salable to the refinery as well as to consumers. At an outlay of $3.000 a farmer, or a combi- nation of farmers, can sell sugar to the refinery, or to the general market, that is equal to the best coffee sugars. This is done by the addition of a "centrifugal," an iron box with gauze wire sides, that revolves with amazing rapidity iu a hollow cylinder, and it throws out every particle of fluid matter, retaining only the solid crystals of sugar. Of course, the centrifugal can only be revolved with the aid of steam. But steam is so far superior to furnaces for the evaporation of the juice of sorghum that it will be an im- provement to employ it for that purpose even if a centrifu- gal is not provided. Hon. Seth H. Kinney, of Morristown, Minnesota, proposes to sell these machines and send a man to teach their use. Another method of selling to the refinery is the " mush sugar." This is made by the use of the ordinary mill and evaporator and granulating pans. First boil the juice to a certain consistency, shown by an instrument called the saccharometer, then place the syrup in pans provided for the purpose, that shut up like a chest of drawers. It here remains for a certain time, varying from forty- eight hours to three weeks, when it is found to be in the condition that is called mush sugar, and it is then ready for the centrifugal or the refinery. It would be a good idea for several neigh- bors to pool together and provide one centrifugal for a hundred mills, as it can be run at any time throughout the winter or the succeeding year. These machines will soon appear, however, when the erec- tion of a refinery creates a demand for their services. Messrs. Stockell and Scales have kindly placed at the dis- posal of the Department of Agriculture a correspondence held with persons owning these supplemental machines, from which the following information has been gathered. The reader will notice how reticent they are about giving the (158) details of the process they employ. It is tHe fear of com- petition which influences them to this silence. W. Z. Haight, of Winnebago, writes: The early amber is the best variety for sugar making. Select sandy or gravelly land, and prepare it as for a crop of Indian corn. Sow the seed in drills four feet apart, and cultivate in the same manner as corn is cul- tivated. When the corn is twenty inches high allow it to take care of it- self, as plowing it again would cut the surface roots, and thus injure the quality of the juice. When the seeds are in the dough state begin to cut, first stripping off the leaves and cutting off the heads. Cut it off at the first and last joint. Some allow it to lie after cutting five or six days,- while others contend it is best to grind at once. I have never seen any difference, and the range gives more time to get it ground up. My syrup makes about eighty per cent, of granulated sugar. It will make good syrup when the seeds are too green to germinate, and it also makes, for me, good syrup when it has been cut and has lain seven weeks. Bat this is an extreme that should be avoided if possible. If possible to avoid it, it should never lie longer than one week. An ordinary good mill and -evaporating pan should make 20,000 gallons syrup in one season. I get my syrup worked into sugar on the shares, and my sugar will compare favorably with any sugar brought from New Orleans. Any farmer can reduce his juice to syrup, leave it in pans to granulate, and by use of a centrifugal convert it into sugar. The centrifugal is a sieve like box that revolves with great rapidity, and it throws out the molasses, leaving the sugar. There is next to no waste in the syrup, as what does not make sugar will make fine syrup. Mr. J. B. Thorns, of Crystal Lake, Illinois, writes: A ton of cane will make twenty gallons of good syrup. This syrup sells for fifty to sixty cents per gallon. Each ton of cane will make one hundred pounds of sugar and eight gallons of syrup. The machinery to work out one hundred tons per day will cost from $1,200 to $1,500. This- includes the services of a man to teach the business. Mr. C. F. Miller, of Dundas, Rice county, Minnesota, writes : Cane machinery is very expensive. First-class machinery, with vacuum pans, centrifugal, bons dust filterers, etc., etc., will co^t $10,000. This will work up a crop of two hundred acres in a season. A machine that will work up a crop of five hundred acres will cost double as much. But it can be used for refining purposes all the year. The business is more re- (159) munerative than anything I ever knew of. It will make any man of-good judgment rich in a few years He can make enough in the first season to pay all expenses, and the cost of the machinery. The amber cane is the best. It will make in this climate two hundred and fifty to three hundred gallons per acre. I have made four hundred gallons on one acre. Many other varieties are raised here, but amber is the best. The early orange comes off too late to suit us, but would make a fine successive crop with you in Tennessee. Hon. Seth H. Kiuney, of Morristown, Kice county, Minnesota, writes : About ten tons of cane is an average crop with us. The average yield is one hundred and sixty gallons per acre of good syrup, and this makes, on an average, six pounds of sugar per gallon, leaving the balance in syrup. It costs six and a half cents per gallon when made thick enough for sugar. We plant and cultivate in drills, as Indian corn is raised, rows three and a half feet apart. But I think it would be better to check it off on hills four feet apart each way. I strip the leaves off with a forke'd stick, cutting off the seed first. We prefer the amber variety. There are seventeen factories in my vicinity, each as large as mine, be- sides some smaller ones, all sprung up within the last two or three years. I have been grinding and making syrup twenty years, but have been making sugar about six years. I find it very profitable. I pay $2.80 per ton for cane. One ton makes one hundred pounds sugar and sixteen gal- lons syrup. I work at it five or six weeks. I have expended about $3,000 in perfecting my machinery. We have a good thing of it out here in Minnesota, and there is no good reason why you should not enjoy it also. It is within the reach of any man of ordinary intelligence. He can soon learn with a little showing. It is the very best agricultural pursuit we know or ever heard of. It beats wheat a long way with us, and will beat cotton with you. It is a cash business, also. It will bring in cash at all times, and never lacks a purchaser. It will pay you to send for a press and go into the business. I have made sugar now about six }ears, and each year find out something new that lessens the work and makes better sugar. The early amber is the best by all odds. I have supplied the Commissioner of Agriculture with amber seed every year for seventeen years. Last year I sold him 50,000 Ibs. of seed, besides shipping 2,400 Ibs. to Japan and 1,500 Iba. to France. It retails at fifty cents per pound, though I only got ten cents per pound. That I shipped I got eighteen cents for. The stalk of the amber is eleven to twelve feet high, and three- quarters to one inch in diamtter. This closes what is to be said on the subject. It is seen that there is a difference of opinion about the results or (160) yield, hut this arises from the difference in soil and treat- ment. But even taking a point far helow the lowest esti- mate and it will be seen that the yield is very great. The man who takes the initiative in this business will probably work without competition for a few years. In that time he will reap rich rewards, for there is no doubt of the profit- ableness of this special industry. When the matter of making sorghum sugar was first agitated, this department held aloof from recommending it to the citizens of the Stsite. lit is the policy of the Bureau to act conservatively, and to do nothing and to recommend nothing that will cause the people to lose money. The attention of this Department has been drawn to it constantly by prominent gentlemen, among them the late Col. Sam. D. Morgan, and now, by actual observation, it can conscientiously recommend the production of sugar from sorghum as a highly profitable pursuit. And such being the conclusion, there is no good reason why our citizens shall not enjoy the benefits arising therefrom. Our State is peculiarly well suited to the culture of Forghum. The seasons are long, giving a sufficiency of time to work it up, and the reward is certainly stimulating, It is the opinion of the Department that more than one re- finery should not be erected for the present, for it requires many small machines to keep one running. But there should be no limit to the others. More of the cane should be raised, and every one that raises it in sufficient quantity should provide himself with a mill and an evaporator. It would be a good idea for a number of men in each county to set up a centrifugal, and make sugar enough, at least, for home consumption. Mr. E. S. Jones, of Pulaski, Tennessee, has met with considerable success in the manufacture of sugar. Accord- ing to his experience the juice of the orange cane contains from 10° to 12° by Baume's instrument. This is from 2° to 4° sweeter than is obtained from any other variety of sor- ghum planted in Tennessee. The old varieties of sorghum (161) require from eight to ten gallons of raw juice to make one gallon of syrup, while with the early amber and early orange it only requires from five to six gallons of juice to inspissate a gallon of syrup. This is a great advantage, as no more work is required to cultivate an acre of the one than of the other. Mr. Jones thinks the older varieties of sorghum have become impared by hybridization with broom corn and other congenital plants. The sugar which Mr. Jones makes is equal to Coffee A and C, and is free from the objectionable sorghum taste. With the introduction of sorghum into Tennessee agri- culture, it does seem that the last desideratum of the farmer is supplied. With a climate the most salubrious and equa- ble, a soil the most various and comprehensive, it sends into the market, annually, grain and hay of every description. Her cattle and sheep are sent in large numbers into North- ern cities, while her mules and horses supply the teams of the South. Fruits and vegetables anticipate the gardens of the North, and now she is able to draw a plant from Africa or Asia to supply her people with an ample quantity of home made syrups and sugars. BEGGARS' LICE— (Oynoglossum Morisoni.) Although this is nothing more than a weed, and a very troublesome one when it comes in contact with sheep's wool, yet it performs a very important function in the economy of nature, as it constitutes one of the main dependencies for food in certain sections of the State for stock. During the winter months the seeds adhere to the mouths of cattle, causing their mouths to look like warty excrescences adher- ing to them. The seeds are full of gluten and starch, and deer get fat on them in the season. This weed has seeds 11 ( 162 ) covered with minute hooks, so that they cling to any body coming in contact with them, it being a provision of nature by which they are conveyed to distant points for germina- tion. It abounds in almost every section of the State, but especially on the "rim lands" in the " barrens," where it exists in the greatest abundance. Cattle are very fond of it, and it serves a useful purpose while all other food is destroyed by the cold weather. In fact, the cattle of the range keep in good thriving order on the seeds alone during the entire winter months. This weed, although it answers such a use- ful purpose as a food for both cattle and sheep, is a great pest, as the seeds render wool almost worthless, for they ad- here with so much tenacity to wool it cannot be separated from them, and no machinery has yet been invented that can remove them. We would not recommend its propaga- tion. INDEX PAGE. Alfalfa — Lucerne 55 Analysis of. 58 Annual Spear Grass 64 Beggars' Lice 161 Bermuda Grass — Scutch Grass 65 Blue Grass 65 Analysis of. 76 Clover— Alsike 52 Analysis of. 53 Clover — Crimson 54 Analysis of. 54 Clover— Red 38 Soils adapted to 39 Sowing 40 Growth and Manure 41 Nutritive value and constituent elements of 44 AiiMlysis of. 44, 45 Effects of upon soils — Manure for ;.. 45 Saving liay of 47 Saving seed of. 50 As a preparatory crop for wheat 51 "rvovor— White 83 Clover— Sipl ing Red 54 Clover— Japan, or King's Grass 84 Chinese Sugar Corn 141 History of. 142 Varietits of 144 Cultivation and harvesting of 146 Manufacture of sugar from 150 Crab, or Crop Grass 30 Dhouro Corn, Durra or Doura, Indian Millet 123 Analysis of. 127 Gama Grass.... 34 (164) Hairy Muskit — Mezquite — Mesquit 63 Meadows — Management of and manures for 88 Preparation of lands for 89 Selection of seed for and method of mixing 94 Times and manner of sowing 100 Cutting, Curing, and Storing Hay 103 Troublesome plants to Ill Manures for 110 Analysis of soils for 113 Meadow Grasses 13 Names of trustworthy varieties 13 Meadow Oat Grass 35 Meadow Fescue — Randall Grass — Evergreen Grass 79 Milletl 30 Nimble Will 60 Orchard Grass 23 Analysis of. 25 Pasture Grasses 59 Pea . 127 Polk, Hon. H. M., on the cultivation and uses of the pea 128 Bed Top— Herd's Grass 20 Rye Grass— English 27 Italian 27 Sainfoin, or Esparsette 58 Sheep's Fescue 77 Sorghum 36 Analysis of 37 Sweet-scented Vernal Grass 82 Timothy -. 13 Tall Meadow Oak Grass 80 Tall Fescue Grass 80 Wood Meadow Grass... 64 GENERAL LIBRARY UNIVERSITY OF CALIFORNIA— BERKELEY RETURN TO DESK FROM WHICH BORROWED This book is due on the last date stamped below, or on the date to which renewed. Renewed books are subject to immediate recall. fONov'55PW LD 21-100m-l,'54(1887sl6)476 UNIVERSITY OF CALIFORNIA LIBRARY