Home Vegetable Gardening
A Complete & Practical Guide To
The Planting & Care Of Vegetables, Fruits &
Berries
Part Three: Fruits &
Berries — Chapter 16: Planting, Cultivation, Filler
Crops
As the pedigree and
the quality of the stock you plant will have a
great deal to do with the success or failure of your adventure
in orcharding, even on a very small scale, it is important to
get the best trees you can, anywhere, at any price. But do not
jump to the conclusion that the most costly trees will be the
best. From reliable nurserymen, selling direct by mail, you
can get good trees at very reasonable prices.
As a
general thing you will succeed best if you have nothing to do
with the perennial "tree agent." He may represent a good firm;
you may get your trees on time; he may have a novelty as good
as the standard sorts; but you are taking three very great
chances in assuming so. But, leaving these questions aside,
there is no particular reason why you should help pay his
traveling expenses and the printing bills for his lithographs
("made from actual photographs" or "painted from nature," of
course!) when you can get the best trees
to be had, direct from the soil in which they are grown, at
the lowest prices, by ordering through the mail. Or,
better still, if the
nursery is not too far away, take half a day off and
select them in person. If you want to help the agent along
present him with the amount of his commission, but get your
trees direct from some large reliable
nursery.
Well grown nursery stock will stand
much abuse, but it will not be at all improved by it.
Do not let yours stand around in the sun and wind, waiting
until you get a chance to set it out. As soon as you get it
home from the express office, unpack it and "heel it in," in
moist, but not wet, ground; if under a shed, so much the
better. Dig out a narrow trench and pack it in as thick as it
will go, at an angle of forty-five degrees to the natural position when
growing. So stored, it will keep a long time in cold weather,
only be careful that no rats, mice, or rabbits reach
it.
Do not, however, depend upon this knowledge to the
extent of letting all your preparations for planting go until
your stock is on hand. Be ready to set it the day it arrives,
if possible.
Planting
Planting can be
done in either spring or fall. As a general rule, north of
Philadelphia and St. Louis, spring planting will be best;
south of that, fall planting. Where there is apt to be
severe freezing, "heaving," caused by the alternate freezing
and thawing; injury to the newly set roots from too severe
cold; and, in some western sections, "sun-scald" of
the bark, are three injuries which may result. If trees are
planted in the fall in cold sections, a low mound of earth,
six to twelve inches high, should be left during the winter
about each, and leveled down in the spring. If set in the
spring, where hot, dry weather is apt to follow, hey should be
thoroughly mulched with litter, straw or coarse manure, to
preserve moisture — care being taken, however, against field
mice and other rodents.
The trees may either be set
in their permanent positions as soon as bought, or grown in
"nursery rows" by the purchaser for one or two years after
being purchased. In the former case, it will be the best
policy to get the strongest, straightest two-year stock you
can find, even if they cost ten or fifteen cents apiece more
than the "mediums." The former method is the usual one, but
the latter has so many advantages that I give it the emphasis
of a separate paragraph, and urge every prospective planter to
consider it carefully.
In the first place, then, you
get your trees a little cheaper. This gain, however, is not an
important one — there are four others, each of which makes it
worth while to give the method a trial.
First, the
trees being all together, and in a convenient place, the
chances are a hundred to one that you will give them better
attention in the way of spraying, pruning and
cultivating — all extremely important in the first year's
growth.
Second, with
the year gained for extra preparation of the soil where they
are to be placed permanently, you can make conditions just
right for them to take hold at once and thrive as they could
not do otherwise.
Third, the
shock of transplanting will be much less than when they are
shipped from a distance — they will have made an additional
growth of dense, short roots and they will have become
acclimated.
Fourth, you
will not have wasted space and time with any backward black
sheep among the lot, as these should be discarded at the second planting. And then
there is one further reason, psychological perhaps, but none
the less important; you will watch these little trees,
which are largely the result of your own labor and care, when
set in their permanent positions, much more carefully than you
would those direct from the nursery. I know, both from
experience and observation, how many thrifty young trees in
the home orchard are done to an untimely death by children,
careless workmen, and other animals.
So if you
can put a twelve-month curb on your impatience, get one-year
trees and set them out in a straight row right in your
vegetable garden where they will take up very little
room. Keep them cultivated just as thoroughly as the
rest of your growing things. Melons, or beans, or almost any
low-growing
vegetable can be grown close beside them.
Let us
suppose that your trees are at hand, either direct from the
nursery or growing in the garden. You have selected, if
possible, a moist, gravelly loam on a slope or slight
elevation, where it is naturally and perfectly drained. Good
soil drainage is imperative. Coarse gravel in the bottom of
the planting hole will help out temporarily. If the
land is in clover sod, it will have the ideal preparation,
especially if you can grow a patch of potatoes or corn on it
one year, while your trees are getting further growth. In such
land the holes will not have to be prepared.
If, however, you are not
fortunate enough to be able to devote such a space to fruit
trees, and in order to have them at all must place them along
your wall or scattered through the grounds, you can still give
them an excellent start by enriching the soil in spots
beforehand, as suggested above in growing lima beans. In the
event of finding even this last way inapplicable to your land,
the following method will make success certain: Dig out holes
three to six feet in diameter (if the soil is very hard, the
larger dimension), and twelve to eighteen inches
deep.
Mix thoroughly with the excavated soil a good
wheel barrow full of the oldest, finest manure you can
get, combined with about one-fourth or one-fifth its weight of
South Carolina rock (or acid phosphate, if you cannot get the
rock). It is a good plan to compost the manure
and rock in advance, or use the rock as an absorbent in the
stable. Fill in the hole again, leaving room in the center to
set the tree without bending or cramping any
roots.
Where any of these are injured or bruised, cut
them off clean at the injured spot with a sharp knife. Shorten
any that are long and straggling about one-third to one-half
their length. Properly grown stock should not be in any such
condition.
Remember that a well planted tree
will give more fruit in the first ten years than three trees
carelessly put in. Get the tree so that it will be
one to three inches deeper in the soil than when growing in
the nursery. Work the soil in firmly about the roots with the
fingers or a blunt wooden "tamper"; do not be afraid to use
your feet. When the roots are well covered, firm the tree in
by putting all your weight upon the soil around it.
See
that it is planted straight, and if the "whip," or small
trunk, is not straight stake it, and tie it with rye straw,
raffia or strips of old cloth-never string or wire. If the
soil is very dry, water the root copiously while planting
until the soil is about half filled in, never on the surface,
as that is likely to cause a crust to form and keep out the
air so necessary to healthy growth.
Prune back the "leader" of
the tree-the top above the first lateral branches, about
one-half. Peach trees should be cut back more
severely. Further information in regard to pruning,
and the different needs of the various fruits in regard to
this important matter, will be given in the next chapter.
Setting
Standard apple trees, fully
grown, will require thirty to forty-five feet of space between
them each way. It takes, however, ten or twelve years after
the trees are set before all of this space is needed. A system
of "fillers," or inter-planting, has come into use as a result
of this, which will give at least one hundred per
cent, more fruit for the first ten years. Small-growing
standards, standard varieties on dwarf stock, and also
peaches, are used for this purpose in commercial orchards. But
the principle may be applied with equally good results to the
home orchard, or even to the planting of a few scattered
trees.
The standard dwarfs
give good satisfaction as permanent fillers. Where
space is very limited, or the fruit must go into the garden,
they may be used in place of the standard sorts altogether.
The dwarf trees are, as a rule, not so long-lived as the
standards, and to do their best, need more care in fertilizing
and manuring; but the fruit is just as good; just as much, or
more, can be grown on the same area; and the trees come into
bearing two to three years sooner. They cost less to begin
with and are also easier to care for, in spraying and pruning
and in picking the fruit.
Cultivation
The home orchard, to give the
very finest quality of fruit, must be given careful and
thorough cultivation. In the case of scattered trees,
where it is not practicable to use a horse, this can be given
by working a space four to six feet wide about each tree.
Every spring the soil should be loosened up, with the
cultivator or fork, as the case may be, and kept stirred
during the early part of the summer. Unless the soil is rich,
a fertilizer, high in potassium and not too high in nitrogen,
should be given in the spring.
Manure and phosphate rock, as
suggested above, is as good as any. In case the foliage is not
a deep healthy green, apply a few handfuls of nitrate of soda,
working it into the soil just before a rain, around each
tree.
About August 1st the
cultivation should be discontinued, and some "cover crop"
sown. Buckwheat and crimson clover is a good combination; as
the former makes a rapid growth it will form, if rolled down
just as the apples are ripening, a soft cushion upon which the
windfalls may drop without injury, and will furnish enough
protection to the crimson clover to carry it through most
winters, even in cold climates.
In addition to the filler
crops, where the ground is to be cultivated by
tractor, potatoes may be grown between the rows of
trees; or fine hills of melons or squash may be grown
around scattered trees, thus, incidentally, saving a great
deal of space in the vegetable garden.
Or why not grow a few extra fancy strawberries in the well
cultivated spots about these trees? Neither they nor the trees
want the ground too rich, especially in nitrogen, and
conditions suiting the one would be just right for the
others.
It may seem to the beginner
that fruit-growing, with all these things to keep in mind, is
a difficult task. But it is not. I think I am perfectly safe
in saying that the rewards from nothing else he can plant
and care for are as certain, and surely none are more
satisfactory. If you cannot persuade yourself to try
fruit on any larger plan, at least order half a dozen dwarf
trees (they will cost about twenty cents apiece, and
can be had by mail). They will prove about the best paying
investment you ever made.
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