THE PROGRESSIVE FARMER Tuesday, November 17, FERTILIZERS AITD CROP PRO- DUCTIOIT. acid solvents, has found the soil to be well supplied with all theplant food needed, but the crop failed to Another Discussion of the Recent Agri- I make these available when only the cultural Department Bulletin We natural solvents of the atmosphere - Give Too Much Attention to Fertil- were available. A careful considera- izing and Too Little to Tillage. tion of all the work done in the past TTio PrnrrrPssJvA "Farmer has al- in advising and aiding farmers in the readv nublished lensrthy extracts work of crop production ana practi from the recently issued Farmers' cal application of these, has led to Bulletin, "The Chemistry of the Soil the conclusion that other factors as Eelated to Crop Production," and were at wor determining tne crop w havfi also published the comments productive capacity oi iana xnan of Dr. Henry Wallace; but the sub- hitherto deemed conciusive, and with - j j j jt a. a iect is so much importance and the a view xo enaeavor xo nnu oux wuui, . - i . bulletin so effectively rebukes the these were, a great series of expen- f fertilizer craze from which the South ments has been conducted by the has suffered so much that we are Bureau of Soils of the Department glad to reprint herewith the views of of Agriculture, under the direction mil- Virfnrfia contemnorarv. the of xrois. vvnitney and Cameron. v v. q sr Southern Planter. The following editorial appears in its November number : T?rvT -mrt-rck TOHTQ TlQTI WP ORT TP f! fill . i bulletin we regard as one of the most agricultural writers, scientific au- i , AJ?x thorities and practical farmers have "The result of these, so far as they have proceeded, has beengiven to the world in a bulletin just issued by the Department of Agriculture. This valuable ever published. After giv ing the results of the chemical exam ination of the natural moisture con tent, the true plant feeding constitu ent of all crops, of hundreds of sam ples of soil taken from typical soils in various parts of this country and abroad, the authors of the bulletin say that the analyses show 'that there are no wide variations in the amounts of plant food material going into so lution where these various soils, so different in their other characterise tics, are acted on by a definite pro portion of water for a short but definite length of time: in other words, all types of soils furnish about the same amount of plant food when treated with the same propor tion of water, othp.r conditions as first began to realize that their lands temperature, etc., being also m tne old country needed neip, xney . been engaged in discussion of the problems affecting crop production and the discussion still proceeds even more vigorously than ever before. With the spread of scientific educa tion and the realization that if farm ing is to be made profitable it must be conducted on scientific principles, thousands who were formerly con tent to follow in the footsteps of 4 111 CIA lailltlO IA.UVA AV UUOUlUlViJ sary to give heed to the teachings of the expert scientists as to how and with what to feed their crops and ' iliri Vio?i lo-nrJa HPVi n A I flRnl txr they experience in- doing this is to - know what teaching to follow. 'In the early days when farmers were advised by Jethro Tull that 'cul " tivation was the fertilizer they need ea. Jtiany accepted me advice ana profited by it. Then investigation by scientific chemists having demon strated that the food plants needed was nitrogen, phospofic acid and pot ash in an available form, Peruvian " 'The conclusion seems inevitable that all our principal soil types, in fact, all cultivable soils, contain naturally a nutrient solution which varies within comparatively narrow limits with regard either to composi tion or concentration, and which is usuallv sufficient for nlant errowth. guano to supply the nitrogen, the Apparently, therefore, all these soils German potash salts to supply the i sunnlied with the neces . potash, and superphosphate to supply ao TY1:T,0,0i sAa nA plant foods are not in themselves a the reach of farmers, and were found mflti nf anr, TMITI1Tnft11T1t imnor i . i to give good results. tflT1ft tn fha flfrT:mii for their 'Experience, in the use of these J supply as regards the plant is deter- fertilizers ha3, however, demonstrat- mined by the supply of soil moisture ed the truth that to secure continued which the crop can obtain from the good results their use must, when J soil once applied, be continued, and even " 'The chemical analysis of a soil then their action is very uncertain, can not in itself, therefore, throw One year they give excellent returns, much light upon the problem of fer whilst in another year, and on the tility, but .when attempting to con- same crop, no results can be seen, trol the factors governing crop yield, On one piece of land- they will tell atention must be directed to the me- immediately, whilst upon another chanical condition of the soil as af their action will be inappreciable, fecting the supply of soil moisture These results led to the conclusion with its dissolved mineral nutrients, that what was needed was a chemical' to the effects of climate, to rotation, o-naWeia ri-f Vi P soil in nrrlo-r o r1ofoi. I 1 uuui uu w-- vw "V ti I CtVJ. mine what were the plant food con stituents lacking therein in order that these might be supplied. "Experience, however, with this laboratory analysis of soils, has not and temperature the authors of the given such results as to warrant con- Bulletin . say that 'the effect of cli- fidence in its use. Too often the mate is very marked, that cultivation chemist, by means of his powerful changes the climatic conditions of "In discussing the effect of climate on the yield of the crop climate in this conection being un derstood as 'to its effect on the soil ence, the soil: that is, it changes the rela tion of the soil to moisture, and probably also to temperature. , It al so changes the character of the at mosphere coming in contact with the root system. We know that stable manure and lime, for example, have a marked influence upon the texture, of the soil, and therefore indirectly upon the climatic conditions It seems possible that other fertilizer materials .may produce effects of a similiar character. If fertilizers have any influence upon the texture of the soil or upon the movement of soil moisture, they will not only in fluence thex supply of water which will be delivered to the plant,Jbut al so the supply of nutrient materials normally contained in this water. "'The important practical infer- if this is so, is that fertilizers have, to a certain extent, the same effect as cultivation and cropping, but it is undoubtedly better to de pend upon efficient methods of culti vation and cropping than to rely up on fertilizers, while at the same time neglecting to give proper attention to the physical condition of the soil. The effect due to cultivation is also more permanent than the effect due to fertilizers. " 'Furthermore.the influence of fer tilizers on the yield of crops is not proportional to the-amount of ferti lizer added, as it frequently happens that a small application is quite as efficient as a larger application. Discussing the effects of commercial fertilizers on the yield of crops, the authors remark that where the an nual application of the fertilizer has been discontinued, the effect is at once apparent in the smaller yield of crops. In other words, on a soil which has a natural capacity for 13 or 15 bushels of wheat, as the Ro thampstead soils in England seem to have where wheat is grown continu ously and fertilizers have not been used for fifty years, the application of certain fertilizers has increased the -'yield to thirty bushels to the acre, but to maintain that' yield a constant annual application of ferti lizer has to be given and subse quent applications merely maintain, but do not increase the yield. It is recognized that in' our own soils, when under intensive cultivation, as in the truck and tobacco areas, large applications- of manure and fertili zers are often used amounting to from two to five car-loads of manure and 2,000 or 3,000 pounds per acre of the f ertilizersy the maximum effect of these is quickly obtained, and these yields can only be maintained by continued large applications. " 'The results obtained in the ex periment by the Bureau of Soils go to show that these large annual ap plications of stable manure or of high-grade fertilizers do not appar ently change permanently the chemi cal composition of the soil as deter mined by chemical analysis of the water extracts, that is to say, im mediately after the application the influence of the fertilizer can be seen in the soluble salt content of the soil, but not only is this comparatively slight, but fields that have been an nually treated in this way for a num- Der oi years do not show on the av erage appreciably more water ble plant food than adjoining upon which no such applications nave ever oeen made The Bulletin discusses the influence of the texture of the soil of rotation, and variety of the plant, on the yield of crons also the action and use of commerci al fertilizers and their infhiencp nn the fertility of the soil. These sub jects, we will take up in a subsequent article, together with the conclusion to be drawn from the experiments. The point we will now emphasup is, that the position we have taken up and enforced in our writing for years, that this physical and me chanical condition of a soil is 0f more influence and importance in the yield of the crop than the applica tion of ny fertilizer, is more than sustained by the evidence accumu lated in the Bulletin." Value of Spraying. W. P. Corza, an assistant pomolo gist of the Department of Agricul ture, devotes most of his attention to apples. Speaking of his personal ex perieence and observation in spray ing this fruit, in a conversation with the Washington correspondent of The Progressive Farmer, Mr. Corza said: "I bought a farm some thirty years ago in Sussex County, Delaware. It had an orchard of 250 trees. I found that they were all Northern apples, quite out of place in their semi Southern home. Thereupon I top grafted them, but I then found that the fruit, although it set well, was every year infested with insects. The first year that the new grafts bore, I got not a single perfect apple. They commenced dropping when the size of a walnut, stung and disfigured by the larvae of the cooling nibth. We tried picking up the drops two or three times a week and boiling them to kill theworms, then feeding them to the pigs. But this did not do. The entire country swarmed with the pests my own orchard and those of all my neighbors. Not much was then known about spraying, but I fixed up a kerosene barrel, with a spraying pump and hose, at a cost of about $5. With this I sprayed my apple trees thoroughly with pans green, and also loaned the pump to all my neighbors, as I wanted them too to get rid of the moths. I did not know anything then about com bining naris preen and bordeaux I mixture, and thus killing the insects and fungus spores at the same spray ing. We had trouble with the brown cedar rust, but overcame this largely by cutting down all the cedars around and working up a sentiment amon? the neighbors against them. Tms cedar rust works over from t&e xedars to the apple leaves, wintering on the cedar f oilage. "If every farmer who has even few trees would spray them he wou: realize enough profit from it to mor than pay for his outfit the first year but if he has any number ol w he is wasting money by fJ this most important item oi w culture."