. Corn; growing, judging, breeding, feeding, marketing;. Corn. WEEDING 181 washing, harrowing will necessarily follow immediately after culti- vating the newly planted field. When the plants are three inches in height they can be safely harrowed. Farmers on a loamy soil report harrowing corn six and eight inches high without apparent damage. The kind of harrow is important. The teeth of the harrow should be set to slant slightly backwards. Rigid teeth tear too deeply. When raised above the surface, the harrow frame does not drag trash. A light harrow is preferable to the heavier WEEDER.


. Corn; growing, judging, breeding, feeding, marketing;. Corn. WEEDING 181 washing, harrowing will necessarily follow immediately after culti- vating the newly planted field. When the plants are three inches in height they can be safely harrowed. Farmers on a loamy soil report harrowing corn six and eight inches high without apparent damage. The kind of harrow is important. The teeth of the harrow should be set to slant slightly backwards. Rigid teeth tear too deeply. When raised above the surface, the harrow frame does not drag trash. A light harrow is preferable to the heavier WEEDER. This is used when the weeds are small and the ground is in good condition. The weeder, though little used in the corn belt, destroys fine grass in corn where the ground is mellow and the surface free from trash. Much younger corn can be cultivated with a weeder than with the harrow or cultivator. As the weeder is of light weight, a boy with two horses can weed a large area in a short time. (7). Please note that these images are extracted from scanned page images that may have been digitally enhanced for readability - coloration and appearance of these illustrations may not perfectly resemble the original Bowman, Melville Le Roy, 1881- [from old catalog]. Waterloo, Iowa, Sold by Waterloo publishing co.


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Keywords: ., bo, bookcentury1900, bookdecade1910, booksubjectcorn, bookyear1915