. Cranberry culture. Cranberries. CRAXBEPvKY CULTURE. and then turfed. For cutting the turf in strips to prepare it for the hoe, an ordinary cleaver may be used ; or, to ac- complish the work more expeditiously, use a tool (fig. 15) made in the following manner; viz: fix a stout, sharp coulter m a benm, with handles and clevis attached: and let it be drawn through the turf by a horse, the length of the blade being properly adjusted to cut to the required depth. Some prefer the coulter to mcline backward, that it may slide over large roots, but when in that position, the ten- dency is to raise


. Cranberry culture. Cranberries. CRAXBEPvKY CULTURE. and then turfed. For cutting the turf in strips to prepare it for the hoe, an ordinary cleaver may be used ; or, to ac- complish the work more expeditiously, use a tool (fig. 15) made in the following manner; viz: fix a stout, sharp coulter m a benm, with handles and clevis attached: and let it be drawn through the turf by a horse, the length of the blade being properly adjusted to cut to the required depth. Some prefer the coulter to mcline backward, that it may slide over large roots, but when in that position, the ten- dency is to raise out, and it requires considerable pi'essure to keep it to its work. In order to dispose of the turf after being separated from the soil, we have sometimes heaped up and burned. Fig. 15.—TUKF CUTTER. that grown on the lower portions of the meadow; on the higher parts, the turf generally contains too much sruid to burn freely. The ground may be cleared n:iore cheaply iu^this way, but the effect of ashes upon the soil is to pro- duce a growth of Tree-moss (Polytrlrhum commune)^ which, wdien abundant, is a serious injury to the vines, in that it keeps the runners lifted above the ground, and prevents them from rooting. Upon spots where heaps of turf have been burned, moss frequently comes in, even after plowing ; but if the ashes are snread on the surface, and plowed under, no injury wdll result from them. Ashes have also a fertilizing effect upon the cranberry vines; this fact induced us to spread them, several years ago, upon the surface of a sandy knoll, where the vines. 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 White, Joseph J. [from old catalog]. New York, O. Judd co.


Size: 2382px × 1049px
Photo credit: © The Book Worm / Alamy / Afripics
License: Licensed
Model Released: No

Keywords: ., bookcentury1800, bookdecade1880, bookpublishernewyo, bookyear1885