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How to Prosper in Boll Weevil Territory
by: G. H. Alford
Description:
Excerpt
In order to obtain profitable returns from farming in boll weevil territory, we mustâFirst, grow an early crop of cotton; second, use every means possible to destroy the weevil and reduce their number to a minimum; third, follow a system of diversified farming.
Grow an Early Variety of Cotton: To secure maximum cotton crops in spite of the boll weevil pest, the cotton grower must use every effort to bring the crop to maturity just as early in the season as possible. An early crop means profitâa late crop goes to the weevil, not to the farmer. If we are to succeed in growing cotton under boll weevil conditions we mustâ
1. Reduce the cotton acreage so that the most effective cultural methods may be closely followed. It is often advisable to reduce the acreage 50 per cent.
2. Plant only warm, fertile, well-drained land.
3. Thoroughly prepare the seed bed before planting. Young cotton plants do not grow well in cloddy ground.
Boll Weevil; enlarged above; natural size below
4. Make heavy applications of commercial fertilizer where the soil responds to such treatment, for it will hasten maturity and increase the yield.
5. Plant early, rapid-fruiting, prolific cotton seed.
6. Plant the seed as early as the season will permit, in rows just about as wide apart as the cotton usually grows tall in the average season.
7. Commence to cultivate the young cotton just as soon as possible, and do not permit a crust to form or the field to become grassy.
Reduce the Cotton Acreage: In many sections of the country, intensive farmingâsmaller farms and more thorough cultivationâis being profitably practiced. In boll weevil territory, we would likewise advocate âintensiveâ cotton growingâsmaller acreage to cotton with more thorough cultivationâas a good step toward securing early and profitable cotton crops. For instance, many farmers in the boll weevil territory are now producing as much cotton on five acres by following proper methods as they formerly produced on ten acres, thus leaving half of their land to produce some other crop.
Plant on Fertile Soil: This is one of the necessities in order to produce an early cotton crop. The land must be well-drained so that it will warm up early in the spring and retain the heat. It must contain plenty of humus or vegetable matter to prevent packing. Plenty of vegetable matter also increases the water-holding capacity of the soil, thus reducing the loss due to the droughts that may occur in summer. Where the soil has not enough humus and therefore will not hold a sufficient amount of water, the cotton crop will stop growing and putting on squares during a long drought, and will shed the squares and many of the small bolls already on the stalks.
At left of each pair is a boll weevil.
The weevils at the right are weevils often mistaken for boll weevils.
The soil may be kept in the proper condition of fertility for cotton by practicing a suitable rotation of crops, including legumes, and by turning under the corn stalks, the oat and pea stubble, and the grass.
Thoroughly Prepare the Soil: The soil should be plowed deep for the following reasons: First, to increase the water-holding capacity; second, to let the water escape from the surface without running over the ground and washing it off; third, to permit the air to circulate freely for a considerable depth in the soil; fourth, to secure crops against droughts by enabling the cotton roots to go down to moisture; fifth, to increase the area from which plant roots may obtain food....