HOME AND FARM MAGAZINE SECTION Among the Orchards of the Northwest A Page of Interesting Advice and Information About Fruits, Large and Small. $$$3$&3$3$$ To get best results from berry fields it is necessary to train tho plants to some sort of trellis for the support of the canes. The kind of troll i 3 to use and the mothod of training depend upon the kind of berries and their habit of growth. Bed rasp berries and high-bush black berries whose habit of growth is 0 . upright are usually trained on a different sort of trellis from trailers such 'as Loganberries and Evergreen blackberries. Mr. Stahl, the writer of this article, is horticulturist' at the Washington State Experiment Station. 3 BY J. L. STAHL. THERE are several methods or sys tems of training red raspberries, now in use, some of which are ex cellent while others are not so desirable. System A. Many berry growers use & trellis made or two JNo. 11 wires strung horizontally on cross pieces made of 2x4 8. The cross pieces are usually 12 to 16 inches in length and nailed to upright posts at a height of about four and a half feet. Seven-foot posts are used and set about two feet in the ground and thirty to forty feet apart. The canes are kept between the wiros and out of the way during cultivation, but the old and new canes are not sepa rated. With this system of training the new canes are often in the way during harvesting and are sometimes badly in jured by the pickers. System B. Another method of train ing usus a double trellis having two eross pieces and four wires. One pair of these wires are placed at a height of two feet, and the other pair . at a height of four and half feet from the ground. With this system the old or bearing canes are bent over and held firm by weaving them to the wires on one side and the new shoots are allowed to grow upright between the pairs of wires and out of the way of the bearing canes. The posts and cross pieces of the trellis are very similar to those of the preceding system. Growers using this method of training are very much pleased with it and claim the fruit is easily picked and the new canes very Beidom disturbed or injured at harvest . time. System C. Some growers instead of having either a single or double trellis of horizontal wires and cross pieces have but one wire from post to post on -which the bearing canes are fastened. It is usually stretched between four and five feet in height.. The canes are some times woven to the wire but quite often are bent over and tied. The new canes are allowed to grow erect and shortly before harvest time they are tied to a temporary wire. Old French Method. Any of the systems so far mentioned can be used in fields having rows set seven feet apart. System D. A plan of training very much like the old French method has been tried by some growers and is be ing adopted in a number of newly t fields. The tows are set north and south, ci'it !ct apart, and trellis placed about a foot to the taul of each row. Tho tivllU is made by ustftg eight foot posts Ion inehes to a foot in diameter. Tiny are set tbreo fe-t in the grouud about fifty feot apart. Posta seven feet iu length may be suiwtiUitod but they must be set elowr. A wire is sretcbed from post to post, thrue foot from the ground, and on tho side of the posts ut-iirost the plaats. The beariug canos are drawn over to tlw wire and sucurely tied with string. On the oppo site side of aoh post and ton or frwelf inches higher another wire is stretched. The bearing ones hung ovvr this wire but aro not tied td it. As tbs fruit is developed the caws gradually droop un til they rest m the upper wiro. Thoy aro thus supported and can oe easily pushed to one sido withont injury as tho fruit in picked. All of the picking is done from the east side of the row and the new canes are not disturbed. The no' or young canes grow erect and are held in place by stretching a temporary wire on the west side of them and a few inches below the lower wire of the trellis ti which the bearing canes are tied. Stretching of the temporary wire may be done any time' after the young canes are three or four feet in height and before harvest. With this system of training the pickers are in the shade of tho plants most of the day. Cultivat ing is made no harder than with other systems and the canes are given every opportunity for development. : 1 - System E Given. ; ':v '; . . System E. A few growers who do not care for early berries are adopting the following, system.' Posts are ..set -and cross pieces attached as in. system A, but at a height of five feet. The cross pieces are of one-inch boards six inches in width and about sixteen inches, in length. ; ' .' .-. 4 ; Instead of stapling the wires to the cross pieces, holes are bored about two inches from the ends and three inches from the top of each board. Through these holes the wires are drawn. - About two inches above and an inch nearer each end of the board other boles .are made for two more wires. ' A notch is made to the. top holes with a saw so that wiros can be easily pushed into the holes from the .top of the board. The top wires are strung loosely until the canes are in place. The fruiting canes of each hill aro divided; half are placed outside of the lower wire on one side and half the same way on the other side. The upper wire is then drawn tight and the canes held securely in position with no tying. There is a space of twelve inches be tween each lower wire in which the young canes are allowed to develop. Tn this way the young canes are not in jured during harvesting and do not in terfere with the fruiting canes;- Pick ing is done from both sides of the row; This svntem makes harvesting easy and the foliage dries quickly after a rain. The frniting canes are usually cut back to a height of six feet, making the fruiting season a little later than when some of the other systems of training are used. High-Bush Blackberries. ? ' The high-bush blackberry is some times set in hills six feet apart each way, but more often the plants are set in rows seven or eight feot apart and about three feet apart between indi vidual plants. The method of trainin? is vpry similar to System A described for training red raspberries. When the fruits are patrially developed, the fruit-1 ing shoots are drawn to the outsido of i the trellis,' where they 'hang in easy reach of the pickers, '-''! System F. "Most of the trailer black- berries, such as Evergreen, pre mi?-'! ported by a double trellis quite like tbatf used, in- System B for Ted raspberries, but the posts are set closer and crow pieces of wood or wire connect each pair of wires. The posts are usually set sixteen to twenty- four feet apart and the cross strips on the wires are at intervals of twenty-four or tbirtv l-ncW. The lower pair of . wires sup ports the young canes as they aro de veloped and the upir trellis bold the hearing canes. The cross strips or slats on each pair of wires are usually made of wood. They are held to the wires by notches in the wood or by stapling one end of ths strip to one wire and driving a Bhingle nail in the other end in such a manner that it hooks over the other wire. The strips can thns easirv be removed when the eanes are cut out or raised. The eanes are trained sorpn t.in fashion above and below the cross strips and held firmly to tnetrellis. After the bearing eanes have produced a crop they are eut out and the young eanes raised in their place. Loganberries. System 0. A few growers train tha young eanes at a height of five feet six inches and the bearing eanes below at a height of forty inches. They like this method better than the preceding one. With both ByBtems the eanes may all be trained in the same direction but usually half of the bearing eanes in each hill and half of tne yoang eanes are trained in opposite directions. Tn general the systems for training Loganberries are the same aa fox Ever greens. , Some of the growers instead of train ing the canes on a double trellis have three wires, one above the other, and about eighteen or twenty inches apart. Th bearing canes are curled, snail fash ion; over one wire and under the next instead of serpentine fashion above and below cross strips. The young eanes are allowed to remain on the ground under neath the-trellis unt.il the bearing canes have been removed and then are trained to take their place." t With this plan the plants may be set closer in the rows than with other sys tems of training. The first railroad in Prussia to uss electric traction on a large scale ob tained much of its equipment from the United States. He Who Saves f 3. SO each month gets S '600.00 ' .' . ..;..-.'. 7.50. each month. gets .'. 1,000.00 14.00 each month gets 2,000.00 21.00 each month, gets 3,000.00 ..... i . . . ... t -v . Larger or Smaller. Sums in the Same Proportion. WHITE FOB BOOKLET WHICH TELLS HOW IT IS DONE. You Incur No ' Obligation. CHAS. E. IjAI)T), Pres. THEO. B. WILCOX, Vice-Prei. .: EDW. COOKINOHAM, Vice-Pres. yp. McKEBCHEB, See'ry. . EQUITABLE SAVINGS AND LOAN ASSOCIATION 240-242 Stark Street.' Portland, Oregon. The opportunity of the year, and of the splendid era that is opening in Seattle's prosperity! 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