HOME AND FARM MAGAZINE SECTION 5 Growing of S33KS$4i$$ . ' The following instructive arti- ' cle on berry growing, by W. S. Thornber, Horticulturist, Wash- $ ington Agricultural Experiment $ Station, Pullman, Washington, $ was published some time ago, but $ not generally circulated. The $ $ Farm Magazine Section prints it $ by requeBt, HE SOIL, temperature and genoral conditions of many parts of the State of Washington are admirably adapted to the commercial growing of practically all kinds of Bmall frqit. This is particularly true of raspberries, black berries and loganberries. Several locali ties west of the Cascade mountains have already become famous as berry grow ing districts. Probably nowhore in tho One Way of Handling Twelve-Foot Canes of Red Soapberries. TJnitod State do these fruits grow to a signer degree of perfection than in these districts. With the opening np of large tracts, of ' la ad for orchard purposes comes the demand for an early yielding, liighly profitable crop that eaa be grown among the trees without dangor of in juring them, and so for this reason large acreages of these plants are annnafly be ing planted in many parts of the slate. Soils Preferred. "While raspberries and blackberries are more or less cosmopolitan as to their likes and dislikes of soil, yet they prefer deep, rich, moist (but not wet), sandy loam, abundantly supplied with humus and nitrogen plant foods. However, they can bo snoeosefully grown on basaltic and volcanic ashy soili after humus has been added, provided there is sufficient moisture during the growing and fruit- ins season. Some of tha soils of the irri gated sections of the state are not adapt ed to these fruits until on or more crops of green manure have been plowed nmler. One of the essential features of a good berry soil is thorough drainage, not only during tho growing season, but also dur ing tho winter months. Soil that bo comes saturated with water and so ro mainB for even a short time is not adapt ed to berry culture, and should not be used until artificial drainngo nas Dccn provided. Much trouble from root rot and root fungus can be avoided-by pro viding good drainage. Tho factor of air drainage should also be Considered in the making of A berry plantation. Good air drainage minimizes the danger ol late Best Form of Support for Wine-Producing Sort of Grapes. ' spring frosts and materially lessens the injuries caused by sotne of .our plant diseases. Thorough Tillage Necessary. Nothing can take the placo of good, thorough tillage in the berry patch. A heavy mulch may keep down tho weeds and hold the moisture, but it does not liberate plant food like cultivation. Tho spring cultivation should start as soon as tho soil is dry enough to be worked, and should be deep enough to loosen up the soil, yet not so deep as to injure the feeding roots of the plants. Tho sum mer tillage should be shallow, but fre quent, and continue regularly until the crop is safely harvested, and afterwards only frequent enough to maintain J Blackberries and Raspberries growth and keep the suckers and weeds down. The perishable nature of berries make them one of the most difficult fruit crops to market that is eommonly grown. However, if they are picked just sb they are turning red, taken at once to the packing or cooling shed and handled with reasonable care thoy will be in their prime in from twelve to twenty four hours. Berries picked in the morn ing ship better than those picked in the heat of tho day, and under no circum stances should fruit be picked when the leaves of tho plants are wet with dew or rain. Where berries are not grown in suffi cient quantities to warrant the use of refrigerator ears, the Pony refrigerator nhould be used. Overripe fruit should be consigned to the cannery, and never be permitted to be sont to any distant mar kets. How to Get Beet Results. The difference in the growth of va rieties makes it necessary to use differ ent plans to get the best results for all varieties. For the convenience of this discussion I group all of these fruits into two classe?, l. c.: "Upright growers, ' or such plants as produce erect canes, and "viny growers," or such plants as the Logan and Phenomenal berries, and Evergreen, Himalaya Giant and Early Mammoth blackberries, which produca long prostrate vines or canes. The two general planting plans: "hill" and "continuous row" systems are about equally used in the eommer cial fields of the state. Each has ad vantages as well as disadvantages, and if not crowded either will give good results. The hill (system affords tha best opportunities for cultivation, air drainage, sunlight on all sides of the plants and ease of harvesting the crop, while tho continuous row system per mits the planting of more plants per acre without serious crowding. The "upright growers" may be Good Way to Support the Canes of Small Fruits In Windy Localities. profitably planted according to either system, but "viny growers" must be grown in hills or they becomo a flense hedgo, making satisfactory harvesting an impossibility. A Common Fault. The one common fault of practically all amateur fruit growers is the over planting of their land. The fertility of the soil, annual rainfall or irrigation, and variety materially govern the dis tance apart plants should be planted. On the rich moist soils of Western Washington, where heavy growth is a certainty, or dry soils of Eastern Wash ington, where the conservation or Me moisture must be practiced, the "up right growers" should bo planted not closer than six feet apart each ray in the hill system, or three by eight in tho "continuous row" system. In irrigated sections, where moisture can be supplied at will, the plants may be planted closer. However, it is not advis able, since what may bo gained in addi tional number of crates per acre :s fre quently lost by the grade or quality of tho fruit. On similar soils the "viny growers" should be planted in rows eight feet rpart, and tho plants from sixtoen to twenty-four feet opart in the row, using tho alternate system, and thereby affording a greater feeding area for the roots of each plant Staking Vines. The "upright growers," where plant ed in bills, can best be staked by a single strong stake, from four to sis feet in height, and the canos loossly, but very securely, fastened to tho stake. Somo growers prefer to set two stakes about fifteen inches apart at each hill of blackberries with the idea of train ing the fruiting canes on one and ,he growing canes on tho other. Where th "upright growers'' are planted in a continuous row thoy may bo trained to and supported by a two-wire trellis, MT7T eonsisting of a single row of posts four to five feet high with a single No. 10 wire stapled to the top, and anothsr from eighteen to twenty-four inches from the top. The mora common meth od, however, is to set a single. line of posts four or five feet high in the row, nail an eighleen-inch cross-arm three feet from tho ground and another at the top of the posts, and to the ends of these arms staple heavy wires, thus forming firm lateral supports for the canes. Tho Trellis Sapport. The four-wire trellis, with the addi tion of notched cross pieces to lay on the lower wires, makes an excellent support for the "viny growers," the purpose being to suspend the growing canes by means of small cloth strings an easy system to work and keeps the growing and fruiting eanes separate, thereby simplifying the picking In sections where there is aangpr oi winter injury the old fruiting canes should be left until spring, while in other sections they may be removed and under the upper wires for the first 'year, and at pruning time lower them to rest Good Framework for Scroorting Canes of Bed Raspberries, en the notched pieces on the lower wires for their fruiting period. This 'makes the plant cleaned up immediately after they are through fruiting. The cutting back of the tops and final thinning of tho canos should bo done late in the winter or early in the spring, after all danger of winter injury is past. The "upright growers" should be cut back to sound wood from three to five foot in height, while tho "viny growers" should be cut back to eanes from six to twelve feet in length, depending upon their condition and strength. The number of eanes to be left per plant must bo determined largely by tho variety and tho vigor of each plant Strong upright plants will support from four to seven canes, while weak onos should not be expected to support more than two or three. Four canes per plant is the most satisfactory number for ths "viny growers." ' ' "''leiii-f; TYPICAL ANDERSON BUNGALOW Are yon coming to Portland t Why not boy on of my Bungalows now! I will letl it to yon oa easy terms, and rent it for yon for almost enoagh to met year payments until you are ready to occupy it. I haro fimr BangMows that MUST be sold regardless of cost. My loss, your gain. Write me for description and location, TONT O. ANDERSON 828 Chamber of Commerce Bldf, Portland, Oregon. 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