The First Book of Farming eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 224 pages of information about The First Book of Farming.

The First Book of Farming eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 224 pages of information about The First Book of Farming.

A low grade fertilizer is always expensive even if the plant food is furnished by high grade materials.

BUY ON THE PLANT FOOD BASIS

The farmer generally buys his fertilizer on the ton basis.  A better method is to buy just as the fertilizer manufacturers buy the raw materials they use for mixing, namely, on the basis of actual plant food in the fertilizer.  The dealers have what they call the “unit basis,” a “unit” meaning one per cent. of a ton or twenty pounds of plant food.  A ton of nitrate of soda, for instance, contains 310 pounds or 151/2 units of nitrogen, which at $3.20 cents per unit would cost $49.  Buy your mixture of a reliable firm, find out the actual amounts of the plant foods in the mixture and pay a fair market price for them.

CHAPTER XXIII

COMMERCIAL FERTILIZERS—­CONCLUDED

THE HOME MIXING OF FERTILIZERS

When a considerable amount of fertilizer is used a better plan than buying mixed fertilizer is to buy the raw materials and mix them yourself.  For example, a farmer is about to plant five acres of cabbages for the market.  He finds that a certain successful cabbage grower recommends the use of fifty pounds nitrogen, fifty pounds phosphoric acid and seventy pounds potash per acre.  For the five acres this will mean 250 pounds nitrogen, 250 pounds phosphoric acid and 350 pounds potash.  To furnish the nitrogen he can buy 1,613 pounds of nitrate of soda or 2,500 pounds dried blood or 1,250 pounds sulphate of ammonia, or a part of each.  To furnish the phosphoric acid he can buy 1,786 pounds acid phosphate.  Seven hundred pounds of either sulphate or muriate of potash will furnish the potash.  These materials can be easily mixed by spreading in alternate layers on a smooth floor and then shovelling over the entire mass several times.  The mixture can be further improved by passing it through a sand or coal screen or sieve.

By following this method of buying the raw materials and mixing them on the farm, the farmer can reduce his fertilizer bill by quite a considerable amount and at the same time can obtain just the kinds and proper amounts of plant foods needed by his crops.

KIND AND AMOUNT TO BUY

The farmer should make the best use of farm manures and through tillage to render plant food available for his crops before turning to commercial fertilizer for additional plant food.

If he grows leguminous crops for green manuring, for feeding stock or for cover crops, he can in many cases secure, chiefly through them, sufficient high priced nitrogen for the needs of his crops, and it is necessary only occasionally to purchase moderate amounts of phosphoric acid, potash and lime.

For special farming and special crops it may be necessary to use the commercial fertilizer more freely.

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The First Book of Farming from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.