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.

Other stems get up into the light and air with their leaves by twining about upright objects.  For example, the morning glory and pole bean.

Some stems will be found that spread their leaves out to the sun by creeping over the ground.  Sweet potato, melon, squash, and cucumber vines are examples of such plants.

One use of the stems of plants then is to support the leaves, flowers and fruit, and expose them to the much needed light and air.

=Experiment.=—­Get a piece of grape vine and cut it into pieces four or five inches long; notice that the cut surface appears to be full of little holes.  Cut a piece from between joints, place one end in your mouth and blow hard.  It will be found that air can be blown through the piece of vine.  Now pour about an inch of water in a tumbler or cup and color it with a few drops of red ink.  Then stand some of the pieces of grape vine in the colored water.  In a few hours the colored water will appear at the upper ends of the sticks.  Capillary force has caused the colored water to rise through the small tubes in the vine.  Repeat this experiment with twigs of several kinds of trees and soft green plants, as elm, maple, sunflower, corn, etc.  It will not be possible to blow through these twigs, but the red water will rise through them by osmose, and in a few hours will appear at the upper ends.  If some leaves are left on the stems the colored water will appear in them.  Some white flowers can be colored in this way.

In this manner the stem carries plant food dissolved in water from the roots to the leaves, and after the leaves have digested it carries it back to various parts of the plant.

The stem then serves as a conductor or a passage for food and moisture between roots and leaves.

Visit a strawberry bed or search for wild strawberry plants.  Notice that from the older and larger plants are sent out long, slender, leafless stems with a bud at the tip.  These stems are called runners.  Find some runners that have formed roots at the tip and have developed a tuft of leaves there, forming new plants.  Find some black raspberry plants and notice that some of the canes have bent over and taken root at the tips sending up a new shoot and thus forming a new plant.  You know how rapidly wire grass and Bermuda grass will overrun the garden or farm.  One way in which they do this is by sending out underground stems which take root at the joints and so form new plants.

Another use of the stem then is to produce new plants.

On the farm we make use of this habit of stems when we wish to produce new white potato plants.  We cut an old potato in pieces and plant them.  The buds in the eyes grow and form new plants.  One way of getting new grape plants is to take a ripened vine in the fall and cut it in pieces with two or three buds and plant them so that one or both of the buds are covered with soil.  The pieces will take root and in the spring will send up new shoots and thus form new plants.

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