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Sweet Clover: Growing the Crop Howard Sheldon Coe
Teknik Bilgiler
Stok Kodu
9786257078658
Boyut
13.50x21.00
Sayfa Sayısı
58
Basım Yeri
İstanbul
Baskı
1
Basım Tarihi
2020-07
Kapak Türü
Ciltsiz
Kağıt Türü
2. Hamur
Dili
İngilizce

Sweet Clover: Growing the CropUSDA Farmers Bulletin No 797

44,00TL
28,60TL
%35
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9786257078658
837126
Sweet Clover: Growing the Crop
Sweet Clover: Growing the Crop USDA Farmers Bulletin No 797
28.60

“Sweet clover is an important forage crop in many regions. Although one of the oldest of known plants, not until ver y recently has it been considered seriously as a forage plant in this country. The principal causes for not utilizing this crop were its aggressiveness on uncultivated land in many localities, the tendency of the stems to become woody as they mature, and the refusal of stock to eat sweet clover before they had become accustomed to the bitter taste. Another reason was the fact that until recently red clover could be grown in the eastern half of the United States without difficulty. In northern Kentucky the continuous growing of tobacco or of tobacco and wheat impoverished the soil to such an extent that crops no longer could be grown successfully. Upon the abandoned farms in this section sweet clover was introduced as a honey plant. Owing to the remarkable yields of tobacco that were obtained on such farms after sweet clover had been grown for a few years the acreage of this plant increased very rapidly. For a number of years sweet clover has been grown on the Selma chalk (rotten-limestone) soils of Alabama and Mississippi as a soil-improving crop. At the present time it is being cultivated in practically every State, and the acreage is increasing ver y rapidly.”

  • Açıklama
    • “Sweet clover is an important forage crop in many regions. Although one of the oldest of known plants, not until ver y recently has it been considered seriously as a forage plant in this country. The principal causes for not utilizing this crop were its aggressiveness on uncultivated land in many localities, the tendency of the stems to become woody as they mature, and the refusal of stock to eat sweet clover before they had become accustomed to the bitter taste. Another reason was the fact that until recently red clover could be grown in the eastern half of the United States without difficulty. In northern Kentucky the continuous growing of tobacco or of tobacco and wheat impoverished the soil to such an extent that crops no longer could be grown successfully. Upon the abandoned farms in this section sweet clover was introduced as a honey plant. Owing to the remarkable yields of tobacco that were obtained on such farms after sweet clover had been grown for a few years the acreage of this plant increased very rapidly. For a number of years sweet clover has been grown on the Selma chalk (rotten-limestone) soils of Alabama and Mississippi as a soil-improving crop. At the present time it is being cultivated in practically every State, and the acreage is increasing ver y rapidly.”

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