Grow It
SPECIAL NOTE. GROW IT! is a big book and even if a
chunk this size were to be run in issue after issue after
issue of MOTHER, it would take over two years to put the
complete volume in your hands. If you haven't got two years
to play around with, we recommend that you truck on down to
your nearest book store and shell out $8.95 for your very
own copy of GROW IT! That way, Richard Langer will
be happy, Saturday Review Press will be happy ... and we're
betting that you'll be happy too. It's a darn good book.
EXTRA SPECIAL NOTE: All material here reprinted from GROW
IT! copy right a 1972 by Richard W. Langer.
At last! For the first time since the HAVE-MORE
Plan was published way back in the 1940's, a fellow named
Richard W. Langer has come up with a 365-page book that
really introduces a beginner to small-scale farming. Wanna
raise your own fruit, nuts, berries, vegetables, grain,
chickens, pigs, ducks, geese and honeybees? GROW
IT! tells you how to get started, we like it, and
here's another chapter from the book.
nuts
He that plants trees loves others besides
himself.x
-Old English Proverb
A nut tree is one of the most valuable things your
homestead can have, not only for the high-protein fine
winter stores and excellent eating the nutbowl will
provide, but for its highly prized timber as well ... if it
absolutely must be felled. The American chestnut is no
more; the black walnut is not far behind in the race to
extinction.
Walnuts are among the most valued of all temperate
hardwoods, with a pair of good hundred-year-old trees worth
more in dollars and cents than a whole furnished
ready-to-move-into two-bedroom ranch house. The problem is
it takes the tree that full hundred years to grow and only
a couple of hours to fell it. There is some hope for the
walnut, for people are beginning to wake up to the fact
that even if they receive no direct benefit from a tree
they plant, not even nuts for a dozen years or so, the
world is that much better off for their having planted it.
Granted there aren't too many people with this awareness
yet ... but at least there's hope.
The American chestnut situation is a little different. The
reason the village smithy no longer stands beneath its
spread, the automobile notwithstanding, is simply that the
species has been almost totally wiped out by blight, as has
the majestic American elm.
Had one fraction of the money spent on advertising by the
industries most responsible for using up trees - the paper,
housing, and furniture industries - been channeled into
blight research and reforestation, these trees could
probably both have been saved.
Be that as it may, not only the furniture and paper
industries, but also you as a farmer owe nature a few
trees. And your farm will only be the better for repaying a
bit of the debt. Filberts will give you a much quicker
yield than walnuts, but plant both where possible, along
with as many other varieties as you can. It's pretty hard
to harm anyone or anything by planting a tree, particularly
a nut tree.
Because of the alphabetical order the following trees got
themselves put into, the first couple may lead you to
despair of getting any nuts at all. Please read to the end
before you decide not to take even a nutcracker along to
the country.
ALMOND
The almond, as you can tell by comparing one in its shell
with a peach stone, is a close relative of the peach. Both
belong to the greater rose family. Almonds come in bitter
and sweet varieties. For the nut bowl the sweet are grown
almost exclusively.
Although almonds will grow wherever peaches thrive, they
bloom almost a month earlier and thus are often subject to
spring chill. This means in many areas of late springs the
tree can be grown only for decorative purposes. There's
nothing wrong with that, however. If peaches grow, and if
you have the space, why not try an almond tree?
Plant in early spring. Just treat it like a peach tree.
Unless, of course, you want to heat your orchard the way
some commercial growers do where the chill is too much for
the blossoms. It's really not worth the work, however. Your
almond tree won't miss the nuts much, even if you do. And
on a northern slope the light will make it blossom a little
later. Even if it's likely that your springs are too late,
you might have an almond or two after all.
BEECHNUT
Here's a nut tree from which you'll never get many nuts.
But it's a beautiful tree, and a boost to your wildlife.
Plant a couple of extra beechnuts on your "back forty" for
your children to make hand-hewn heirloom furniture from
when they have a homestead of their own.
The tree is very hardy and will grow in almost any soil but
that with poor drainage. However, since it is a
taproot-dependent tree, you have to transplant it early.
Also keep competing growth away from it for the first
couple of years. Then you can let it go wild. Dormant oil
spray in early spring, before the tree gets growing, is a
good idea, but a hundred-foot-tall tree is a bit hard to
spray, so you'll have to give up eventually.
If I had my way, everyone would be planting a beechnut,
hickory, or walnut tree every year to celebrate their
coming to the land. It doesn't take much time or money and
would make all the difference in the world ... to the
world.
CHESTNUT
The American chestnut is dead, long live the Chinese
chestnut. Although a tiny, unimpressive runt when compared
with the majestic cathedral spread of the native chestnut,
the Chinese variety yields excellent large nuts and can be
grown in almost any part of the country. As with other
early-blooming trees, it is often advisable to plant on a
northern slope to delay flowering.
Several trees are needed to insure pollination. Of course,
you want to plant them in the same area, not at different
corners of your place. Twenty-five to thirty feet apart is
fine. In some cases they will yield as soon as three years
after planting, in most cases four years, and six years
after planting you'll have a bumper crop.
Mulching and deep, fertile, sandy loam with plenty of
organic matter are necessary. The Chinese chestnut wants a
lot of moisture, but it needs good drainage too. The roots
are more sensitive to standing water than those of most
trees.
Pruning and care are about the same as for your fruit
trees, except that you'll have to keep a sharp lookout for
root suckers unless you want to grow a bush instead of a
tree. Harvest nuts as they hit the ground. Don't let them
mold, which they'll do quickly left to their own devices.
FILBERT AND HAZELNUT
Your northern slope - or eastern, it serves almost the same
purpose—is getting crowded by now, because here's
another one that should be planted there to delay blooming.
Lest this make you think how bare your southern slope is
going to look in comparison, that's the best place for your
vegetable garden.
The difference between filberts and hazelnuts, in case
you're pondering on the matter, is that hazelnuts are
American while the filbert was imported from Europe.
Filberts in most cases produce bigger and better nuts. Both
are mostly shrubs rather than trees, although there are
some fifty-to sixty-foot members in the clan.
Plant whatever variety is grown locally. Usually this means
filberts in areas of milder winters and hazelnuts in the
colder regions. Get at least two varieties for
cross-pollination. Plant in early spring, using deep,
fertile, well-drained soil. For bushes, filberts and
hazelnuts have amazingly long and deep roots. They also
have sensitive bark, easily sun-scalded and slow to heal.
Bind the trunks up for winter in burlap to reduce snowglare
injury.
Root suckers must be removed every year unless you want a
pincushion on your hands. For best yields, allow only three
or four main trunks to develop. If you want to increase
your filbert population, leaving propagation to the
nut-burying squirrels won't suffice, although you'll see
plenty of them around. Instead, let a sucker grow for a
year on the parent plant. The next spring, take a knife and
make a one-inch-long slit in the bark about six inches from
the tip of the sucker. Then arch the sucker so the tip
touches the ground. Stake it down so it can't pull itself
loose, Bury the cut part of the sucker, from which roots
will sprout. Use good compost, and leave the actual tip of
the sucker exposed to grow as the plant. Water it well.
Early in the second year cut the new plant free and
transplant to a permanent location. You have just "layered"
your first plant. Most willowy bushes and trees can be
propagated in the same way.
HICKORY
There are several varieties here, and they're all cousins
of the pecan. Treat the tree as you would a beechnut or a
pecan. It's got a bear of a taproot, three to five feet
long even on a young transplant, so be prepared to dig
halfway to China when setting it in. Give it the best soil
and compost possible, but no manure. It needs no pruning
except to have the top cut back by 25 percent on planting.
If you hope to get good eating hickory nuts and not just a
beautiful tree, get the shagbark variety. And if you can't
get hickory stock - as is often the case because it makes a
difficult and chancy transplant—find a supply of
fresh-fallen nuts on your next outing in hickory country,
and plant those. Plant plenty, for few will survive,
but plant!
PECAN
Most of the above nut trees prefer the northern half of the
country. Pecans are their southern counterpart and usually
grow where cotton will. They need a long, hot growing
season in order to yield.
Like all trees, pecans need deep soil, rich and well
drained. And they have the deep taproot as well, which
means you'll be digging again. Try five feet. Taproots on
all trees must be buried absolutely vertical all the way.
Don't try to rattail the tip into a curve or U-shape-you'd
be better off saving yourself the time and trouble and
throwing the tree away.
Cut back about 40 percent on planting. Fertilize well and
protect the trunk from sun-scald. Very little pruning is
necessary once the tree is growing, although usually the
lower limbs are removed.
WALNUT
Grow black walnut trees for their beauty. Grow Carpathians
for nuts. This hardy tree comes from the mountains of the
same name and is thus very cold-resistant. It is also
readily available through most nurseries ... by popular
demand. It's noted for its large yield of highquality
thin-shelled nuts.
Walnuts need deep, well-drained, rich soil, of course, but
a little acidity doesn't hurt. Plant as you do other trees.
Protect the bark from sunscald the first years. Black
walnuts mature fully in a hundred and fifty years. But
don't give up ... the Carpathians wil I bear six to eight
years after planting.
fowl
Man comes and tills the field and lies
beneath,
And after many a
summer dies the swan
—ALFRED, LORD TENNYSON
Chickens aren't the only useful domestic fowl on the farm.
Ducks and geese give you variety in meat and eggs, as well
as the highest quality down. And swans, though not a
productive addition, personify beauty itself.
DUCKS
Among the hardiest and easiest to raise of all fowl are
ducks. For the most part, they are kept for their meat,
though there are duck-egg connoisseurs, and the down and
feathers make fine pillows. Should you have a pond on your
place, the decorative breeds of duck are a pleasant
addition. They also help cut down the algae, which does not
aid fish growth the way plankton does.
BREEDS
For meat you'll want the Pekin, an all-white duck with a
yellow beak. Black or partially black beaks are sometimes
seen, but a black-billed duck is considered inferior stock.
While Pekins will lay quite well, if you really want an
eggproducer, the Indian Runner is your breed. Coloration
ranges from white to white and fawn to pencilled. Since
these ducks grow to only half the size of Pekins, the roast
duck will be a small one. On the other hand, they not only
lay more eggs, but ones of better quality. An Indian Runner
will give you almost as many eggs a year as a lazy chicken.
Duck eggs are excellent for baking, if a little tough fried
or boiled.
Show breeds available in the United States include the
Call, Black East India, and Crested White. The first-named,
in addition to being nice on your pond, attracts wild
mallards.
THE YARD
Ducks do not need a pond, despite the fact that they look
more at home there. For meat- and egg-producers, a yard
equipped with a shallow cement or steel basin full of water
suffices. It should be just deep enough for the birds to
wade, wallow, and wash their feathers in. Such a man-made
pool is best supplied with continuously flowing fresh
water.
Sandy soil is best, but not absolutely necessary, for the
duck yard. What is necessary is that the soil drain very
well. To this end, duck yards are usually located on
sloping land. Ducks are quite sloppy and noisy fowl, so
don't crowd them. Commercial breeding farms run the birds
at five to eight thousand an acre, but this creates immense
sanitation problems. Twentyfive to a hundred ducks is
plenty for the average farm. That number can be kept
comfortable and clean in a 150-by-300- foot yard.
Show ducks on your pond should not be allowed to grow to a
flock of more than ten or twenty. If they do, they will
trample the banks, destroy your watercress, and generally
make a nuisance of themselves. Besides, they'll be
competing with the pond fish for nutrients. A few ducks, on
the other hand, will give good balance to the pond and
increase some of the nutrients.
HOUSING
Housing for ducks is about the same as that for chickens
... minus roosts, which they don't use. The two cannot be
kept together, however. Mature ducks are cold-hardier than
chickens, so their building doesn't have to be as tightly
constructed. On the other hand, with warmer quarters than
they need, they will develop less protective fat and
consume less food, both of which are to your advantage.
Provide the house with simple nests set about four to six
inches off the floor and comfortably bedded.
The house for young ducklings must have all the litter
changed frequently, preferably every two or three days.
Because of their drinking habits, ducks throw around a lot
of water. Even adding a fresh layer of litter every day, as
you must, does not suffice to keep it dry. And wet litter
makes for dead or blind ducks: ammonia from the droppings
gets in their eyes.
THE FLOCK
Your first time around, buying day-old ducklings is your
best bet, particularly if you have already raised a flock
of chickens. Brooding and rearing for both are pretty much
the same, and you can use the same kind of equipment.
For a duck brood, the room temperature the first week
should be 70 0 F. and the temperature under the hover 90 0
F. Reduce the latter slowly to 80 0 F to 85 0 F. the second
week, and 75 0 to 80 0 F. the third. The fourth through
sixth weeks a 70 0 to 75 0 F. temperature is fine.
The same encircling guard system as for baby chicks is used
to prevent crowding and to keep young ducklings close to
the hover. Total brooder area for a hundred ducklings
should be around twenty-five square feet for the first two
or three days and expanded gradually to one hundred and
fifty to two hundred square feet.
If the weather is warm and sunny, the ducklings can have an
outside run for a few hours a day as soon as they are three
weeks old. But don't let ducks younger than six weeks near
the pond, or try to give them water to swim in. They'll get
a chill. They are sensitive to not only moist cold, but sun
as well. So when they're permitted to go outside, some
shade must be provided.
The feed mix for a duck brood is similar to that for
chicks. For the first week, feed wet mash from a shallow
trough six times a day. Give the ducklings as much as
they'll eat; then remove the trough till the next feeding.
Grit or sand must always be available. Each feeding should
be accompanied by fresh water in a fountain deep enough so
the ducks can submerge their bills fully. They need to
clean their nostrils of caked mash as well as to drink. Be
sure the drinking fountain is not so designed that they can
get their whole body wet, however. They'd love to, but even
indoors chances are they'd catch a bad chill. The second
through eighth weeks, the young ducks should be given a
growing ration fed three times daily. Keep the water
fountains clean and filled.
When they are six weeks old the brooder can be removed from
the house and the ducks allowed to range. At ten weeks
they'll weigh in at six pounds or so and are ready for the
roaster. This is the prime time for tender ducks, although
they are still very tasty if slaughtered a few months
later. Ducks are dressed the same way as chickens.
BREEDING
In some ways it's easiest to buy day-old ducklings every
year for a new flock. But you may want to keep a breeding
flock of your own. If you do, reserve the best of your
ducks for breeding stock. Select those with bills, feet,
and shanks colored an even, heavy yellow. Look for a solid,
compact body, with broad, full breast and short neck. The
plumage should be glossy and full, the eyes round, big, and
bright. You'll need one drake for every five or six ducks.
Keep a breeding flock separate from the laying flock if you
don't gather eggs twice a day. Eggs for hatching should be
fresh.
Ducks make poor mothers. So when one of your chicken hens
gets broody, let her stay that way instead of trying to
break her of it. Confine your ducks one night and the next
morning gather as many newly laid duck eggs as you can. If
you don't collect enough that day for the size brood you
want, you can store the eggs in a cool, damp place ... no
longer than five days, though. And make sure you turn them
twice a day. If not, the old wives' tale goes, the duck
will stick to the shell. True or not, fewer eggs will hatch
if you don't turn them.
Slip a batch of duck eggs under a setting hen slowly.
Remember, a broody hen thinks you're out to swipe her eggs
... even if she's sitting on an empty nest. She'll be
temperamental and prone to peck. You can allot up to ten
duck eggs per broody hen. They should hatch in twenty-eight
days, unless you have Muscovy ducks, whose eggs take
thirty-four.
A mother hen will leave the nest once a day to eat, for
perhaps half an hour. If you're lucky enough to find her
away from her post, take the opportunity to sprinkle the
duck eggs lightly with warm water, particularly toward the
end of the hatching period. Duck eggs, as might be
suspected, need more moisture than their land-fowl
counterparts. Also be sure to turn the eggs once a day. A
chicken will do it herself with her own eggs, but the duck
eggs will be a little too big for her to handle.
THE BROOD
Once the eggs hatch, the mother hen should be confined to a
floorless cage three by three feet in floor area raised
high enough so the young ducklings can crawl under the
bottom to roam farther when they want. Hens like to walk,
ducks are not as adept at it. By confining the hen, she
will not exhaust the ducklings.
Newly hatched ducks do not need to be given food or water
the first twenty-four hours. After that, the care and
feeding schedule is the same as for your first shipment of
day-old ducklings.
When the ducks reach the four-week age, the mother hen may
be released from her confinement to guide her ersatz brood
wherever she wants. At six or seven weeks the young ducks
are ready to swim. If your ducklings have been raised by a
chicken hen, incidentally, be prepared to see her throw a
violent fit when the ducks take to the water instead of to
the roosts. It may be a few days before she gives up on her
rebel swimmers and calms down.
GEESE
Geese are even easier to keep than ducks, for during the
green season they can subsist primarily on pasturage. Their
range, however, should be separate from that for other
livestock, since they are rather sloppy about their
hygiene. Also, don't let them pasture in the orchard if you
have young trees. They will destroy the bark. On the other
hand, they are excellent for weeding strawberry patches;
the stupid things much prefer weeds to luscious sun-ripened
strawberries. Geese are such weed fiends they've been used
for many decades now in "goosing down" cotton, or keeping
the fields clean, down Dixie way.
Geese are hardy creatures, and the only shelter they will
need is a small house, insulated in the coldest areas, with
an open entrance and a floor to keep out the dampness. In
the South you really don't need to shelter them at all
except to provide shade, either artifical or natural. As an
extra plus, the much-neglected goose is very disease- and
parasite-resistant.
BREEDS
The geese available in the United States are Toulouse,
Embden, African, Chinese, Pilgrim, Sebastopol, Canadian,
and Egyptian. The first four are the most common in the
United States, and the apprentice farmer should limit his
choice to the Toulouse or the Embden. All the others are
much smaller, except for the African, and that one is very
noisy. The honking might be appealing in the beginning, but
you'd soon have more than enough of it. If the Pilgrim is
available in your region (which it isn't often), some
thought may be given to keeping this breed. Although it
matures to little more than half the size of a Toulouse,
the male and female have different-colored plumage, which
is handy when you're just starting out to breed since it
prevents you from accidentally slaughtering the only gander
in your flock.
A mature Toulouse weighs between twenty and twenty-five
pounds. It is a gray goose with white abdomen sweeping up
to the tail. The female will lay an average of twenty-five
eggs a year over a period of about a month. However, she
can't set on that many. Fifteen will be plenty for the
goose. Farm out the rest at the rate of five per broody
chicken hen. The number of eggs per hen should not exceed
five ... you'll see why after checking out the egg size. In
fact, a hen is unable to turn the egg, which is necessary,
so you'll have to do it for her once a day. Start the
chickens setting first, before the goose. In other words,
set the first five eggs laid under a hen, the second five
under another hen. Then let the goose set on whatever else
she lays. Incubation time is about thirty days. When the
goose's eggs are hatched, slip the hen-hatched goslings
into the nest at night to ensure adoption. Make sure she's
taken them in before you leave them on their own. If she
hasn't, you'll have to give them back to the hen.
Embden geese are smaller than Toulouse, averaging fifteen
to twenty pounds. They are pure white, and thus more
popular when feathers are wanted. Although their egg
production is lower than that of the Toulouse (about
fifteen eggs per goose per year), they will usually do
their own setting and they make good mothers.
TENDING THE FLOCK
Geese mate in the fall. One gander will oblige up to four
geese, and if you're planning on roasters, bigamy is the
best course. Often, however, a gander selects a mate for
life. Don't break up the happy couple. But do keep them
away from other ganders during the mating season or some
nasty fights will ensue.
As to fights, ganders are naturally pugnacious and,
particularly during the rearing season, will often attack
anything that approaches a nest. This trait is an excellent
reason for selecting Embdens, since with Embdens you won't
have to pick up all those extra eggs that may well be
guarded by the gander long after the goose has given up on
the whole affair. You might think of gander s as only
birds, but a couple of good-sized ones can send you to the
hospital for a week if they really put their minds to it.
Use caution ... or stick to ducks.
If you're using a chicken hen to set on Toulouse eggs, she
may need watching. The eggs are apt to hatch unevenly, and
the hen will stroll off with the first thing that moves,
leaving the remaining eggs to rot. So take each gosling
from the nest as soon as it's born. If its mother rejects
it, or hasn't hatched her batch yet, keep the new gosling
in a flannel-lined box located in a warm corner. Keep the
box clean and dry.
Once the hen has hatched her five, if the goose rejects the
lot, use the same hen-confinement method as with ducks. At
three to four weeks, as long as they are fully feathered
out, the young goslings may be allowed to swim. Up to this
time, however, they must not be allowed to get wet. Don't
let them out on the grass until the dew is well burned off
for the day. A moist chill is often fatal to bare goslings.
Goslings are raised like ducks, except that they must have
fresh greens at all times. Provide plenty of fresh fountain
water in constant supply and feed four times a day, as much
as they'll take. Chopped, hard-boiled eggs, stale bread
soaked in milk just enough to get it moist, and chopped
alfalfa, clover, or vegetables with a teaspoon of cod liver
oil make a good mix for the first week. The second and
third weeks the feed should be a wet mash of cornmeal and
chicken growing mash in addition to pasturage. After that
the geese can be allowed to fend for themselves on the
range.
An acre will carry ten geese. They are destructive to
pasture, grazing close to the ground, so rotation is
essential. It's recommended that they be given a daily
supplemental feeding. A good feed is half cornmeal and half
wheat bran or oats, with another 10 percent meat scraps or
middlings (wheat germ). Soaking the meal in buttermilk or
sour milk to make wet mash is excellent. Water, oyster
shells or limestone, and grit should all be available on a
demand basis.
In winter increase the grain supplement for geese to 20
percent of their diet and give them legume hay or silage
for the rest. They must have roughage. Fresh vegetable tops
and parings should be given when available to your geese in
preference to your pigs or other farm animals.
Before slaughtering a holiday-dinner goose, put it on a
moist-mash, fattening ration of yellow cornmeal and oats
for a couple of months. Mix equal proportions of each with
buttermilk or skim milk to make the mash wet and extra
fattening. The wet mash should constitute about 50 to 75
percent of the goose's diet, with the rest pasturage or
other green fodder. However, don't switch a goose to a
fattening diet overnight or it might develop digestive
problems. Switch gradually, over a week, particularly if
your geese have been almost exclusively on pasture. In
Europe geese are often force-fed to make them extra plump
and expand the liver. This practice isn't worth it unless
you're a glutton for punishment. Goose eggs, incidentally,
make excellent rubber sink stoppers when fried. You're
better off hatching them or selling them to someone else
who wants to raise geese.
SWANS
If you have a fair-sized pond, a pair of swans, the most
graceful of all waterfowl, may well be worth keeping.
You'll get neither meat nor eggs from them, but they take
next to no care and are esthetically one of the most
beautiful of all avians.
Swans mate for life. So buy a pair if you can. Then step
back. Mate swans are nothing if not ill-tempered.
Eventually they will get to know you and come regularly for
feeding to supplement their diet of water plants and
insects. Even then, it is advised, however, that you make
yourself scarce during mating time. The swans will put
together a large nest of scraps and twigs. Six to eight
greenish-white eggs will be laid and the male will stand
guard over them. He is now ready to attack ... anything
from a cat to an elephant or tractor that approaches the
nest. With luck, you'll have some young swans in six weeks.
But don't be too disappointed if they die young. Swans
often live to sixty years of age ... provided they survive
their first season.
TURKEYS
There's only one sane word of advice to the beginner on the
subject of turkeys. Don't raise them. They are incredibly
stupid birds. So much so in fact that if not patiently
taught to eat, they won't know how and will starve to death
... although once they get the habit, you can't stop them.
They won't even learn to drink unless you keep some marbles
in the water fountain to give them something interesting to
peck at. They are also disease-prone, and have to be
brought in out of the rain or they'll catch their death of
cold ... an exasperating bit of farm routine for the
apprentice during the rainy season. A turkey egg omelet
can be beat ... easily. And so can the
Thanksgiving turkey dinner. I'm all for tradition. But a
modern prepackaged turkey bears no resemblance to the
flavorsome fowl of Pilgrim times. Consider the alternative
... a plump roast goose.