SYL\ ICULTUEE. 



point of differentiation against the edge of the hole, when drawing' 

 with the right hand the dirt required to fill the hole. 



III. Such plants are firmly imbedded and are less shaken by the 

 wind. On forest soil it is wise to place the top dirt dug from the. 

 hole around the root tips, and the bottom dirt of the hole close to the 

 surface. The workmen should be. shown daily by the forester how to 

 plant. It is of the utmost importance to pulverize and loosen the 

 dirt first, and to then press and beat it tightly with fist, heel or 

 mallet around the roots. Some planters give a trifle of forest humus 

 into the hole; others carry fertile garden dirt in baskets to the 

 plantations. The placing of stones on the hole (as refrigerators) is 

 recommended. One man's work at hole digging per day is 300 to 3,000 

 according to root-size and conditions of soil. 



C. The seedling mvist stand, after planting: 



I. Firmly, the dirt being tightly packed around its roots, so that 

 it cannot be shaken and so that the roots may establish their suck- 

 ing contacts. 



II. Naturally, the roots having the same manner of spreading 

 and ramifying which they had in the nursery. 



III. Erect and just as deep as it stood in the nursery (exception: 

 barren sand). 



Paragraph XXIV. Special methods and tools used for planting seed- 

 lings in the open. 



A. Biermans spiral spade, costing $2.00, is pointed parabolically, 

 the blade being IVz inches long and 5 inches wide. When used bor- 

 ingly, this spade forms a parabolic hole and loosens the soil. With 

 the left hand the seedling is pressed against the side of tho hole, 

 while the right hand places some sod ashes (See Par. XXIX, D. VI.) 

 immediately over the fine root fibres. Then the best pan of the 

 soil is used to fill the near half of the hole, and the poorest for 

 filling the far lialf. The instrument is adapted to hardened soil. 

 On wet and binding soil, the dirt clogs in the curves of tlie spade. 

 Capacity per hand in Germany 320 plants per day. 



B. The Planting Dagger is used for Yellow Pine seedlings one or 

 two years old, to be planted on sandy soil. The dagger is three 

 inches longer than the longest root. It is made of wood, iron shod 

 at the point. It makes a narrow, funnel-shaped hole, which is 

 closed by pressure from another hole made a fe\*' inches from the 

 first. On loose, sandy soil it is wise to plant Yellow Pine seedlings 

 'leeply — up to first needles — since Yellow Pine is not aflfected, in 

 that soil, by deep planting. Daggering is the cheapest possible 



6G 



