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PLANT SUGAR MAPLES.

Every Parmer Can Grow HU Owa finj>ply of finunr. Should we plant maple groves? There can hardly be two opinions on this subject. Tin; beet sugar industry is a problem, but Hie maple sugar industry never was a problem. It pays better than three-fourths of our farm work. At eight cents a pound maple sugar finds ready market, while much of the better pj .duct sells at ten and twelve cents, ' ; sirup is sold by producers directly to consumers at one dollar a gallon very rarely at less than 80 cents. Throughout New York, New Jersey, Pennsylvania and other states this direct sale to consumers takes up a large part of the product, excepting only two or three counties of northern New York. But it is not just now as a market product that the subject should be mainly considered. Every family is a sugar consumer and a sugar buyer. Must farmers can make the larger part of this sugar supply as easily as they can raise their own potatoes. A family of six or seven will consume from one to two barrels of .sugar in a year. Granulated sugar will cost such a family from sls to S3O a year. A grove of 50J trees will produce from 200 to 250 pounds of maple sugar. That is, where the trees stand in the open. The product is less where the sugar is made from trees in the forest. This is equivalent to at least half the family’s requirements for sugar. But the sales of sirup will make an aggregate value per tree even higher. A grove of 50 trees standing in the open will occupy not more thap a quarter of an acre. Besides the sugar product, the grove is advantageous for shade, also for an enormous product of humus each fall, and for windbreaks and shelter, and as an equalizer of temperature and moisture. Maple trees should grow in a grove. They' do not thrive well as street trees, where they are subject to much abuse of the saw and exposure of the trunk to hot sunshine. A grove might well be given place on every farm of 20 acres. Why shall there not be a general planting of maple groves during the spring of 1898?—N. Y. Tribune.

Permanent link to this item
Hononga pūmau ki tēnei tūemi

https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/MH19051118.2.19.3

Bibliographic details
Ngā taipitopito pukapuka

Manawatu Herald, Volume XXVIII, Issue 3599, 18 November 1905, Page 4

Word count
Tapeke kupu
383

PLANT SUGAR MAPLES. Manawatu Herald, Volume XXVIII, Issue 3599, 18 November 1905, Page 4

PLANT SUGAR MAPLES. Manawatu Herald, Volume XXVIII, Issue 3599, 18 November 1905, Page 4

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