Natural wealth of
Australia—Neglect of agriculture—Proposals to establish experimental
farms—Apathy, indolence, and ignorance prevalent—My own experiments with
Indian seeds—Indian products for Australia—Resume of the salient points of
indigo culture—Probable result of its introduction into Australia- Mustard
and rape seeds—How grown—Linseed—Sesamum— Castor
plant—Hemp—Safflower—Millets—General remarks.
It is not only in the
direction of stock-breeding, however, that a mighty future lies before the
Austratralian colonies. Gifted by nature with every variety of climate, with
a rich, inexhaustible soil in places, with unlimited capacity for., the
growth of products belonging to every land, it is marvellous that more
specific and practical efforts have not been made to spread abroad a
knowledge of practical farming and modern agricultural processes amongst the
rising generation of colonists. It is true that there are several
magnificent botanical gardens in many of the Australian towns. These are
fully equal, in one or two instances, to .anything of the kind we have even
in Europe, so far as beauty of situation, excellence of management, and
diversity of specimens are concerned. But where .are our experimental farms?
What are our agricultural and horticultural societies about? Horticulture
indeed, owing to the self-denying, persistent effort of a few enthusiasts,
is making rapid progress, but agriculture really seems at M standstill.
Would it be believed that,
although the Agricultural Society of New South Wales, the representative
society of the oldest Australian colony, received a grant of a fine farm
near Paramatta from government, they have seemingly never been able to
utilize it, to put it to any practical use whatever, have not conducted any
experiments on it, or have tried to acclimatize no new and foreign
agricultural products? The farm at Paramatta lies untilled, unused, uncared
for, a grim satire on the mismanagement and internal divisions of the
society who ostensibly are its possessors, and a sad evidence of the little
esteem in which the culture of the soil is held amongst a growing nation of
centaurs, shepherds, butchers, cattle-salesmen, shopkeepers, civil servants,
politicians, bankers, land-jobbers, lawyers, speculators —anything and
everything but yeoman farmers and surdy tillers of the soil.
Amid all the shibboleths of
parties, politics, and polemics, Speed the Plough is the one grand old
rallying cry that is never heard in New South Wales. Let me identify myself
with my adopted country, and speak as an Antipodean Welchman.
Considering the wonderful
diversity of our climate in New South Wales, the excellence of our soil, and
the rapid communication that now exists between the different parts of our
great empire, it is amazing that more vigorous attempts have not been made
to acclimatize some of the more important vegetable productions of other
lands in which we are deficient. What has been done in this direction has
mostly resulted from the efforts of private individuals, and as far as
conservation of forests, irrigation, experimental gardening, model farming,
and feting tlie capabilities of our soil for new plants of commercial
importance goes, we are far behind many newer colonies, and lag immeasurably
in the rear of continental countries. In our gardens, thanks to the
enterprise of seedsmen, and thanks partly to the influence of our Botanical
Gardens,, to which I have referred already, we have added to the list of
o.ur ornamental shrubs and flowers. The loquat and the plantain have become
domesticated, and English bushes, trees, and shrubs, as was but natural in
an English-speaking colony, have been introduced successfully. There are,
however, thousands of foreign plants and products that might be cultivated
in this land with every prospect of a remunerative return, but our
governments and agricultural societies seem to be strangely apathetic in the
matter. Our farmers have no recorded results of experimental farming to
guide them. They plough, sow, and garner in the old beaten track. Maize is
about the only cereal foreign to English farming which is grown in any
quantity, and great tracts of the most productive land in the colony, once
under cultivation, are allowed to relapse into worse than fallow, because it
has been found impossible, from rust, blight, and other untoward
circumstances, to profitably cultivate wheat.
Some attention has been paid,
in the interest of the stock-breeders principally, to the introduction and
propagation of foreign grasses, but even in this direction the experiments
have been halting, unmethodical, and ofttimes purposeless. Some enthusiastic
agriculturists have raised their voices at times in favour of the
establishment of a government model or experimental farm, which might be
made entirely self-supporting, where experiments with promising foreign
seeds might be made, and the results accurately recorded; where all the most
modern improvements in husbandry, and in farming processes, and machinery
might be tested; and which would become a practical school for our farmers,
and be productive of a manifest impetus and practical encouragement to
agricultural science generally. Considering the climatic conditions we
enjoy, the fecund soil we possess, and the unlimited extent of ground which
could be made available for cultivation, New South Wales is about the most
backward country, in an agricultural point of view, of any dependency of the
Imperial Crown of Britain. Kitchen-gardening in many districts is left to
Chinamen. Husbandry seems to find no favour with us as a rising nation, and
the question may well be asked, What sort of a nation are we likely to
become?
We cannot all be government
or bank clerks, mechanics, speculators, publicans, or land-jobbers. Our
wealth must be drawn from the soil, either in roots, seeds, fibres,
minerals, or animal products. Already the cry is raised that there is no
market for our surplus flocks and herds. It seems hopeless to compete with
America in the export of meat, and the grim, ghastly dernier ressort of
"boiling down" again seems looming in the gloomy distance. What
encouragement are we giving to entice an agricultural community to rise
amongst us? Practically none. The farmer is hampered with restrictions on
every hand.
It is not my intent in this
chapter to go into the labyrinthine subtleties and perplexities of our land
laios, but surely it behoves all interested in the future welfare of our
adopted country, all who love the grand old primal industry, that of tilling
the soil, to band themselves together, and agitate for increased attention
being shown to agricultural experiment, more facilities afforded for
demonstrating the principles of modern farming, and a greater recognition
being given to the paramount importance of so tilling the land that it will
yield its best increase, and build up a prosperous and progressive nation.
Trade and commerce ever hang
on the heels of agriculture. The farmer is the true pioneer and founder of a
nation's growth. For farming science we have hitherto done little or
nothing. Other colonies , and countries have their departments and ministers
of agriculture. Meteorologists record their minute observations, measure
the rainfall, classify the winds of heaven, map the variations of
temperature, and collate facts, phenomena, and theories, to help the farmer
to arrive at the truths which nature teaches us, and to expend his energy
and skill to the best advantage in garnering the fruits of the earth.
Chemists in the laboratory, by patient research and experiment, labour to
aid the farmer in bringing together the substances that will the most
readily assimilate in the great crucible of nature, and hasten the formation
of those compounds which swell our granaries and fill our wine and oil
presses. But in Sydney, as I have just stated, even our own Agricultural
Society, beyond a praiseworthy attention to the improvement of stock, and
the introduction of labour-saving machinery, do little or nothing to assist
the practical farmer.
There are hundreds of
valuable products admirably suited for our soil, climate, and natural
conditions otherwise that have never been noticed at all. Had we but
experimental farms, a department of agriculture, interchange of seed and
products with other lands, a sympathy with farming pursuits on the part of
government, a due appreciation of the fact, that, come what may, this
country must eventually stand or fall by its agriculture, must of necessity
be a farming and grazing community; then we would see a more enlightened
regard given to farming pursuits in the directions I have indicated, and at
least a portion of the money, the price of the soil, expended in training up
an agricultural body of practical farmers.
At one exhibition, held under
the auspices of this National Agricultural Society, I was in many instances
amazed at the ignorance displayed by good, hardworking, reputable,
practical farmers when I quitted the well-worn tracks of ordinary English
farming, or got away from the familiar topics of wheat, barley, potatoes,
Lucerne, and Indian corn. I say nothing of the strides which sugar-growing
has made, or of the narrow-minded obstructions that have often been thrown
in its way; but when I came to question the Grafton, the Clarence, the
Hunter River, or Shoal- haven farmers about linseed, rape-seed, saffron,
vetches, millet, indigo, and other eastern products, they stared at me. Some
sneered at the idea of growing anything but the good old crops that their
fathers had grown before them. Others, principally the young ones, said it
was a shame government did not make experiments with such crops; they
themselves were too poor to experiment with crops they had never tried ;
they could not get seeds, and so on. And others again confessed frankly that
they had never heard of such products, and had never even thought of the
possibility of the land growing anything but the good old stock roots and
seeds.
I consider that the
government of New South "Wales is deplorably short-sighted in this matter of
attention to agriculture. It is more than culpable neglect, it is suicidal
folly. The expenses of experimental farms would, I feel certain, under
proper management, be covered by the receipts. The model farms on the
continent, and in most instances in India, are self- supporting. The good
effect they have on farming, the immense practical good they achieve, the
advancement and improvement they initiate and foster are incalculable. In
Queensland, South Australia, and notably in New Zealand, progress is far
more rapid than with us, and these colonies will doubtless reap the results
of their enlightenment and enterprise, and we must see trade pass from our
doors, and their markets take precedence of ours.
Shortly after I settled down
in Sydney, in 1878, I got down from India, at my own expense, numerous kinds
of seeds of commercial value. I made trial sowings on the grounds of Mr. D.
Nichol, at Strath- field, Redmyre, near Sydney, a favourite suburban
retreat, about eight miles from the coast. Although the rainfall was scanty,
the soil full of iron-stone, and the influence of the sea breezes to a
certain extent inimical, all the seeds I sowed germinated quickly, grew
strongly and well, and, with the single exception of the indigo, gave most
favourable results. In the case of the indigo, the contiguity of the sea
was, in my opinion, the true cause of the partial failure, because, up on
Mount Wilson, among the Blue Mountains, I afterwards found the most
magnificent growth of a wild kind of indigo, and I am certain that with
proper care and abundant labour, the dye could be largely manufactured in
Australia.
Mr. Charles More, the
talented, and in every way admirable Director of the Sydney Botanical
Gardens, took charge of the surplus seeds I got down from India, and
distributed them to various, parts of the country. I have received proofs
"from various parts that, with' ordinary care, and under existing
conditions, these products can be easily raised in the colony. The seeds
that I tried were all sent to me from the north-west provinces of India. In
climate this portion of our Indian territory is very like that of New South
Wales. In summer they have fierce, hot west winds. They get the monsoons or
rainy season, and they have four or five months of a cold season, during
which the frosts are often as sharp as what are experienced occasionally in
the colony under notice.
Indigo is largely grown in
Oudh and the north-west provinces of India, although it is principally
cultivated in Behar and Bengal. In this country, New South Wales, I have
great hopes that it might become a valuable crop. In its early stages it is
rather delicate, but once it grows to an inch or so in height, it is one of
the hardiest plants known in India. It is there grown in many places almost
without any preparation of the soil at all. The ground is scratched, and the
seed scattered broadcast. On the sand-banks by the rivers it grows
splendidly, and, owing to its bitterness, no oanimal will touch it. If the
weeds attain any rankness the sheep are frequently driven into the indigo in
Purneah, Bhaugulpore, and Jessore, to graze down the weeds, and they do not
touch the indigo. I think it would grow well in Australia. It does not
require much care, and it might yield three cuttings. Small vats, and all
the apparatus, need not cost much, but if attempted on a large scale, if the
results of the trial sowing would warrant it, I am sure it might be made a
magnificent industry.
"With good cultivation,
careful weeding, drill sowings, and good machinery for the manufacture,
indigo farming is one of the most money-making industries in the world. A
succession of favourable seasons is a fortune, but in India seasons are
precarious, and the price of both land and labour has been doubled if not
trebled since the Mutiny; and I believe, under proper management, indigo
might be made a most profitable colonial crop, and with our cheap land, use
of machinery, successive cuttings, and good communications, we might
successfully compete with even the cheap labour of India. For seed we
would.have to depend on Queensland, for the frosts here would kill the crop
during the seed-time, which takes place in the cold weather. The plant is an
annual, but will afford cuttings in succession for years, if not allowed to
run to seed. It becomes ready for the first cutting in about four months.
Sown in July, manufacturing could commence here in November. Under favouring
conditions of moisture and heat, the second growth from the stumps or
stubble is very rapid and luxuriant, and yields good produce. Three
cuttings might be had before the cold weather again set in. A succession
crop of mustard, rape, linseed, vetches, wheat, barley, or oats, millet,
sesamum, or other cold weather crops, is frequently taken from the indigo
lands in India. Although, as a rule, if the three cuttings be taken from the
land during the year, the cultivators consider they have done well.
So far as indigo is concerned
I am confident that, were it properly tried, it might become a very great
industry. On the Bellinger, for instance, and the northern rivers, and in
many other remote agricultural areas, where communications will for years
be difficult, the great obstacle the farmer has to contend with is the
wholly disproportionate charge he has to pay on the transit of his produce
to the value of the product itself. The cost of transmission to market of
wheat, maize, potatoes, and similar crops, eats np all the profit, and for
practical purposes he might leave farming alone. "Were, however, products to
be raised that could be manufactured on the farm, and transported in the
manufactured instead of the crude state, transit charges would be immensely
reduced; and all the oil seeds, the safflower, the dyes, and other Indian
products I want to see introduced, fulfil this condition. "Were a few cheap
oil-mills to be established on the remote farms, were indigo vats to be
built, these products would well repay cultivation, always supposing that
they can be suitably grown, and to find out this experiment is necessary.
In India, where the best
farming under European supervision prevails, the indigo is generally sown by
drills, is carefully weeded and tended, and the fields are as well tilled as
any in Strathmore or Midlothian. It would be a warm weather crop here, and
might be sown about the beginning and all through August. Sown upon good
moisture it would take a good start, and its growth'is very rapid. In the
north-west of India it is often sown broadcast upon irrigated lands. In
Oudh, Bengal, and other places, it is scattered on sandbanks, in the
rice-fields after the rice has been cut and the ground merely tickled with
the hoe. In Bhaugulpore and Purneah the cultivators scratch the ground with
their wooden ploughs, and amid the grass jungles in the newly-cleared forest
lands, the hollows and margins by lakes and watercourses, its vivid green
contrasts beautifully with the arid, withered, burnt-up aspect of the
surrounding country.
As already stated, it is so
bitter that no animal, not even a goat, will touch it, and where the weeds,
favoured by the shelter of the indigo crops, attain a dangerous rankness,
the village sheep and goats are sent in to brouse down the unwanted weeds,
and the field thus supplies fodder as well as a valuable crop. The plant, if
it once gains a footing, is of vigorous growth. It has a deep tap-root which
descends straight down. It would thus be unsuitable to stiff clays, or land
with a marly or shaly bottom. I have known it successfully resist blight,
caterpillars, ten months' drought, and winter frost, and on getting rain,
though not a leaf had been visible before, it sprouted up with amazing
vigour and quickness.
It would be ready to cut, in
from three and a half to four months. In this country with occasional rains,
in probably less than that time. The dye which the plant contains is
extracted from the leaf. The plant is grown for leaf alone, and a thick
sowing, for this purpose is desirable.
The mode of manufacture,
stated very shortly, is this. The plant is first steeped in steeping-vats,
for about ten to twelve hours. The plant is placed in layers and battened
down. When the vat is ready to open, it is run into a lower vat called the
beating-vat. It runs out as a yellowish green liquor, which, on exposure to
the air, becomes of an intense blue. This is due to oxygenation. Here it is
now beaten violently for from two to three hours. This process is now done
by machinery, a revolving wheel with small discs at the ends is put in
motion by the engine, and it churns and smashes up the liquor, exposing
every particle to the action of the air, till the vat assumes a deep intense
indigo blue colour, beautifully flecked with foam, and is one of the
prettiest sights in all the range of the manufacturing industries of the
world. Two processes go on simultaneously during the beating. The one, as I
have stated, is chemical, namely oxydation, the other is mechanical, an
aggregation of the particles into what is technically termed "grain." As the
beating process progresses, the liquor gets seemingly filled with flecks, or
starchy-looking little flakes. These get bigger and bigger, till at length
the beating is completed. The vat is ripe and this flakey fecula, floating
in the contained mass gradually subsides to the bottom as a pulpy sediment
of an intensely deep blue.
The waste liquor, of a dark
sherry colour, is now run off. The indigo remaining in the bottom of the
vat, is strained, boiled, strained again on a large cooling table, put into
presses, pressed through cloths, cut into cakes, marked, dried, and finally
boxed up and sent to market. My readers will see it is a long and
troublesome and costly process, but these elements are more or less
inseparable from all manufacturing industries, and in indigo the results are
fully commensurate with the time, trouble, and cost.
After the first cutting, the
field is ploughed to loosen the soil, keep down weeds, and let the air into
the roots. In a short time shoots sprout out from the stubble, and by
another month or six weeks a second cutting is ready for the vats. With
favourable moisture, or if the approach of cold do not check the shooting
of a fresh growth, a third cutting is frequently obtainable.
In the winter, if these
remaining stumps be lightly ploughed, a crop of rape, mustard, linseed,
barley, oats, or any other cereal, could be taken from the ground, and in
localities where there was little frost, the "khoontees" or stubble would
yield a second year's crop, and X have taken in Oudh three years' cuttings
from the one sowing. As a rule, in the best indigo districts in India,
annual sowings are followed. The plant from which the seed is obtained is
sown at the end of the manufacturing season, and ripens in the cold weather.
Indigo-growing for seed forms a very profitable industry in the northern
parts of India, and immense quantities of seed are sent down to the planters
in Behar and Bengal. In Queensland, therefore, we would require to have our
seedrgrowers, and there I am desirous that seed-growing experiments should
be made. There need not be costly vats and premises built, and, indeed,
capitalists might here meet the requirements of the small selector and poor
farmer, much in the same way as is done with the sugar-cane, and start a
factory, paying the farmer for the green indigo, as is very commonly done in
India. Many a cultivator in India grows his patch of indigo, and when ripe,
cuts and sends it in to the factory, where it is weighed, and paid at so
much per bundle.
Roughly speaking, and in the
absence of all data from experiment, I would calculate the yield in this
country to be fully up to the Indian yield, because the soil is virgin here,
and has been worked for centuries there without ever being manured. I would
imagine that an acre of good crop in this country would yield enough, from,
say two cuttings, to fill six or eight vats of 2000 cubic feet each. Each
vat yields on an average 30 lbs. of manufactured indigo. The average price
of this at the port of shipment, is about ten shillings per lb. It would
fetch more in England or the Continent. At six vats to the acre this would
yield 901, per acre, with eight vats 1201; this seems a large return, but,
of course, until practical experiments be made, I can only state what I
believe would be the case. With three cuttings in the one season, I do not
think my estimate over-sanguine.
My agricultural friends in
the colony will clearly understand that I am writing mainly to promote a
spirit of inquiry, and a desire for intelligent experiment. It would be
very easy to find out what a given weight of green indigo will yield. The
question, first of all, is to find out what weight will the land bring
forth; how many cuttings are procurable; and then the proportion the cost of
production will bear to the value and amount of the article produced. By all
means let us be sure of our ground first, and not rush blindly into foolish
visionary schemes. But to sum up what I have said on indigo, we have here a
plant that is of immense commercial value, which is most profitably grown in
India, which is hardy, quick of growth, and does not require immoderate
care, or the best soil. It is strong to resist long drought and extreme
heat. Quick to recover scorching, blight, or caterpillars which sometimes
attack it in its early stages. It will not succumb to slight frosts. It is
unpalatable enough to enjoy immunity from even the greedy kangaroo or
omnivorous goat. It is said to be a wonderful agent in destroying miasma,
and lastly it needs not to be transported in bulk, but can be manufactured
where it is grown, and always commands a sale, whilst it retains its "pride
of place" as the only "fast" vegetable blue the world contains, and
wool-dyeing, calico-printing, potteries, and other arts and industries
demand its aid.
So much for indigo. I have
proved by actual experiment that it can be successfully grown in New South
Wales, and I am collecting the seed which is ripening in the garden as I
write, and will continue the experiment yet another year.
We come now to a class of
crop which is a very common one in India, one that yields a good return,
does not require a very extraordinary amount of care in its cultivation, is
hardy and prolific, and which I think would be admirably suited to the
climate and soil of Australia. I have, indeed, proved that it is so. I refer
to the oil seeds.
Perhaps the most productive
of the group is the sarsoiu or mustard, with its kindred rival the toree or
black rape.
The mustard is the beautiful
golden yellow variety, from which the mustard oil is expressed, while the
brown rape yields the valuable rape oil of commerce. In India these are
usually sown broadcast at the beginning of the cold weather. They could very
readily be sown here, after the indigo had yielded its third cutting. A
field of rape or mustard in full bloom is a very lovely sight indeed. It
reminds one at a distance of the golden furze or broom of the old country.
For leagues upon leagues in Bengal, Behar, Oudh, and the north-west, during
the cold weather, this golden carpet is spread over the land. In January and
February the richly-tinted expanse suggests poetic fancies, and reminds one
of a vast "field of the cloth of gold." When it is little more than an inch
or two inches in height the rape begins to put forth its blossoms. As the
stalk emerges further and further from the ground fresh successions of
beautiful golden blossoms open their tiny petals, and the pods take their
places on the stalk below. Innumerable tiny branchlets shoot off, each
bearing its crowns of bloom and wealth of pods beneath, until at length the
last little yellow petals pale and drop off, as the pod asserts itself; and
then, as the stalk begins to get dry and withered, the pods swell and the
seed inside begins to rattle—the weighted stalk droops its head and bends.
The natives pluck the stalks
up by the roots, and gather the crop ere it be perfectly ripe. This is to
let it ripen on the threshing-floor. When perfectly ripe the pods open, and
were it allowed to ripen in the field much of the seed would be lost.
The stalks are not good for
much beyond fuel, but the beautiful seed forms a valuable freight to Europe,
and the mustard oil is used by every native in Hin- dostan as a relish to
curry and rice, a medicament, an unguent, and in other different ways. It
possesses valuable medicinal properties, is a first-rate article of diet for
those who can get over the rather assertive smell, and is of course most
valuable in all the uses and purposes to which vegetable oils can be
applied. There is always a ready sale for the seed. The refuse makes grand
feed for cattle, and every village in Bengal possesses its two or three rude
oil-mills, and. the taelees or oil-merchants are generally among the most
intelligent and thriving class of the community.
Rape and mustard seem to
thrive on any soil. Among the newly cleared tracts of the forest country, on
the high bare uplands and sandy undulations of Goruckpore and North
Bhaugulpore, it thrives luxuriantly. Its golden sheen covers the arid
slopes of Shahabad, and drapes the flat fertile reaches of Patna with its
magnificent mantle of yellow. It is, indeed, a beautiful sight to see
leagues of this gorgeous blossom.
There are three kinds: the
sarsow, or large yellow rape; the toree, a smaller brown seed, not unlike
turnip seed, but a little larger; and the rye, or true mustard. "When in
full bloom the plant is not unlike a "shot" turnip, that is, a turnip gone
to seed. The seed pods form much in the same way as turnip or radish pods
form. It is very productive, and as it ripens early, the natives often sow
it sparsely with their barley or wheat, and pluck it just as these crops are
about coming into ear. It does not require weeding, and would, I believe,
make a most suitable crop for rough ground here, or newly reclaimed land,
where it might not pay to grow wheat, barley, or oats.
The linseed which the natives
call teesee is another favourite cold-weather crop. It is frequently sown
along with the toree or barley, but most commonly is scattered over the
early rice stubble, which has previously had a perfunctory scrape with a
wooden plough. The linseed has an exceedingly pretty pale- blue blossom.
This contrasts beautifully with the golden yellow of the toree; and at such
a time, when the weather is cool and bracing, the rice crop garnered, and
there are prospects of good moisture for the indigo, cane, tobacco, or
maize, the Indian farmer's life is not at all an unenviable one.
There exists a large and a
small kind of linseed. Its uses are too familiar to my readers to require
elucidation here, but I am certain that if experiments were made on the
scale I have suggested with all these oil-seeds, that on such places as the
Belliuger, the Tweed, the Richmond, Hunter, and Clarence, the finest
riverine districts of New South Wales, the oil- mill would become as
necessary and common an adjunct to the selector's farm as the barn and
threshing-mill are to the Scotch and English farms at home.
The til or sesamum is another
crop, cultivated in high sandy uplands, in many places near the Nepaulese
boundary. It yields a delicious aromatic oil, which could be used in a
thousand ways in the arts, but it is more of a specialty than the rape or
linseed, and I daresay would not be so valuable as a farming crop.
I can scarcely estimate the
yield that might be expected from these oil seeds, as all my calculations
are based on the Indian figures, but from one "beegah" in Chumparum, I have
raised thirty-four "maunds" of mustard seed, and this was sown amongst a
field of sugar-cane which I had planted as feed for my plough bullocks.
Now-a "beegah" is some 1240 square yards. An acre is 4840—ergo, a "beegah"
is somewhat more than a quarter of an acre. It will be practically near
enough, allowing for better farming and a richer soil, if we say a quarter
of an acre. A "maund" is eighty lbs. avoirdupois, this would make the yield
of an acre, roughly, 10,880 lbs., or say ninety- six cwt. The average price
in Calcutta for the seed is two rupees eight annas, to three rupees, or say
five shillings to six shillings. This would make about 241 an acre.
I must say that thirty-four "maunds"
to a "beegah" is an exceptionally good crop; still I am sanguine that such
would be no uncommon yield in the Australian colonies, and were the oil
expressed, it would fetch more than the seed. The residue forms castor-oil
and hemp are splendid fattening feed for stock, and the product is not
bulky, but readily transportable. Linseed fetches a higher price, but for
both products there is a-constant and steady demand. Linseed is generally
credited by the Indian farmer with being an exhaustive crop ; indeed, all
oil seeds seem to be more or less exhaustive, but I have never yet seen land
so utterly poor as not to be capable of producing a pretty fair growth of
rape. It seems to grow readily anywhere in India. On this account the
natives generally sow it in their worst lands, but where it gets a rich
soil, the vigour of its growth ig amazing. In rich factory lands I have
often seen it " laid" in the same way as rank wheat —lying in tangled masses
on the humid soil, quite unable to support its wealthy weight of
well-filled seed pods.
Of the castor-oil plant, what
shall I say? Nearly all my readers are acquainted with the peculiar
properties of the oil itself, I have little doubt. The plant grows like a
weed, but with proper treatment it is capable of forming a most valuable
crop. In India it is generally planted on the head ridges of the fields, or
on the banks and along the sides of ditches. The women pluck the berries, or
bunches of prickly-looking nuts, or pods, or whatever they are called. These
are dried, husked in a mortar by a wooden pestle, and then put through the
oil mill. When the bushes are freely nipped and pruned, and the plant kept
down like a shrub, and not allowed to straggle, its producing power is much
augmented. I do not know, however, what amount per "beegah" it would
produce, as I only. grew enough along the banks to yield oil for the press-
house, screws, and machinery about the factory.
Sunn-sunnai, or hemp, is
another common crop with the Indian farmers. It is sown very thickly, has a
large beautiful bell-shaped yellow flower, grows to a height of from six to
eight feet, and each farmer grows just enough to afford him material to make
his cordage for the year, and yield. enough tow to put round the axles of
his old patched-up bullock cart. It could, I daresay, be easily grown in
Australia, and is certainly worthy of experimental trial.
Let me say a few words now of
the safflower, I have already seen some very fine samples grown from the
seed which I have imported from India. In India it is generally planted in
rows round the edges of the poppy fields. The seeds are put in at about a
foot apart. The plant is hardy, and of quick growth, The produce is
contained in the flower. The safflower is not unlike a thistle-head in
bloom, or- perhaps an artichoke is a better illustration. When the pretty
yellow flower has fully opened, the women and children, with tucked up
clothes, go into the field, and pick the flowers, much as cotton is picked,
and these are then spread out on bamboo mats, and put on the roof of the hut
to dry.
As it dries, it assumes a
deep orange hue : a deep, dark, intensely vivid orange, This is quite a
feature in Indian villages, The lovely touches of colour give quite an air
of beauty, which lights up the otherwise rather unlovely surroundings of the
ordinary Indian hut or village, with quite an artistic and charming effect.
On every thatched roof in the early mornings of February, one may see the
deep crimson of the capsicums, contrasting beautifully with the brilliant
orange of the koosoom, or safflower, and the snowy white of the newly washed
puggree or saree spread along the lowly eaves to dry; or maybe
flutteringgaily in the wind, a party-coloured flag of quaint device erected
on a high bamboo, and sacred to one or other of the multitudinous array of
Hindoo mythological creations.
The dried flower is valuable.
In the Indian bazaars it is sold by the ounce—and at times a rupee will only
buy its own weight of the precious dye. It is used also as a drug, and I
have proved it might be cultivated successfully here in patches. It would
form a valuable cottage industry, but perhaps is scarcely suitable for a
farming crop on a large scale.
Besides these there are Jowar,
Bajra, Murrowah gennara, and a host of other kinds of grain, which form
valuable food staples, and which are perfectly adapted, I am sure, for this
country, i. e. New South Wales. These I have just named belong to the millet
family; and, apart from their grain-producing qualifications, they are most
valuable as being all of them excellent fodder plants. Indeed, the Indian
gennara is, next to sugar-cane, the great stand-by of the Indigo planter for
fodder to his large staff of draught cattle, which he has to keep well fed,
if he wants his indigo lands kept at the proper standard of cultivation.
Then, again, there are the
valuable legumes, such as the dall, mussooree, muttur, channa, lombeea, and
a host of others. The channa is the well-known gram, than which there is
probably no better horse-feed in the world. Surely they are all worthy of a
trial! But how is the struggling farmer to try them ? which brings me back
to my former complaint once more.
That agriculture has not
received the attention its vast importance merits is undeniable ! Perhaps
these few short, hurried notes may lead some of my farming Australian
readers to think. If thinking will but lead to action, and a fair trial be
given to suck of our Indian seeds as may seem most promising, certain I am
that the available crops of the Australian farmer can be increased
many-fold. Certain am I, too, that more suitable products for his soil and
climate than those he now cultivates with such an often times precarious
return, can be readily obtained; and that it behoves our farmers and our
government to mutually aid each other to make the fecund earth yield her
best and fittest increase, and make this magnificent country indeed a land
of corn, and wine, and oil. |