Cabbages and Cauliflowers: How to Grow Them / A Practical Treatise, Giving Full Details On Every Point, / Including Keeping And Marketing The Crop
Boston: CASHMAN, KEATING & CO., PRINTERS, 1889.
Entered according to Act of Congress, in the year 1889, by JAMES J. H. GREGORY, In the Office of the Librarian of Congress, at Washington, D. C.
As a general, yet very thorough, response to inquiries from many of my customers about cabbage raising, I have aimed in this treatise to tell them all about the subject. The different inquiries made from time to time have given me a pretty clear idea of the many heads under which information is wanted; and it has been my aim to give this with the same thoroughness of detail as in my little work on Squashes. I have endeavored to talk in a very practical way, drawing from a large observation and experience, and receiving, in describing varieties, some valuable information from McIntosh's work, The Book of the Garden.
Botanists tell us that all of the Cabbage family, which includes not only every variety of cabbage, Red, White, and Savoy, but all the cauliflower, broccoli, kale, and brussels sprouts, had their origin in the wild cabbage of Europe ( Brassica oleracea ), a plant with green, wavy leaves, much resembling charlock, found growing wild at Dover in England, and other parts of Europe. This plant, says McIntosh, is mostly confined to the sea-shore, and grows only on chalky or calcareous soils.
Thus through the wisdom of the Great Father of us all, who occasionally in his great garden allows vegetables to sport into a higher form of life, and grants to some of these sports sufficient strength of individuality to enable them to perpetuate themselves, and, at times, to blend their individuality with that of other sports, we have the heading cabbage in its numerous varieties, the creamy cauliflower, the feathery kale, the curled savoy. On my own grounds from a strain of seed that had been grown isolated for years, there recently came a plant that in its structure closely resembled Brussels Sprouts, growing about two feet in height, with a small head under each leaf. The cultivated cabbage was first introduced into England by the Romans, and from there nearly all the kinds cultivated in this country were originally brought. Those which we consider as peculiarly American varieties, have only been made so by years of careful improvement on the original imported sorts. The characteristics of these varieties will be given farther on.
James John Howard Gregory
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CABBAGES AND CAULIFLOWERS:
JAMES J. H. GREGORY,
CONTENTS.
CABBAGES AND CAULIFLOWERS.
OBJECT OF THIS TREATISE.
THE ORIGIN OF CABBAGE.
WHAT A CABBAGE IS.
SELECTING THE SOIL.
PREPARING THE SOIL.
THE MANURE.
HOW TO APPLY THE MANURE.
MAKING THE HILLS AND PLANTING THE SEED.
CARE OF THE YOUNG PLANTS.
PROTECTING THE PLANTS FROM THEIR ENEMIES.
THE GREEN WORM.
CLUB OR STUMP FOOT AND MAGGOT.
CARE OF THE GROWING CROP.
MARKETING THE CROP.
KEEPING CABBAGES THROUGH THE WINTER.
HAVING CABBAGE MAKE HEADS IN WINTER.
VARIETIES OF CABBAGE.
SAVOY CABBAGES.
OTHER VARIETIES OF CABBAGE.
CABBAGE FOR STOCK.
RAISING CABBAGE SEED.
COOKING CABBAGE, SOUR-KROUT, ETC.
CABBAGES UNDER GLASS.
COLD FRAME AND HOT-BED.
CAULIFLOWER, BROCCOLI, BRUSSELS-SPROUTS, KALE, AND SEA-KALE.
SQUASHES:
HOW TO GROW THEM.
FERTILIZERS:
WHERE THE MATERIALS COME FROM; HOW TO GET THEM IN THE CHEAPEST FORM; HOW TO MAKE OUR OWN FERTILIZERS.
ONION RAISING:
WHAT KINDS TO RAISE
AND
THE WAY TO RAISE THEM.
A NEW TREATISE.
CARROTS, MANGOLD WURTZELS
AND
SUGAR BEETS.
JAMES J. H. GREGORY,