Cacao Culture in the Philippines
Philippine Bureau of Agriculture.
Farmer’s Bulletin No. 2.
Cacao Culture in the Philippines
By William S. Lyon, In charge of seed and plant introduction.
Prepared under the direction of the Chief of the Bureau. Manila: Bureau of Public Printing. 1902.
Sir: I submit herewith an essay on the cultivation of cacao, for the use of planters in the Philippines. This essay is prompted first, because much of the cacao grown here is of such excellent quality as to induce keen rivalry among buyers to procure it at an advance of quite 50 per cent over the common export grades of the Java bean, notwithstanding the failure on the part of the local grower to “process” or cure the product in any way; second, because in parts of Mindanao and Negros, despite ill treatment or no treatment, the plant exhibits a luxuriance of growth and wealth of productiveness that demonstrates its entire fitness for those regions and leads us to believe in the successful extension of its propagation throughout these Islands; and lastly because of the repeated calls upon the Chief of the Agricultural Bureau for literature or information bearing upon this important horticultural industry.
William Scrugham Lyon
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Contents.
Letter of Transmittal.
Climate.
Location.
The Soil.
Preparation of the Soil.
Drainage.
The Plantation.
Selection of Varieties.
Planting.
Cultivation.
Pruning.
Harvest.
Enemies and Diseases.
Manuring.
Supplemental Notes.
Estimated Cost and Revenues Derived from a Cacao Plantation.
Colophon
Availability
Encoding
Revision History
External References
Corrections