ILLUSTRATIONS
| Beginning of the Asparagus Industry in California | [Frontispiece] |
|---|---|
| PAGE | |
| Asparagus Plumosus Nanus | [5] |
| Asparagus Sprengeri | [7] |
| Asparagus Laricinus | [9] |
| Asparagus Racemosus, var. Tetragonus | [11] |
| Asparagus Sarmentosus | [12] |
| Crown, Roots, Buds, Spear | [14] |
| Stem, Leaves, Flowers, Berries | [14] |
| Flowers | [15] |
| Palmetto Asparagus | [21] |
| Pot-Grown Plant | [37] |
| Horizontal Development of Roots | [51] |
| Trenches Ready for Planting | [57] |
| Hudson's Trencher | [58] |
| Root in Proper Position for Covering | [59] |
| Cross-section of Trenches After Planting | [60] |
| Asparagus Field Ridged in Early Spring | [67] |
| Leveling the Ridges After Cutting Season | [69] |
| Fertilized Asparagus Plot | [75] |
| Unfertilized Asparagus Plot | [77] |
| Basket of Asparagus | [85] |
| Cutting and Picking Up Asparagus | [86] |
| Horse Carrier for Ten Boxes | [87] |
| Asparagus Knives | [89] |
| End and Side View of White Asparagus Bunches | [90] |
| Conover's Asparagus Buncher | [91] |
| Watt's Asparagus Buncher | [92] |
| Rack and Knives Used in New England | [93] |
| At the Bunching Table | [94] |
| Box of Giant Asparagus | [97] |
| Southern Asparagus Crate | [98] |
| Tunnel for Forcing Steam Through the Soil | [107] |
| A Long Island Asparagus Cannery | [113] |
| Sterilizing Tank | [115] |
| Sterilizing Room | [117] |
| Interior View of a California Asparagus Cannery | [119] |
| Perspective View of a California Asparagus Cannery | [121] |
| Cannery in Asparagus Fields | [123] |
| Common Asparagus Beetle | [127] |
| Asparagus Attacked by Beetles | [129] |
| Spotted Ladybird | [131] |
| Twelve-spotted Asparagus Beetle | [134] |
| Asparagus Stems Affected with Rust | [138] |
| Portion of Rusted Asparagus Stems | [139] |
| Asparagus Field on Bouldin Island | [161] |
PREFACE
he cultivation of asparagus for home use as well as for market is so rapidly increasing, and reliable information pertaining to it is so frequently asked for, that a book on this subject is evidently needed. While all works on vegetable culture treat more or less extensively on its cultivation, so far there has been no book exclusively devoted to asparagus published in America. Asparagus is one of the earliest, most delicious, and surest products of the garden. Its position among other vegetables is unique, and when once planted it lasts a lifetime; it may be prepared for use in great variety, and may be canned or dried so as to be available at any time of the year; and yet in the great majority of farm gardens it is almost unknown. The principal reason for this neglect is based upon the erroneous idea that asparagus culture requires unusual skill, expense, and hard work. While this was true, in a measure, under old-time rules, modern methods have so simplified every detail connected with the cultivation of asparagus as to make it not necessarily more expensive and laborious than that of any other garden crop. To describe and make clear these improved methods, to demonstrate how easily and inexpensively an asparagus bed may be had in every garden, and how much pleasure, health, and profit may be derived from the crop have been the principal inducements to writing this book.
In a popular treatise on so widely distributed a vegetable as asparagus, the cultivation of which had been brought to a high state of development many centuries before the Christian era, there is little opportunity for originality. All that the author has endeavored in this little volume has been to collect, arrange, classify, and systematize all obtainable facts, compare them with his own many years' experience in asparagus culture, and present his inferences in a plain and popular manner. Free use has been made of all available literature, especially helpful among which has been the Farmers' Bulletin No. 61 of the United States Department of Agriculture, by R. B. Handy; also bulletins of the Missouri, New York, Ohio, New Jersey, North Carolina, Maryland, Massachusetts, and South Carolina and other experiment stations; the files of American Agriculturist; Gardener's Chronicle, from which descriptions of several ornamental species by William Watson were condensed; Thome's "Flora von Deutschland;" "Eintraegliche Spargelzucht," von Franz Goeschke; "Braunschweiger Spargelbuch," von Dr. Ed. Brinckmeier; "Parks and Gardens of Paris," by William Robinson; "Asparagus Culture," by James Barnes and William Robinson; "Les Plantes Potageres," by Vilmorin-Andrieux; the works of Peter Henderson, Thomas Bridgeman, J. C. Loudon, and others.
The author desires to express his grateful acknowledgments to Mr. Herbert Myrick, editor-in-chief of American Agriculturist and allied publications, for critically reading the whole manuscript; to Prof. W. G. Johnson, Charles V. Mapes, C. L. Allen, A. D. McNair, Superintendent Southern Pines Experimental Farm; Prof. W. F. Massey, Robert W. Nix, Robert Hickmott, Charles W. Prescott, Joel Borton, and all others who by their help, suggestions, and advice have aided him in the preparation of this work.