Crop Rotation
THE ROTATION OF CROPS
Doubtless you know what is meant by rotation, for your teacher has explained to you
already how the earth rotates, or turns, on its axis and revolves around the sun. When we speak of
crop-rotation we mean not only that the same crop should not be planted on the same land for two successive
years but that crops should follow one another in a regular order.
Many farmers do not follow a system of farming that involves a
change of crops. In some parts of the country the same fields are planted to corn or wheat or cotton year
after year. This is not a good practice and sooner or later will wear out the soil completely, because the
soil-elements that furnish the food of that constant crop are soon exhausted and good crop-production is no
longer possible.
Why is crop-rotation so necessary? There are different kinds of plant food in the
soil. If any one of these is used up, the soil of course loses its power to feed plants properly. Now each
crop uses more of some of the different kinds of foods than others do, just as you like some kinds of food
better than others. But the crop cannot, as you can, learn to use the kinds of food it does not like; it must
use the kind that nature fitted it to use. Not only do different crops feed upon different soil foods, but
they use different quantities of these foods.
Now if a farmer plant the same crop in the same field each year, that crop soon uses
up all of the available plant food that it likes. Hence the soil can no longer properly nourish the crop that
has been year by year robbing it. If that crop is to be successfully grown again on the land, the exhausted
element must be restored.

Fig. 25. Grass following Corn
This can be done in two ways: first, by finding out what element has here been
exhausted, and then restoring this element by means either of commercial fertilizers or manure; second, by
planting on the land crops that feed on different food and that will allow or assist kind Mother Nature "to
repair her waste places." An illustration may help you to remember this fact. Nitrogen is, as already
explained, one of the commonest plant foods. It may almost be called plant bread. The wheat crop uses up a
good deal of nitrogen. Suppose a field were planted in wheat year after year. Most of the available nitrogen
would be taken out of the soil after a while, and a new wheat crop, if planted on the field, would not get enough of its
proper food to yield a paying harvest. This same land, however, that could not grow wheat could produce other
crops that do not require so much nitrogen. For example, it could grow cowpeas. Cowpeas, aided by their
root-tubercles, are able to gather from the air a great part of the nitrogen needed for their growth. Thus a
good crop of peas can be obtained even if there is little available nitrogen in the soil. On the other hand
wheat and corn and cotton cannot use the free nitrogen of the air, and they suffer if there is an
insufficient quantity present in the soil; hence the necessity of growing legumes to supply what is
lacking.

Fig. 26. Cowpeas and Corn—August
Let us now see how easily plant food may be saved by the rotation of crops.
If you sow wheat in the autumn it is ready to be harvested in time for planting
cowpeas. Plow or disk the wheat stubble, and sow the same field to cowpeas. If the wheat crop has exhausted
the greater part of the nitrogen of the soil, it makes no difference to the cowpea; for the cowpea will get
its nitrogen from the air and not only provide for its own growth but will leave quantities of nitrogen in
the queer nodules of its roots for the crops coming after it in the rotation.

Fig. 27. Cowpeas and Corn—October
If corn be planted, there should be a rotation in just the same way. The corn plant, a
summer grower, of course uses a certain portion of the plant food stored in the soil. In order that the crop
following the corn may feed on what the corn did not use, this crop should be one that requires a somewhat
different food. Moreover, it should be one that fits in well with corn so as to make a winter crop. We find
just such a plant in clover or wheat. Like the cowpea, all the varieties of clover have on
their roots tubercles that add the important element, nitrogen, to the soil.
From these facts is it not clear that if you wish to improve your land quickly and
keep it always fruitful you must practice crop-rotation?
An Illustration of
Crop-Rotation
Here are two systems of crop-rotation as practiced at one or more
agricultural experiment stations. Each furnishes an ideal plan for keeping up land.
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First
Year
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Second
Year
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Third
Year
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Summer
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Winter
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Summer
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Winter
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Summer
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Winter
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Corn
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Crimson Clover
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Cotton
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Wheat
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Cowpeas
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Rye for pasture
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or
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Summer
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Winter
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Summer
|
Winter
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Summer
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Winter
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Corn
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Wheat
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Clover and grass
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Clover and grass
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Grass
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Grass for pasture
or meadow
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In these rotations the cowpeas and clovers are nitrogen-gathering crops. They not only
furnish hay but they enrich the soil. The wheat, corn, and cotton are money crops, but in addition they are
cultivated crops; hence they improve the physical condition of the soil and give opportunity to kill weeds.
The grasses and clovers are of course used for pasturage and hay. This is only a suggested rotation. Work out
one that will meet your home need.
The Plant
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