Oats
The oat plant belongs to the grass family. It is a hardy plant and, under good
conditions, a vigorous grower. It stands cold and wet better than any other cereal except possibly rye. Oats
like a cool, moist climate. In warm climates, oats do best when they are sowed in the fall. In cooler
sections, spring seeding is more generally practiced.

Fig. 206. Oats
Common oats at left;
side oats at right
There are a great many varieties of oats. No one variety is best
adapted to all sections, but many varieties make fine crops in many sections. Any variety is desirable which
has these qualities: power to resist disease and insect enemies, heavy grains, thin hulls,
good color, and suitability to local surroundings.
As oats and rye make a better yield on poor land than any other cereals, some farmers
usually plant these crops on their poorest lands. However, no land is too good to be used for so valuable a
crop as oats. Oats require a great deal of moisture; hence light, sandy soils are not so well adapted to this
crop as are the sandy loams and fine clay loams with their closer and heavier texture.
If oats are to be planted in the spring, the ground should be broken in the fall,
winter, or early spring so that no delay may occur at seeding-time. But to have a thoroughly settled, compact
seed-bed the breaking of the land should be done at least a month before the seeding, and it will help
greatly to run over the land with a disk harrow immediately after the breaking.
Oats may be planted by scattering them broadcast or by means of a drill. The drill is
better, because the grains are more uniformly distributed and the depth of planting is better regulated. The
seeds should be covered from one and a half to two inches deep. In a very dry season three inches may not be
too deep. The amount of seed needed to the acre varies considerably, but generally the seeding is from two to three bushels an acre.
On poor lands two bushels will be a fair average seeding; on good lands as much as three bushels should be
used.

Fig. 207. Harvesting Oats
This crop fits in well, over wide areas, with various rotations. As the purpose of all
rotation is to keep the soil productive, oats should alternate every few years with one of the
nitrogen-gathering crops. In the South, cowpeas, soy beans, clovers, and vetches may be used in this
rotation. In the North and West the clovers mixed with timothy hay make a useful combination for this
purpose.
Spring-sowed oats, since they have a short growing season, need their nitrogenous
plant food in a form which can be quickly used. To supply this nitrogen a top-dressing of nitrate of soda or
sulphate of lime is helpful. The plant can gather its food quickly from either of these two. As fall-sowed oats have of
course a longer growing season, the nitrogen can be supplied by well-rotted manure, blood, tankage, or
fish-scrap. Use barnyard manure carefully. Do not apply too much just before seeding, and use only thoroughly
rotted manure. It is always desirable to have a bountiful supply of humus in land on which oats are to be
planted.
The time of harvesting will vary with the use which is to be made of the oats. If the
crop is to be threshed, the harvesting should be done when the kernels have passed out of the milk into the
hard dough state. The lower leaves of the stalks will at this time have turned yellow, and the kernels will
be plump and full. Do not, however, wait too long, for if you do the grain will shatter and the straw lose in
feeding value.
On the other hand, if the oats are to be cut for hay it is best to cut them while the
grains are still in the milk stage. At this stage the leaves are still green and the plants are rich in
protein.
Oats should be cured quickly. It is very important that threshed oats should be dry
before they are stored. Should they on being stored still contain moisture, they will be likely to heat and
to discolor. Any discoloring will reduce their value. Nor should oats ever be allowed to remain long in the
fields, no matter how well they may seem to be shocked. The dew and the rain will injure their value by
discoloring them more or less.
Oats are muscle-builders rather than fat-formers. Hence they are a valuable ration for
work animals, dairy cows, and breeding-stock.
Rye
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