M pis T it ►'i . -£ HEDGES, WINDBREAKS &c E.P.rOWELL SB w^^^y^ ■ :V1 LIBRARY OF CONGRESS. if-: (;hai)...:r_.. Copyright No. ShelfZaa UNITED STATES OF AMERICA. m^'^^^m^-7^ 'm. r^^ o X w W O Q W o H U Hedges Windbreaks Shelters and Live rences A Treatise on the PlaiUing, Growth and namgen^ent of Hedge Plants for Country and Suburtxin Homes P^^ POWELL ILLUSTRATED New Yorft ORANGE JUDD COMPANY 1900 ^ 55328 l_ibrMr y of Con< ?••••«« OCT 2 1900 S£r.Otjf> COPY. OHOtK DWISION, OCT 18 1900 Copyright, 1900 BY ORANGE JUDD COMPANY DEDICATION This book is dedicated to the Farmers of America ; the noblest race of men God's sun ever shone upon ; a race headed by George Washington and Thomas Jefferson ; a race that made the Republic, and that has the future of American freedom and prosperity in its keeping. Table of Contents PAGE. Introduction ---------___ ix Chapter I. Live Fences -------- -___i • Chapter II. Deciduous Hedges ---__._ .__i-j Chapter III. Hedges for Small Lawns, or for Dividing Lawns ; and Without Special Regard to Utility ----- 38 Chapter IV. Evergreens for Hedges ---------49 Chapter V. Windbreaks, Shelters, Etc ----___ 75 Chapter VI. Neglected Beauty - --------- 105 Chapter VII. Misplaced Hedges, Windbreaks, Etc - - - - - 113 Chapter VIII. Renovating the Deserted Homestead ----- 125 Chapter IX. Homes ----_-_-__-- 131 List of Illustrations 1 Buckthorn Hedge— Frontispiece ----- page. 2 Evergreen Hedge Bordering Drives - - - - 14 3 Windbreak on Grounds of Houghton Seminary, Clin- ton, N. Y. ----------- 22 4 Ground Plan of Suburban Home, with Fruit Garden - zi 5 Hemlock Hedge About Suburban Home - - - - 50 6 Arbor- Vitse Hedge Leading to Country Cottage - - 53 7 Entrance to Suburban Home of Twelve Acres - - 64 8 Ground Plan of Village Plot, with Flowers, Hedges and Windbreaks ----------73 9 Second Entrance to Suburban Home of Twelve Acres 74 10 Windbreak of Cedar Forty Feet High — House About Entirely Concealed --------82 11 Ground Plan of Country Place with Arbor-Vitre Hedges _-___------ 86 12 Hedge of Arbor-Vit?e in Winter ----- 92 13 Shrubbery Lawn with Ornamental Hedges - - - 96 14 Ground Plan of Country Place, Sheltered by Norway Spruce -----------98 15 Woman's Sewing Balcony ------ loi 16 Ground Plan of Country Place ------ 106 17 Ground Plan of Farm Plot with Tartarian Honey- suckle Hedges --------- 112 18 Residence with Street Hedge, and Another Without 126 19 Village Plot with Hemlock Hedges - - - - 124 20 Evergreen Circle on Lawn, with Bird House - - 126 21 Shelter and Croquet Ground ------ 134 22 Ground Plan of Suburban Place ----- 139 INTRODUCTION A book on hedges, live fences, windbreaks and shelters is called for, and I shall respond to the call, with the intention of preparing a compact handbook, that will be of specific use to the largely increasing class of people who appreciate the fact that country life is, or may be, the ideal life. Live fences are of much less importance in the United States since the very general passage of stock laws and their nearly universal enforcement. We do not any longer ha\^e to build fences against all the world, but only to see that our own stock commits no trespass. For this [)urpose wire will be chosen generally where there are ranches or large pastures, while lumber sections will still use board fences. There is, however, suffi- cient use of live fences to make it necessary to take the subject under consideration. The subject of windbreaks, on the contrary, is growing greatly in importance. The people are waking up to the neces- sity of an almost universal use of such protections against the drying effect of winds and the breaking force of storms. Ornamental hedges are also grow- ing in favor because of their peculiar effectiveness in producing variety in landscape — besides they always, more or less, are serviceable as windbreaks. The uses to which a hedge may be put are ( i ) as fence, (2) ornament, (3) windbreak, (4) to equalize mois- ture and temperature, (5) to furnish bird food. ix X INTRODUCTION. This last point may not be considered by some people of sufficient importance to be discussed in a prac- tical treatise. I am not sure but it is the most practical and important question that I can possibly lay before my readers. Certainly it shall not be overlooked. The materials to be used for the pur- poses enumerated class themselves under the head of deciduous and evergreen. These will be sepa- rately discussed. My object will not be to say everything that can be said about my topic, but succinctly and clearly to give necessary information. I shall especially not undertake to create an enthusiasm for hedge plant- ing; knowing well that where such a tendency is aroused it must be well sustained or the results will soon be a disgrace to our farms and rural residences. I shall keep this continually in view to stimulate my readers, and through them the American public, to a higher conception of the beautiful in home-making. The truly beautiful cannot be established by making a fad of any one sort of utilities, or of ornaments like arbors, or of ornamental utilities like hedges. It is by a judicious and thoughtful use of all that nature provides that we make our surroundings the best. It is especially desirable that w^e learn to dis- cover — to see — what nature freely offers us; for often the most glorious as well as the most valuable things are overlooked, while the inferior are cultivated. Traveling through the New England states, I am impressed with the fact that — with many noble exceptions — the most i>eautiful places are those where nature has had most freedom. I have INTRODUCTION. XI longed to own some of tlie superb gardens of pines in New Hampshire, sown not by the hands of men ; while my heart has grown warm over many a glori- ous hillside in Massachusetts where Mother Nature has thrown up her granite walls and lifted her wind- breaks, and run charming hedge lines, and dotted the trees just right, in groups and in singles, without a house in sight. Man sliould go to school to nature before he undertakes to improve nature. But this we should all refuse to do, waste or distort or abuse what is given to us freely. The fact that by far the majority of so-called homes are not homes of reason, taste and high sentiment, of beauty and utility har- monized, remains as the chief disgrace of our com- munities. I do not mean that we should let things go wild, or that a beautiful shrubbery is most beau- tiful when least cultivated. Not a spot exists on the globe that does not need exactly what God put in Eden — a man and a woman to trim and control it. A soul is needed everywhere, and a hand, but a brutish soul and a brute-force hand is needed nowhere. Nature does best without both these. Plant, but plant with brains. Trim, but trim thoughtfully. So you ^vill be, not a mere autocrat over the vegetable and animal kingdoms, but a wise and loving friend. The end will be that you will be in love with all about you, and in turn will win all love — till the birds sing for you an.d the roses blos- som for you. Your work in the garden and in the field will become a poem. I take up this work all the more gladly because of the unexpected, but none the less welcome, reversal of the tide of population into congested city Xll INTRODUCTION. life. The tide townward, which has gone on since the steam age began, about 1835-40, and with in- creasing volume up to 1890, has at last begun to ebb. The tendency to move outward has already taken up nearly every deserted farm, and is buying up all available land within one hundred miles or more of the larger cities. The rise of electricity as the world's motive power has made this possible. Steam power never could serve the farmer as it could serve the manufacturer. It built great factories, and around factories grew our great towns. Steam took our best brains and our best hands away from the farm. It took our most interesting employments out of our home life to do the knitting, sewing, soap-making, spinning, weaving, candle-making and shoemaking in vast establishments by machinery. The farmer was left to do, as well as he could, what coarse things were left for him to do, by hand power and animal power. Electricity is bound to reverse all this. Steam was concentrating, electricity is distributive. You can carry steam only an eighth of a mile with profit; electricity you may carry hundreds of miles. The twentieth century will open with a vastly increasing country population, all bound together with telephones and trolley roads. A large share of business will be done by telephone. Merchants will sit in their houses one hundred miles from their stores, yet within speaking distance of their em- ployees. Coming ont to breathe pure air and enjc^y green fields, the tide will bring wealth and culture and refinement. The country will get back its population, with a gain. We shall once more have our farmer presidents, as in the days of Wash- INTRODUCTION. Xlll ington, Jefferson and Madison — all tillers of the land. With this drift of the times, nothing can give more pleasure than to contribute to the most enlight- ened use of the land and the things of the land. We must hasten to reverse the waste of the useful and the beautiful, the wanton destruction of our windbreaks and water preserves. The small contri- bution of a few rods of windbreaks or hedges or a clump of shelter may seem an insignificant item, but these taken in the aggregate of tens of thousands Aviil do more than large forest plantations and reservations to equalize temperature and water pre- cipitation. Whoever builds a beautiful home and surrounds it with judicious plantings of trees is a public benefactor. CHAPTER I. LIVE FENCES. I shall discuss in this chapter the subject oi live fences ; not because of its general importance, but because of its supreme importance where it is needed at all. The introduction of wire as a material for fencing has become so common, and its adaptation to long ranges is so perfect, while the material is cheap and the fence quickly built, that it has largely displaced the use or need of live fences. The list of plants serviceable for a fence has not greatly changed during fifty years. The Osage orange stands at the head of the list for many sections. It is hardy, robust and capable of turning cattle. The hawthorn is less robust, and is subject to attacks of the woolly aphis. It is also less hardy, while very liable to lose its foliage early in the summer, like mosl of the thorns, from a fungous foe. The buckthorn is decidedly preferable to the hawthorn for general planting. It is free from blight and mildews, and I have never known it to be attacked by any other insect than the hop louse. This aphis, after several generations on plum trees and buckthorn hedges, migrates to the hop field. The damage done to the buckthorn is not serious, but is defacing. The leaves are curled and young growth is checked. The wild or native crab apple makes a stout defense, and it is also capable of being made ornamental. 2 HEDGES^ WINDBREAKS^ SHELTERS^ ETC. Its form can never be made regular, which is often an advantage. Fences of seedhng apples have been occasionally tried, and have proved to be more or less useful in turning annuals. Their chief value, however, is as windbreaks. Such hedges if exposed to animals will be pruned by them, and to some extent broken. Their irregularity and unmanageableness soon makes them occupy too much space for a fence. I have also found that the individuality of apple growth is so marked that no two trees can be relied upon to grow with equal vigor or similar habits. One will rise almost as direct as a Normandy poplar and the next sprawl out or show a propensity for weeping. There are special advantages about the three-thorned Gleditschia or honey locust. It certainly makes a formidable fence, and, if well trimmed, is the most beautiful of our live fences. It is impenetrable to man or beast. I have, however, found one trouble that is fatal to this fence, except when used on a small scale; it is very likely to be girdled by mice during the winter months. Where there is a short strip, the rodents can be stopped from their work by the use of coal ashes freely piled along the roots. Willow for fencing has not proved of any permanent value. Where such fences have been planted they have in some cases, however, developed into very good windbreaks. We may therefore pass by all material for live fences except the Osage orange, the honey locust and buckthorn. These three require more thorough examination and discussion. Osage orange f Madura aiiranfiaca) is a native of Arkansas and other southwestern states, where LIVE FENCES. it rises to a forest hight of sixty feet. It is really one of the handsomest of the forest trees of the southwest. The wood is very durable, and said to be more valuable in shipbuilding than live oak. It is otherwise of great use because of taking on a fine polish for furniture. Tlie Indians found it so elastic and tough for bows that they called it bow wood, and the French termed it Bois d'Arc. About 1800 Mr. Choteau of St. Louis planted seed of this tree, and Mr. Landreth of Philadelphia planted it in 1803. Hedges were first tried about 1840. In 1845, that genius of horticulture, Professor Turner of Jackson- ville, 111., reported that it had proved hardy with him during six years of trial. The seed soon became \alual)le, and was so sought for that the speculative price went up to $50 dollars a bushel. From 1850 to 1870 there was no subject of more importance to agriculture than live fences. Everywhere the best material was souglit for, and nothing seemed to be better, especially for the prairie land, than Osage orange. The prairie farmers went wild with excitement. In 1868 alone, Texas and Arkansas received over $100,000 for seed. One nurseryman of Illinois had 400 acres of plants. It was estimated that 60,000 miles of fence were planted in 1869. The cost was figured out at $48 a mile for the first year, about $20 for the second A^ar, about $12 for the third, and after that very little beyond the expense of trimming. Rut, alas, here was where the trouble came in. Not one mile in ten was ever properly trimmed. The fences grew out of all bounds. The lower limbs died, breaks occurred, while upper limbs threw out ferocious arms to 4 HEDGES^ WINDBREAKS^ SHELTERS^ ETC. scratch and tear. I do not know one Osage orange fence now remaining in central New York that is in ])rime condition. Most of them have been cut down. A few stand as windbreaks, but are scraggy, irregu- lar and unsightly. On the lower lands of the west, the Osage orange proved not quite hardy. The difficulty was largely with conditions of the soil. Careful drainage was always requisite. Planters soon learned to throw up ridges on which the plants were set. These ridges, twenty inches high, were rapidly prepared with plows, and the plants found the soil thus thrown up in admirable condition to be filled with fibrous roots. As soon as the hedge became strong enough to serve as a fence and turn cattle, root pruning was easily applied — also done with the plow — cutting off the ends of the roots with a revolving coulter. This combination of hedge and ditch was found to make a very admirable fence. These open ditches, run alongside of the hedges, served as drainage channels during the wet months, also holding water for stock during the dry season. When deepened into pools, they were found to be of decided value on the level lands of the west. During the dry season such channels act as ditches always do, not to render the soil more dry Init more moist. In some cases farmers grew corn rows on both sides of a ditch \n order to preserve the water as late as possible in summer. As a rule, the best live fences required double setting. Single rows did not prove absolutely a defense against hogs and sheep. The use of honey locust (Glcditschia triaran- Ihos) began a few years after that of Osage orange. LIVE FENCES. 5 It proved to be more hardy, and although the fohage gives it a more deHcate appearance, the thorns are strong and the wood is stiff from the outset. A very young hedge of this sort will turn animals. About 1870 the honey locust was considered just the thing we had long sought after and needed. It was planted in the eastern states much more freelv than the Osage orange had been used. From obser- vation I conclude it has not proved entirely unsatis- factory, yet there are more short lines of this fence still in existence than of any other throughout New York state, and a few of them are in good condition as fences. Next to the Osage orange and honey locust, the buckthorn, although less robust, makes a fairly good live fence. It has the advantage of being more beautiful in growth than the Osage orange and less savage in its thorns than the locust. It is possible to tolerate a buckthorn fence very near your house. In preparing the soil for a hedge fence it should be thoroughly cultivated for a width of at least three or four feet. The ridges that are made by the plov/ should be thrown toward the center. In stiff soils this may be advantageously done in autumn by throwing the furrows on each side from the center of the hedge line. This will enable the frosts to penetrate, and loosen the soil and the subsoil. A little preparation in spring and you are ready for planting. If it is desired to create a fence for immediate use, set your plants from twelve to fifteen inches apart, and in a single row. But if the object of the fence is to turn animals, and the desire is to have a 6 HEDGES, WINDBREAKS, SHELTERS, ETC. long-lived and perfect fence, set your plants at least two feet apart. If the land be dry and high, it is as well to plant in the fall; perhaps, indeed, this is preferable; but on low and wet soils, by all means defer until spring; although the ground should be under preparation, as I have stated. A perfect live fence depends, however, not only upon the planting, but also upon the treatment it receives during its early years of growth. It should in all cases be sharply cut l:)ack to uniform bight at the very outset. As a rule, two-thirds of the wood should be cut away by this first pruning. After the first year, the object of pruning should be to broaden the base about one-third as fast as the top is raised. When the fence is grown to a bight of six feet the base should be at least four feet. All pruning must be directed to the establishment of this pyramidal form. Supposing the young plants to be cut back to five or six inches from the ground at the first pruning, during the first summer they should be cut back so as to increase the bight not to exceed two inches. There will always be a tendency to throw up a few very strong stems, and these will draw the strength from others, so that if not checked they will very speedily ruin your fence. These stronger shoots should be kept well in hand, cutting them back so that they will break their force into several shoots in line with the fence. In fact, the application of common sense must be continuous through the first year's growth of your fence. Bear in mind simply that the object is to create a pyramidal form and to compel the side shoots to form thickly near the ground. The failure with live fences has always LIVE FENCES. 7 laid at this point, that farmers have not been dis- posed to give their hedges sufficient attention to keep them in proper style of growth. If such attention can be secured for the first four years, the fence will need comparatively little attention thereafter. When the live fence is intended to serve also as windbreak, and the enclosure is for horses and sheep, it is possible to use evergreens. Where cattle are to be enclosed, evergreens would be speedily torn and their beauty destroyed, if not their utility. However, I know highly valuable windbreaks of spruce and others of arbor-vitae that are as stout as if built of oak posts and hemlock boards. It takes twenty years to get such a fence well grown. The plants should be set two or two and one-half feet apart. Growth will gradually close up the spaces so as to present a nearly solid wall at the base. A close park can be created of this sort, as a deer enclosure, or for ordinary farm stock. Meanwhile the fence is serv- ing a much better purpose as windbreak. But of this topic I am to speak more distinctively in another chapter of this book. About 1870, stock laws began to be passed by the states compelling every citizen to fence in his own animals, and not to fence out those of his neigh- bors. These laws, although at first met with bitter opposition, proved to be so just and economical that by 1880 they were nearly universal. A few states made them optional to the vote of counties ; but while this gave conservatism a chance to discuss, the result was overwhelming in favor of the new system. It was established that New York alone saved $150,- 000,000 in fencing material, and Missouri was 8 HEDGES, WINDBREAKS, SHELTERS, ETC. estimated to save at least $90,000,000. It was a dis- tinct triumph of progressive agriculture. A secon- dary result was to greatly decrease the call for material for live fences. The use of wire had already begun and shortly completed the revolution. From that time, about 1885, the enthusiasm for live fences waned. I have not seen such a fence planted in central New York during the last twenty years. It is only in conjunction with hedges and windbreaks that the live fence topic remains of any importance. I shall be excused if I give to this branch of my topic only this brief chapter. Confirmatory of my own views of live fences, I shall give at this point two or three letters from some of the most eminent horticulturists of the United States: Ithaca, N. Y. Dear Mr. Pozvell: — Hedge fences, or live fences, are no longer used to any great extent in America, so far as my observation goes ; and there are several reasons for it. The chief of these is, I think, that timber has become so very cheap ; another is that labor is high priced, and another that our distances are so great that the expense of putting in live fences has proved to be con- siderable. Perhaps the dry and severe climate has something to do with it. I presume the national taste or temper also has an influence! Hedges are used for small effects about build- ings, but it is comparatively rare that they are used for the main fences of the farm. In fact, fences are no longer looked upon as necessary features 01 the farm. They are liable to be in the way of the requirements of grazing changes. The farmer is no longer obliged in New York state to keep up his line fence. Yours very truly, L. H. Bailey. Germantown, Pa. Dear Mr. Pozvell: — Live fences as means of turning cattle have been practically abandoned in Pennsylvania, but as fences for ornament they are very popular. Some little is being done by combinations of galvanized wire and inclined Osage orange fastened to the LIVE FENCES. wire, as a protective fence; but the ignorance of sound prin- ciples in pruning, which has had much to do with the failure of live fences, will soon leave these combinations as inverted broomsticks turned over by the wind. For all our literature, I am ashamed to say that sound horticultural knowledge has not thoroughly prospered in the United States. Sincerely yours, Thos. Meehan. Grand Rapids, Mich. My Dear Mr, Poivcll:— There are constant reminders of the wave theory of ac- counting for almost everything in the universe. We had a wave of planting live fences along in the seventies — a regular tidal wave. But after a few years we began to feel very tired over the results, and the digging-out process is still going on. The hedge fence is entirely unsuited to the American farmer. He will not give it the attention necessary to make it effective as a fence, and when it does not accomplish that purpose he has no use for it. Osage orange was used mostly in our sec- tion, but there are relics of honey locust fences occasionally to be found. In some places where windbreaks are desired, the Osage is still retained and is quite effective although for this purpose alone other plants are more desirable. In a few places in our state the white willow was sold by enter- prising agents, and the farmers were deluded into the belief that in ten years they would become a stock barrier. Of course, for fencing purposes, the willow was a failure ; yet many miles of these willows have done good service in holding snow on wheat fields during trying seasons. My own opinion of hedge fences is that they do not add to the attractiveness of the country. Compared with wire they are expensive. If allowed to grow high they hide the landscape, and give an air of exclusiveness that is un-American. Fences are growing un- popular, and the meanest fence to get rid of is the hedge fence. • Cordially yours, Chas. W. Garfield. There may be, however, some people who still desire to plant live fences, and I desire in this brief chapter to give to such all the information that is requisite. I shall therefore close the discussion by giving- a short and admirable paper by Robert C. McMurtrie of Philadelphia — in its entirety. It is the best brief statement 1 have ever seen for dealing with the Osage orange. lO HEDGES, WINDBREAKS, SHELTERS^ ETC. OSAGE ORANGE FENCES. Raising Plants. — The seed can generally be purchased of any seedsman. I soaked the seeds in water for forty-eight hours before planting. When treated thus they sprouted almost as freely as could be desired. Those not soaked came up sparsely and very badly. The ground was prepared as for ordinary gar- den seeds. The seed was placed in rows, about one foot apart and about one inch deep. I kept the plants carefully weeded from their first appearance till the autumn. The result has been that plants raised one spring are fit for setting out as hedges the next spring. Preparing Ground for tJic Hedge. — In the autumn the line of the ground on which the hedge is to stand is dug as a trench, about eighteen inches wide and one foot deep. The earth is laid on the side of the trench and the bottom broken with a pick. In that condition I left it during the winter for the frost to do its work. Cultivating or Tilling. — In the spring when the ground is warm enough to cause the plants to show the first symptoms of life, by pushing, I put a quantity of the best barnyard manure in the trench or ditch, and on that placed the loose earth left lying at the side during the winter. In this ground the plants were placed. If in two rows, eighteen inches apart ; if in one row, nine inches apart. The latter, I am inclined to think from experience, is the best for every purpose. The plants thus set out were kept carefully LIVE FENCES. II weeded and cultivated all summer. They sprouted slowly and very irregularly. But these were plants purchased. Those I grew were much quicker and more uniform. By the end of July nearly every plant was growing. In one instance, by count, I found but two out of two hundred and eighty failed. Subsequent Treatment. — In the autumn, the plants treated as above stated had grown, in single stems, from three to six feet high, depending on the earlier or later start. The stems were quite thick. These I laid down without cutting-, nicking- or breaking, by simply bending them nearly flat to the ground and weaving them as one would osiers in wicker work. There is little elasticity but great toughness in the wood, and the thorns secure them in place, when bent and woven, without tying or any other sort of fastening. The next year the hedge started with an average hight of six inches from the ground, or the stems thus lying laterally along the ground. The leaf buds sent up shoots similar to those of the first year, but thicker and higher; many grew eight feet. The ground was cultivated with a hoe and weeded. In the autumn these stems were again laid down, with- out nicking, breaking or cutting. This made a hedge of lateral stems about eighteen inches from the ground. The next summer the shoots grew, the upright ones much more vigorously than the laterals. When the upright shoots reached three feet or more I cut the tops with a sickle at the hight I determined. This was repeated at intervals, whenever there were a few inches above the line determined, from time 12 HEDGES^ WINDBREAKS^ SHELTERS^ ETC. to time, as the liight of the hedge. This permitted the shorter and weaker stems to grow without check- ing till they reached the proper line. The result was, that in the third summer from setting out the plants there was a good hedge, suffi- cient to turn ordinary cattle, as it seemed. Cer- tainly in all subsequent years it was impervious to man or beast. And it had a foundation as firm as a fence. Cfitting. — If this is done when the plants are young, they are so succulent that an amateur can readily trim two hundred feet in an hour, and feel no fatigue. Laying Down. — I have this year adopted a plan that I deem a great improvement, and I have done it with stems varying from a quarter to an inch in diameter, thus : I cut off with nippers a number of stems to the hight of two fret, so that the stems, left at each end of the cutting, when laid down and woven into the upright cut stems, would cross each other, and give at least two lines of lateral stems, passing in and out of the cut stems, thus giving a living fence of about two feet high. I expect to trim the growth from these next summer to about three feet high, leaving the laterals to grow with little or no trimming, to form the hedge into the pyramidical form ; which is essential, as lower branches will not flourish if upper branches overhang them. If anyone can show more perfect fences that have thus been produced, I have yet to see or hear of them. CHAPTER IL DECIDUOUS HEDGES. The satisfaction with which we dismiss hve fences is more than doubled by the gratification derived from the study of hedges; whether those strictly for ornament or those for utility as well as ornament. It is a confirmation of the belief that horticultural taste is developing in America, that hedges are growing in popularity. In all parts of the country the demand for plants is increasing ; and this book will find its more specific use in giving all required information on the planting, growth and management of this department of horticulture. I shall be compelled in this chapter to refer to some material developed in the previous chapter; because the thorns, the Osage orange and the honey locust may be used for beautiful as well as discordant pur- poses — and so need not be discarded from our beau- tiful plantations. SECTION I MATERIAL. There is no mistaking the conviction of farmers that where a hedge is needed the gleditschia or honey locust hedge is more satisfactory than the maclura or Osage orange. I find very few hedges of the latter in even tolerable condition, but many of the former. The gleditschia should not be allo\ved to 13 14 HEDGES, WINDBREAKS, SHELTERS, ETC. FIG. 2. EVERGREEN HEDGE BORDERING DRIVES. DECIDUOUS HEDGES. 1 5 grow over two to three feet in hight, if yow expect it to keep good form. The tendency is very strong to die out at the bottom, and expand the top hmbs. When this is allowed, there are sure to follow gaps in the outline of the foliage. The Osage orange has this one advantage, that it is free of insects, and in the hedge form I have found it to be entirely hardy in central New York. It is not given to suckering unless cut down, when it does incline to be trouble- some by filling the ground. I have no doubt that both the plants will for some time to come be favor- ites with the farmer. He cannot divest himself of the sentiment that whatever he does must have more or less of utility in its purpose. He will undertake to have his hedges of some direct value besides orna- ment. Nevertheless, I advise hedge planters to dis- card both the maclura and the gleditschia, because they are very liable to get out of complete command, and so become merely thorny, irregular and homely nuisances. The pyracantha thorn as a hedge plant has the advantage that it is not only capable of resisting cattle and even turning hogs and sheep and fowls, but its growth is compact and so close to the ground that it is easily managed. The southern or red- fruited pyracantha is not quite hardy at the north, while the white-fruited is entirely hardy as far north as New York. I find its foliage blisters somewhat and the ends of the twigs are sometimes killed in central New York. I can hardly conceive a pyra- cantha hedge looking very badly from neglect. When not somewhat blistered by the frost it keeps green all winter. My own plants blossom not unfre- l6 HEDGES^ WINDBREAKS^, SHELTERS, ETC. quently, and yet give me very few seeds. Notwith- standing the sHght damage done by frost, I think it fair to recommejid this thorn as a very good hedge plant as far north as the lower counties of New York state. It will work admirably also to fill in larger gaps that occur in larger hedges. This thorn is not a native, but was introduced from Germany by Parsons and company, about i860. It is grown readily from cuttings, which is the only practicable method of multiplying it, owing to its shy seeding. Bear in mind, however, that the pyra- cantha is very thorny. It is ornamental if you do not get too near it. Its place is on small farms or fruit-growing homesteads, where it is desirable to prevent the too free movement of fowls.. It would be just the thing around an exposed fruit yard. A thief would never twice try to get over or through it. It would not be possible to mutilate the hedge or cut a passage in a hurry. The thorn genus has been very generally used in America. Before the introduction of the maclura the different members of this genus constituted nearly all the hedge plants in general use. The hawthorn is best known because of its reputation in England. The moist climate of that country suits it far better than our dry summers. The very hand- some foliage is liable, with us, in common with that of other thorns, to mildew and turn black soon after the period of flowering. It is a very long- lived plant ; Loudon says that it lives to be one hundred or two hundred years old. Among our more common shrubs and trees it has no rival in age, except perhaps the apple and pear. Of DECIDUOUS HEDGES. I7 the apple, I have on my ground specimens that are one hundred and ten years old. These were planted when the Iroquois were still in posses- sion of central New York. Pear trees are known in Michigan, planted by the French, as long ago as the founding of Detroit. I do not know of any haw- thorn bushes in this country that are very old, but in England the record is fully two hundred years. Growing wild, the hawthorn is almost always found as a dense bush, somewhat like wild apples. This is owing to the fact that cattle have browsed the young trees and made them dwarf bushes. These are the favorite resorts of the sly catbird. On our lawns, when well cultivated, the hawthorn grows to about twenty feet high, and is covered with delightful flowers. It takes cions of pear and apple as it is a member of the rose family. All the tall grow- ing varieties are much alike in shape and vigor and growth. In our nurseries are to be found sev- eral beautiful sports and crosses. Among these are Paul's double scarlet, the tansy-leaved, the black- fruited, the glossy-leaved, Gumpper's and the double white. Many of these I have found growing wild in our forest edges and glens, probably the result of seed sown by the birds. All of these varieties are equally useful for hedges. The cockspur thorn is more commonly used in this country than the hawthorn, or any other thorn, except the black or buckthorn. It has a single sharp spur under the leaf, like the spur of a cock. In the West I have seen these growing wild in most pic- turesque and delightful forms. It only needed man's hand to arrange and control their growth, in order 2 1 8 HEDGES^ WINDBREAKS^ SHELTERS^ ETC. to create a work of great beauty. They spread out their heads densely compacted, and if undisturbed they will touch the ground with their overhanging limbs. When browsed by sheep they form a won- derful canopy over wide patches of the pastures, where these animals lie down out of reach of the sun's rays. There are many varieties, characterized by form of leaves and color and by size of bush. They are, everyone, admirable for hedge work. The honey locust deserves a few additional words owing to the peculiar beauty of its foliage. Its thorns are the most perfect weapons known in nature, but unfortunately they are dangerous. When broken from the hedge they cannot be stepped upon with impunity by man or beast. The trimmings are not easily gathered and removed, yet they should be not only removed but burned. It will not do to throw them into refuse holes or brush piles — espe- cially not by the roadside. Notwithstanding the beauty of the plant and its usefulness as a hedge, the danger from its thorns is so great that I believe, as a rule, it should be given up. I have not in my own range of observation known of a single rod of gle- ditschia hedge that remains in preservation. I have seen miles of it planted, and miles of it gone wild and unmanageable. When once out of hand it can never be reduced to order and beauty. It is as much as a man's life is worth to undertake such a task. I go so far as to refuse to allow even a tree of this brutal thorn to grow on my land. There is. however, a thornless variety of gle- ditschia, very little disseminated, which will surely make a remarkably strong and beautiful hedge. I DECIDUOUS HEDGES. 1 9 obtained my seed from Kansas, but some of the prod- ucts have more or less of thorn. I have now grow- ing one superb tree which is absolutely thornless. It has the exquisite leaf beauty of the thorny variety, its fine foliage, and is what no other tree is even comparatively, a sifter of the moonbeams, a most elegant tree for night scenery. Apart from the gnawing of mice in the winter, I see no reason why this plant should not be very valuable for hedges on our choicest lawns. It has the most remarkable combination of strength and compact growth with beauty. It is also a very rapid grower, while it en- dures the severest cutting. I am inclined to think the plants should stand at least two feet apart, and a good deal of care be taken to have them of nearly equal vigor of stem and root in planting. Even if it be desired to have the hedge turn back animals, I think we have here a very promising plant. Michaux, who was as capital a landscape econo- mist as he was a botanist, called attention to the value of the scrub oak (Querais ilicifolia), sometimes called the bear oak, as a material at hand in New Jerse3^ and elsewhere in sandy soils, for hedges. He says : "The presence of this oak is considered an infallible index of a barren soil, and is usually met with on dry, sandy land mingled wnth gravel. It is too small to be adapted to any use, but near Goshen on the road to New York I observed an attempt to turn it to advantage, by planting it about the fields for the purpose of strengthening the fences. Though this experiment seemed to have failed, I believe the bear oak might be usefully adopted in the Northern states for hedges, which might be formed from 20 HEDGES^ WINDBREAKS^ SHELTERS, ETC. twenty to twenty-four inches thick by sowing the acorns in three parallel rows. They would be per- fected in a short time, would be agreeable to the eye, and would probably be sufficient to prevent the pass- age of horses and cows.'' The plant is an abundant bearer of seed, yet I do not know that the suggestion of Michaux has been put to test. But nature has used the scrub oak very freely in making wild hedges of great beauty. The chief advantage of such sug- gestions is to teach us to keep our eyes open to the possibilities about us, and be ready to put an old thing to a new use. A wide-awake mind is never at a loss to find a chance to exercise a creative purpose. A person blind to nature is always compelled to follow in old routine tracks, and so misses some of the finest opportunities that nature affords him. Among the newer shrubs and trees available for hedges we may enumerate the Siberian Pea tree (Caragana arbor csccns). This is a small tree, grow- ing from fifteen to eighteen feet in hight, but it bears pruning admirably well. It is hardy even to the very northern limits of our states and Canada, at the same time endures severe drouths. I think this will prove to be a desirable addition to our hedge plants. The Kei apple is another importation of our Department of Agriculture which promises to be of considerable use to us. It is the best South African hedge plant ; and becomes, if untrimmed, only a tall shrub. It may be ranked among tht strictly ornamental hedge plants. However, I do not myself believe there is any deciduous plant anywhere near equal to the buck- thorn (or black thorn) for universal use as a decidu- DECIDUOUS HEDGES. 21 ous hedge plant. I place it at the front, as I shall hereafter place arbor-vitse at the front of evergreen plants for hedges. It grows with an even spread and bears rational cutting admirably. It has no enemy that I ever heard of except the hop louse, which it is compelled to harbor for a couple of months. This louse does not appear every year, and if properly attacked it can be destroyed with a spray of strong kerosene emulsion. Although not a thorny or harsh plant, the buckthorn is very firm in growth. I have already spoken of its capacity, in a previous chapter, for turning cattle, when it is allowed to grow six or eight feet high. At that hight it is also a very handsome screen, but for ordi- nary purposes a hedge of four to six feet is much better. At this hight it is easily trimmed, and the form of the hedge can always be kept without trouble. The growth is neat and tidy, if not remark- ably handsome. When neglected, it can be cut back to renew its form without injuring the hedge, and it does not become at any time, under the worst neg- lect, as horrible a sight and as terrible a nuisance as neglected Osage orange or honey locust. In fact, I have seldom seen a buckthorn row given up. Even when neglected and practically useless as a fence, the owner is inclined to keep it as a hedge. I find, after careful examination, that among the farmers of the Eastern and Middle states, the hedges which have been best preserved and most useful are (i) the buckthorn, (2) the gleditschia or locust. I find also that the buckthorn is invariably in the best form as a hedge; although I judge that the thorn has done the most service. The latter is, however, o H u w en v. O H w o o W o in Q ;::) o o < Q CO d DECIDUOUS HEDGES. 23 in no case that I know, presentable as a landscape ornament. Invariably it has become scraggy, gappy and very uneven. Most of the hedges that are retained are evidently pieces, where most of the origi- nal planting has died away. I asked a farmer why he kept a rather disreputable strip in front of his homestead. He answered that, bad as it looked, it hid his yard, which looked worse. It is not impos- sible that a good many others feel like this, and choose the street hedge as a cover for nasty habits. Therefore, I say once more, down with street hedges or street fences, alive or dead. There is the common trouble in growing Osage orange and gleditschia that mice will gnaw them in the winter. They frequently girdle a large number of plants in a single season. Where it is desirable to grow a short strip for ornamental purposes, or for landscape use, the intrusion of these rodents can be in part prevented by keeping from about the roots any refuse or grass, and raking away the leaves before winter sets in. Besides this, I would recom- mend in October or November a good mulch of coal ashes. It has been recommended to scatter along the hedge, peas soaked in arsenic to poison the mice. Any ill-smelling stuff is an additional protection. But I believe that coal ashes will always prove the best preventive, while it is at the same time a grand weed killer. There has been a very substantial error about this material in the minds of the people. Because it is in a very small degree a direct fertilizer does not argue that any material may not help roots to take manure from the air. This is exactly the office performed by coal ashes. It lightens clay soil, 24 HEDGES, WINDBREAKS, SHELTERS, ETC. and helps it to absorb nitrogen. The soil under a mulch of coal ashes will be found to be friable and rich. I have seen the most barren ground made into a rich garden with nothing but coal ashes forked in in considerable quantity. I use it about young apple trees to prevent the borer from working ; it is equally good about all other trees that are occasionally attacked by boring insects. You will make no mis- take in using anthracite coal ash about your hedge row. You may place it on very heavily, and you will find the result will be beneficial in all ways. It will at least have checked the working of mice, and in almost all cases have prevented it. SECTION II PLANTING DECIDUOUS HEDGES. (i) Size of Plants. — Whatever the material, T prefer two-year-olds or sometimes three-year-olds to yearlings. Such plants, to make rapid and satis- factory growth, should be stocky to begin with, and then cut sharply back. However, when long lines are to be run, one-year-old plants will be generally planted, and will probably be satisfactory. (2) Running Lines. — When drives are to be bordered, curves are frequently necessary. In this case great care is needed at the outset, for if a mis- take is made it is going to show worse and worse as long as your hedge exists. My plan is to set small stakes over the lines to be followed, and then to go over these again and again, until I am quite sure that my curves are where they should be, to accommodate drives and to satisfy the eye. At this point be sure that you do not DECIDUOUS HEDGES. 25 trust a landscape gardener implicitly, for while he may be skilled in his selection and grouping of plants, he may wholly lack an eye for such lines. Many a time such a defect in vision is unknown to its possessor. In fifty years of landscape work I have never found but one man who could materially assist me in working out long and double curves — he was a common Irish laborer with a gift. A long sweep- ing curve is not easily established and it grows all the worse when one curve is to be multiplied by another. (^) Preparing the Ground. — This is an impor- tant point. The ground must be as clean as a gar- den and thoroughly tilled into loose friable condition. There is no use sticking plants into half-prepared soil. Where the sod is tough and vigorous it should have been tilled with some hoed crop during the previous year. The rotted turf will then make excellent soil for hedge planting. Before setting, let the soil be thrown, by back furrowing or by the spade, toward the center, enough to form a slight rise, that will carry off rather than retain water. After planting, there will be more or less settling, and your ridge will not be perceptible. If you are obliged to run through wet places, drain on both sides, throwing up the line of the hedge with soil from the ditches. (4) Setting the Plants. — All tricks and devices for saving labor at this point are undesirable, if you intend to make sure of your hedge. There must be no mistake about the mellowness of the soil, and if two-year-old plants are used, a trench must be ready along the line of your stakes. If one-year-old 26 HEDGES^ WINDBREAKS^ SHELTERS, ETC. plants are to be set, you may use a spade as you pro- ceed, or a dibble. Spread the roots at the bottom of the trench, and set the plant two or three inches deeper than it was in the nursery row. Firm the soil with great care. This is the most important point in setting out plants of any kind as well as in planting trees. In the case of the hedge plants, it is absolutely necessary. I advise you to tramp the soil as solid as possible with your feet, or let a man follow whose business it is to pound down the soil with a heavy rammer. You may be sure that no harm will be done. (5) Spacing.- — My own preference is decidedly for more room for each plant than is generally given. When placed six inches apart, many plants in the process of growth are dwarfed or weakened in vitality, if not killed outright. I set two or three feet apart. Dr. Warder recommends this in his book on hedges (now out of print) and he did wisely. He says : "I consider that most writers and planters have committed the great error of crowding. The dif- ferent plants used in hedges are so varied in their habits that no fixed rule can be laid down for all of them, but be sure to avoid setting the plants too closely." For the honey locust, which attains in its individual growth a diameter of from one to three feet. Dr. Warder would prefer a distance of twelve, eighteen or twenty inches. I have found this plan far better for every plant that I have ever tried or seen tried. The honey locust, the hawthorn, the buckthorn, the Osage orange and all of the shrubs that attain any size, should be given at least one foot in the row, and from that up to two or even three. DECIDUOUS HEDGES. ^1 I have suggested requisite room for requisite strength and vigor. In other words, every plant must have root room in order to make a healthy top. I object entirely to the plan of setting plants m double rows alternately. There will be trouble enough in keeping a well-trimmed hedge withm bounds. Therefore, begin with one row of plants. Those who argue for close planting do so on the ground that gaps will be filled by overhanging hmbs. But a rightly managed hedge must not have gaps. The whole space should be filled wholly with branches interlaced until the wall will be too close for us to see through. The question is asked, why not set the plants still farther apart, and by bendmg down interlacing branches, create a compact wall or even impermeable fence? Simply because it would require patience and care and labor that would not often be given to a hedge, and the result would be, in all probability, a failure within two years. Rustic walls of the kind suggested, like rustic arbors, are the work of time and of genius. They are seldom produced in perfection. (6) Mulching. — As fast as your hedge plants are set they should be mulched. Use whatever material is most easily obtainable in your section. As a rule, sawdust is most convenient and cheap. Others may most readily obtain coal ashes. I have referred to the use of this material already. It must be understood that reference is made to anthracite coal ashes and not to bituminous. The latter mate- rial contains too much sulphur to make it safe to use in any large amount in our plantations. The coal ash from anthracite coal is not only safe but 28 HEDGES, WINDBREAKS, SHELTERS, ETC. unexcelled in all ways for mulch. It is pervious to the air and it retains moisture. It does not permit weeds to grow readily, and it keeps clay soils from hardening. Use all that you can get, in your com- post piles and for mulching. When it is more con- venient, fine cut straw or fresh cut grass makes a fair substitute; yet it is liable to attract mice, and will be blow^n away unless held in place by a sprinkle of earth. (y) Renewals. — The first year will certainly develop gaps in your hedge, whatever care may have been used in planting and mulching. These gaps should be filled the next spring without fail. It will not be easy at best to give these new plants a good chance between the older ones. It will be well to select as large plants as possible, and to take special care in setting and puddling them. Let mulching be very carefully and promptly applied. (8) Watering. — It frequently occurs, as in set- ting trees, that a dry spell follows. Whatever care may have been used in thoroughly watering the hedge when planted, it will be necessary to keep up the supply for some weeks afterward. • At all events, the hedge plants must be well started into growth, and the young rootlets be well developed before they are given over to nature. Watering is always a science. As it is usually performed it kills more than it benefits. It should never be superficial, for that will solidify the soil and then bake a crust, from which the showers wall flow quickly off. Tin's crust also prevents the natural absorption of mois- ture from the air. To water correctly, dig a hole by the side of every tree or bush, and ])our in enough t DECIDUOUS HEDGES. 29 water to wet the roots thoroughly. This will require a good deal of labor, but when once performed it need not be frequently repeated. After the water is poured in and has settled, draw over a little dry soil to prevent evaporation. In this way the soil becomes permeated, and remains wet. This is the rule for all plants. Pour a quart for a strawberry, pour a pailful for a tree. For a hedge it may be best to run a furrow on each side and pour the water in the trough. Then haul back the soil to cover with the plow. If you have a well near by, attach a hose and let the trench be filled by pumping. But to throw water with a hose through a sprinkler over the soil is worse than nothing. It requires almost continuous sprinkling to make this method of watering of any value, even for a lawn of grass. (p) Trimming. — I have suggested that plants should be cut back when set. This matter of trim- ming is one of the most important, from first to last. It is requisite to get a thick bottom to the hedge, and to do this, in almost all cases, the plants must be cut nearly to the base the first year, and compelled to spread laterals. Cut down to the collar, making the branching start out so that the lower limbs will lie upon the ground. If you have followed directions you have set your plants two or three inches deeper than where they were as seedlings. It will now be your object to keep the hedge from growing upward, and make it spread out and keep its lower limbs vital. This is the constant aim in hedge-growing. The law of nature, that a tree shall climb upward, and as it climbs take away a part of the strength of the 30 HEDGES^ WINDBREAKS, SHELTERS, ETC. lower l)ranches to make new ones above, must be held in check. Where hedges have to serve partly for utility, in turning hens or possibly larger creatures, impene- trability must be sought for. Your wish is to divide vitality and distribute the growth evenly to all branches. A perfect hedge is as strong in one point as in another. To secure this requires that there be no neglect during the first three years after planting. No part must get the advantage. Then after your hedge is well established, if neglected for a year or two, the balance will be broken ; and a few branches will have surmounted the rest, while a part will have died out altogether. Most of the deciduous hedges as they grow require trimming twice a year. This should be done in May, and at such time later as growth may indicate necessity. The buckthorn, as a rule, should be cut the second time in July or August. When the growth has been checked by drouth I have sometimes trimmed as late as September. When first planted, and until well shaped, I trim three times or even more, being regulated solely by the rapidity of growth. Nearly all deciduous hedges have a habit, while young, of sending out a shoot here and there of unusual strength. These must not be allowed to get much start, or they will have accomplished a good deal very quickly in the way of weakening other shoots. It must, however, be remembered con- stantly that, if you trim a hedge very late in the season, there will be a growth put forth that will not have time to ripen its wood, and you will get winter- killing of even very hardy plants. DECIDUOUS HEDGES. 31 The shape of a deciduous hedge should be abou^ that of a very young bush of the same plant where it stands wild. It should have a broad base and rise to a round top — never to a sharp or pointed top — and equally never to a flattened top. The hawthorn, and particularly the buckthorn, submit to a very neat oval shaping, but should have the lower branches a little longer than the others. The Osage orange is not so submissive to form, but it may be kept reason- ably in bounds if never given any freedom. The pyramidal form is an outrage on nature, because it is never undertaken with deciduous plants in their native state. In all cases avoid artifice and the arti- ficial; follow nature's outlines, and heed nature's suggestions. Whatever may be said of special tools for more rapid cutting, nothing is so satisfactory as the long- handled hedge-shears. The blades of these should be fifteen to twenty inches long. If trniiming is done coarsely it will tell, in the process of the years, in an ungainly hedge. For cutting strong branches it is necessary also to have what are called hedge- clippers. These are short curved shears with handles three feet long. They will sever a half-inch branch readily. For ordinary trimming these are not needed, but will be of importance w^hen the hedge is to be cut back, or when from neglect a hedge has to be reshaped. The same tools are useful for much other work about trees and shrubbery. They should be kept sharp so that one-half of power may be saved in using them. Dull tools of all sorts will be found a dead loss. They use up wastefully a large part of your power, and all of your patience and good cheer. 32 HEDGES, WINDBREAKS, SHELTERS, ETC. Successful horticulture is a happy combination of wit and grit. Failure in farming is mostly the result of leakage of power and waste of crops. However, when economy of time is very greatly desired, the trimming of the first three or four years can be per- formed with a sickle. Give a quick motion in the way the branch grows — that is, with a slant upward. Hold the sickle reversed and strike sharp and quick ; a slow movement will drag the br?inch. This tool is satisfactory for all fairly strong and stiff shoots. But as the hedge gets shaped, and the shoots become finer, they require more smooth and accurate cutting. Bear in mind that T do not recommend the use of such tools, but by all means would prefer the shears. Can the spring pruning of a deciduous hedge be as well done in midwinter, or March ? I can only an- swer this with a very positive negative, when you are dealing with an evergreen hedge, but it may be advantageously done in the case of such plants as buckthorn, hawthorn and Osage orange. There is no reason why a sharp heading-in of a thoroughly hardy plant shall not take place at any time after nature has laid aside her tools, and the hedge is in a state of absolute rest. I would not, however, begin the work before near the close of winter. There is one advantage in following this line of advice, because you can observe more completely the condi- tion of the leafless branches, and determme where nature is being too sharply turned or forced from her natural tendency. Where there is a mere bunch of twigs starting instead of a good number of branches, remove part of them. This is always a DECIDUOUS HEDGES. 00 possible mischief when we crowd a tree down to bush growth. (lo) Cultivation. — Do not plow close to a hedge, with the idea of benefiting it. Nearly all plants' that make good hedges do so largely because they make a great mass of surface roots, and most of these form a close network of roots. These should not be ripped up by plow or hoe. If you wish a stout hedge you must give it root room. I would not plow within six feet of a well-established hedge. Outside of this line I would keep the ground clear and forbid the hedge getting a grip on it. It is, however, superfluous to undertake direc- tions minute enough for every conceivable difficulty. I have covered the ground sufficiently to lead the amateur workman out of the way of easily made mistakes. The general direction is, use common sense. You will easily master all the difficulties of horticulture in that way, and in no other. Study the situation and do what you think is wise under the circumstances. You will find hints always ready for you if you are ready to heed them. (ii) Cost. — No estimate of cost can be any- thing more than approximate, as cultivation, seed, cost of plants, cost of labor, will vary everywhere and all the time. Professor Turner some years ago estimated that, while the cheapest wood fence would cost $300 a mile, his four miles of hedging did not altogether cost over $100, which would be $25 a mile. ''Here, then, is a clear difference of $275 per mile, or say v$iooo in the cost of four miles when first put upon the ground. The annual interest of $1000 would hire a good young man to tend the hedges for 3 34 HEDGES, WINDBREAKS, SHELTERS^ ETC. five months in the year. But instead of requiring a hand five months a year, it does not require sucli help for one month even in the most laborious part of the work, and after the third or fourth year it does not require the half of that." Professor Turner was always an enthusiast, and I quote him only as able to show the rosy side of hedge-growing. The first cost of a hedge of Osage orange would in most soils be at the present time more than three times the above estimate. Nor is it in the least desir- able to underestimate the real cost of hedging, which is not in the outlay for plants and for planting, but is in the subsequent care and pruning. Professor Turner made his estimates with the understanding that his pruning was to be done with a sickle and rapid slashing. The chief trouble seems to be that the hedge will not allow of delays such as the farmer often feels to be imperative. The season of trim- ming passes by, and the rank growth gets difficult to handle. Then the owner thinks he may as well defer still longer before giving a sharp cut. In a couple of years the hedge is a ferocious, thorny defiance to approach, and the chances are that it will never 1)e reduced to subjection by the owner. Then comes a hard job, and a costly one, of cutting the whole thing down to the ground for a new start. The brush must be burned, and is a bad job to handle. On the whole T think we must let the esti- mates of Professor Turner stand as fairly good for live fences, but of little value for hedges such as we are now discussing. Henry Shaw's estimate of the cost of a deciduous hedge is" from twenty- five to fifty cents a rod. As a matter of fact DECIDUOUS HEDGES. 35 our ornamental and semi-ornamental hedges will cost double that. (12) Devices. — The use of wire with hedges is a combination of considerable value under certain conditions. It serves to make an ornamental hedge able to hold back an animal that happens to break loose. I have found it equally useful against inter- lopers and fruit thieves. The wire may be entirely concealed by skillful interweaving through the branches of the hedge. I have known of such a hedge, wdien somewhat dilapidated, being used as a background or trellis for climbing roses. These almost entirely covered the original hedge and became an object of remarkable beauty. We are not shut out entirely from devices for wet land. I never saw a willow hedge of much use except where it ran along by wet places. Yet a close grove of willows makes a splendid protection against the northwest. Let such a hedge pass on into the form of a windbreak, and then front it with a row of red bark dogwood, a bush which remarkably enjoys itself in marshy ground. Plant it freely and you will say that of all hedges in winter it is the most beautiful. As the leaves fall in autumn the bark turns a beautiful crimson, and retains a warm glow throughout the winter. Nothing in the shrubbery equals it for contrast with the unbroken white of the snow. A single bush will grow only to a hight of ten feet, and fifteen feet in diameter. It does not, therefore, need any severe cutting or pruning. For a moist swale it is just the thing, but it will grow finely on a dry knoll, (^nly much more slowly, and not to above half the size. 36 HEDGES^ WINDBREAKS^ SHELTERS^ ETC. Either have a good hedge, or none at all. A poor hedge is unsightly and a nuisance. If by the roadside, and untrimmed or poorly trimmed, it scratches the pedestrian who passes by, and in wet weather it brushes him with its wet branches. If bordering a drive it disgraces the owner instead of honoring him. If I were to sum up this section, I should say that, under ordinary conditions, I should prefer the buckthorn for the general purposes which I have indicated, and as likely to endure all the provocations likely to be inflicted upon it by care- lessness and negligence. Note I. — It may be necessary to add a note on winter injury to hedges. This will rarely if ever occur where the wood has not been weakened by too late or improper trimming. A very thorough report on hedges injured during the winter of 1898 says: *'The neglected hedges, that is, those having one year's growth or more on the old stalks, came out universally alive. On a new purchase of 240 acres I had some three miles of untrimmed hedge, a con- siderable part of which had been neglected for some years. We trimmed about 100 rods in January, just before the noted cold spell ; this was badly injured. The remainder was trimmed after March ist, and made a fine new growth. Ninety per cent of our hedges throughout this section are dead, and this much is certain, that the hedge not trimmed during the winter or just previous to the winter is all right." From personal observation I am satisfied that winter- killing may be in all cases traced to enfeeblement of the plants by improper trunming. Note 2. — Kerosene emulsion, for spraying DECIDUOUS HEDGES. 37 liedges infested with lice, should always be kept on hand. It is made by dissolving one pound of hard soap in one gallon of hot water; to this add three gallons of kerosene. Churn together with a force pump for ten minutes, or until the materials are thoroughly assimilated into a mass, semi-fluid, and much like the best soft soa]). Store this for usage, and it will keep for several weeks or months. When needed, use about one pint to a pail of water. If this solution does not prove strong enough to kill the lice, double the quantity of the emulsion. Let the spray be applied as soon as the lice appear, and so thoroughly, that the undersides of the leaves will be well wetted. Use the McGowan nozzle, adjusted to any good spraying pump. FIG. 4. GROUND PLAN OF SUBURBAN HOME, WITH FRUIT GARDEN. CHAPTER III. HEDGES FOR SMALL LAWNS, OR FOR DIVIDING LAWNS; AND WITHOUT SPECIAL REGARD TO UTILITY. The distinction which I here draw between hedges strictly ornamental and those which are both ornamental and useful, is one that cannot be strictly carried out, for every hedge is useful and every hedge ought to be ornamental. Yet there is a distinction which owners of landscape gardens thoroughly appreciate. SECTION I MATERIAL. In the line of deciduous ornamental hedges I do not believe that anything can surpass the Tar- tarian honeysuckles. These occur in several shades of color, and are somewhat varied in vigor of growth. The pink-flowering is the most robust, sending up strong shoots with great rapidity, and when these are injured, renewing them quickly. The red-flow- ering is very handsome, and hardly inferior to the pink for hedging. The white-flowering is several degrees feebler in shoots, and it is less vigorous every way. Whichever color is selected, if you wish for an even growing hedge, do not select but one color. In May the flowering is astonishingly profuse, filling the whole air with sweetness. I should like to know where one can find a more charmino- sisfht than such a hedge in full bloom, unless it be the same hedge .^8 HEDGES FOR SMALL LAWNS. 39 when loaded with berries in July and August. These are of different shades of color, according to the color of the flowers. The pink-flowering produces a fine carmine berry. Of the value of these berries as bird food I shall speak in another place. The lilac has some value as a hedge plant, but easily grows ugly with age, while the intense suck- erinsr tendencv of the plant decreases the blossominq; power of the bushes. The Persian lilacs will do much the best, provided you have room for them; but a good Persian lilac hedge will require from ten to fifteen feet in diameter. The show of flowers will be inconceivably beautiful during May, and after that the bushes are dense enough to make a very good windbreak. Set the bushes eight or ten feet apart, or if you prefer, set them five feet apart, and later remove every other bush. At the best the inside branches of any lilac will die out every year, and must be carefull}^ removed. Josiksea and Charles X are later-blooming varieties, with stout trunks, and can be used in the hedge form. Some of the more recently developed varieties are far better, but at present somewhat costly. I have seen the com- mon white lilac used as a hedge, but with nothing to recommend it, except that it served as a windbreak, and would turn a stray animal. The Weigelas are among the prettiest plants for hedge rows, but more particularly the variegated- leaved sort. This is one of the handsomest of all shrubs, as its variegation is clear and bright and lasting. It is not in the least sickly in hue, like many variegations. It has a drooping but compact form, and in florescence is a marvel of beauty. As it is 40 HEDGES, WINDBREAKS, SHELTERS, ETC. low-growing, I should like it best for a border for beds of flowers, or for a winding drive. It rarely exceeds four feet in hight, and can be cut to some extent. You will especially like it fronted with ? line of Dcutzia gracilis. This latter plant will lift itself about one foot in hight, and adjust its method of growth very closely to that of Weigela. Almost any of our best known shrubs make ornamental lines when needed to divide gardens or to outline fields; not so many of them are suitable for bordering drives. It is not a bad plan to grow morning glories at the foot of such hedges, and so secure a fine autumn blossoming, since most of the shrubs blossom in April, May or June. But we have two exceedingly fine shrubs blossoming in August and September, that can be used with admir- able effect, the Hydrangea paniculata grandiflora, and the althea, sometimes called Rose of Sharon. The former will stand about six to ten feet in hight, and show a complete mass of magnificent heads of flowers. This bush will endure considerable cut- ting, and on the whole should rank, I think, close after Tartarian honeysuckle for a strictly ornamental hedge. The altheas are of as different styles of growth as they are of different colors of bloom. It is necessary to select those which grow alike, if one desires any uniformity in hedge growth ; and it is better in most cases to select the erect growing than the spreading. Many of the altheas, perhaps all of them, will need protection for the first two years from seed, and after that they will be found to be entirely hardy as far north as New York. Most of the varieties are hardy as far north as Albany. One HEDGES FOR SMALL LAWNS. 4I variety on my lawns I find objectionable, owing to its brittle wood. Still, on the whole, with a little extra care, long lines of altheas can hardly be sur- passed for beaut}^ during the autumn months. I have already si)oken of the beauty of the red- barked dogwood as a hedge in winter. To enliven the landscape and take the chill from the winter months there is nothing quite so good. The color becomes a deep crimson in November, and remains a brilliant sight for the eye until the leaves put forth in spring. It has only one rival, the barberry. Although the barberry has often been used for hedges, it has one fatal defect, its branches are con- stantly reaching over out of place, and breaking with readiness. The wood is very brittle, so that it is difficult to keep anything like symmetry of outline. I should prefer the barberry in individual plants. If used in line, I should set the plants several feet apart and retain the branches in place with a strong wire around each plant. Mr. S. B. Parsons of Flushing has, for a long time, urged the value of the purple beeches for hedges. Some years ago C. H. Miller of Phila- delphia called attention to the fact that seed- lings of this tree came with purple foliage, and were hardier than the parent. There if, a good deal of variation in the color, but I think he is right about their hardiness. The ordinary purple beech is not hardy. The variety called Rivers is absolutely frost proof. It is one of the grandest trees in existence for a shelter. If you desire a short hedge or a hedge to close in a warm nook, the purple beech will serxe vou admirablv. It does not easilv 42 HEDGES^ WINDBREAKS, SHELTERS, ETC. yield ground to a crowding neighbor, nor does it die out in spots. Those who desire to form an ornamental trellis will find nothing to surpass the sweet honeysuckle (Loniccra Canadensis) and other varieties of con- stant blooming honeysuckles. They should be grown to a stout wire trellis, and kept well fed. A pretty effect is made by growing alternately the sweet and the trumpet honeysuckles. The latter variety, however, is mucli the more rapid and robust in growth, and likes to climb as high as twenty-five feet. It needs close cutting, while both varieties require considerable compulsion to correct a wild straggling style of growth. The fragrance of the honeysuckle, if it does not surpass all other vines, is at least unexcelled. It is possible on such trellises to combine with the honeysuckle the large-flowering clematis. The tall climbing varieties are more suit- able for balconies or rockeries. The Southern states ha^•e the advantage of being able to use for hedges those roses which are too tender to grow perfectly in the Northern states. They can also make grand hedges of the Chinese privet, and of Cape Jasmine, and the Japan Euonymus. But imagine a hedge or a windbreak of the broad- leaved evergreens! At the North, however, we may grow many varieties of roses with enough effect to be highly gratifying. I have seen hedges of General Jacqueminot, Caroline de Sansal, John Hopper, and other hybrid-perpetuals which were certainly mar- vels of beauty during the blossoming season. Bui, alas, our tea roses are too tender to become suffi- ciently large plants for effective hedges. I shall HEDGES FOR SMALL LAWNS. 43 hardly venture upon a special section on roses, because the constant development of new varieties makes it desirable that the rose grower shall seek the information of experts. However, we may be sure that the Soupert roses are among the best at present for hedge growth, and that the Ramblers cannot be excelled during their period of blossoming. The new Rugosa roses are exceedingly attractive because of their luxuriant, glossy green foliage. Several of our perpetuals are very nearly ever- blooming. In using them for a hedge let every fifth plant be one of the climbing ever-bloomers, and be trained sideways on wires over the tops of the other bushes. Meehan tells us that he has seen the tea plant grown as a garden hedge in the Southern states. The nearest approach at the North is a border of sage, which really is veiy pretty in bloom and can be neatly clipped. Too much emphasis cannot be easily placed on the multiplication of sweet odors about our homes. They are associated with ozone, and therefore with health. I recommend the use of the wild grapes, but these are more directly asso- ciated with windbreaks, and will be spoken of farther on. From the flower bed edges to the walls of tropeolums and sweet peas, flower hedges are pretty enough to add to our pleasure, and they are so inex- pensive as to be everybody's luxury. The tropeolum or nasturtium is the poor man's flower. It belonged to our fathers and mothers as a pickle producer and border plant ; and to this day it remains par excellence the sweetest, healthiest and most floriferous annual in our whole list. It likes 44 HEDGES, WINDBREAKS, SHELTERS, ETC. poor soil, with a plenty of water, and makes a trellis that never gets tired of blooming. It is a peculiarly wholesome flower, fit for the sick room as well as the dining room. When you want an annual screen or hedge of flowers, there is not one of them all to surpass it. The sweet pea is its only rival, but the sweet pea exhausts itself in half the season, and it requires extra good soil and constant attention to keep a fine screen. The tropeolum runs irregularly, freely, and with a sort of flowery abandon. Morning-glories are perhaps our next be:>t screen maker, and for a porch or tall screen, our best. The}^ blossom profusely all summer, provided only that you will keep the seed picked off. Better still it is to sow a second drill of seed outside the other later in the spring. I am accustomed to let morning glories sow themselves along a board and wire fence. They grow all over it and cover it with a luxuriant glory in August, September and October. You can use either of these flowers to climb up any wall or fence that needs decorating. SECTION II TREATMENT. Ornamental hedges depend for their beauty on more or less neglect. That is, if made of bushes, they must be allowed to follow natural outlines with considerable irregularity. The Tartarian honey- suckle is, however, specially excellent for keeping a good form and enduring pruning. You may lop off branches that overreach or you may cut a whole side back without materially damaging the hedge. Indeed, I cannot say too much for this admirable HEDGES FOR SMALL LAWNS. 45 shrub. It is very close-growing, and makes new shoots so quickly that a clipping does not long remain unpleasantly formal. In general that which we wish of an ordinary hedge we do not wish of a hedge planted only for ornament ; that is, we do not require exact lines and precision of growth. But where approximate accuracy and formality are needed, the Tartarian honeysuckle is, above all others, the plant that you need. Hedge growers, while learning to abhor the monstrous and misplaced, may make hedge-growing contribute to the general beauty of the place by such contrivances as living arbors, bowered seats, and arched walks. One of my living arbors, slightly separated however, from the hedge rows, lifts its peaks about twenty-five feet high, and inside is a cool shaded enclosure of eighteen feet diameter. Origi- nally intended to be a place to conceal a refuse pile, I have found it more useful to use the enclosure as a retreat. With seats and a hammock it becomes delightful. The roots of the arbor-vitse create a dry mat inside like the floor of evergreen woods. If left to arch over a pathway, your hedges may easily give a cool, arbor-like pathway. One of my own leads to an enclosure, where is found a well, useful for watering the grounds. Over the well is trained an arbor of grapes. Hedges for screens are of great importance. This is not to cover the disagreeable, but to secure quiet nooks, places for hotbeds, and enclosures for wells and reservoirs. These, as a rule, are not what we can blend pleasantly into gen- eral lawn work However, our wells may be S(^ con- structed with rock work as to be highly ornamental. 46 HEDGES, WINDBREAKS, SHELTERS, ETC. A screen can be advantageously used to cover the work that creates htter, work that must at all seasons be going on. However, be careful about carrying this system to excess. A lot of petty screens or bits of hedges do not create the beautiful ; they suggest children's playgrounds. I have in mind an elaborate set of lawns which err in this direction, so as to create a sensation of pettiness. The removal of hedges and hedge fences from the highways is a reform that follows close after the removal of board fences. The removal of cattle from the streets leaves no object whatever for the street fence, alive or dead, except that of seclusive- ness. This is conjoined in public sentiment with exclusiveness, and rightfully it is resented. But for other reasons these obstructions should never be placed along the street. They make the highway something foreign to the owners of adjacent land. Less interest is taken in road improvement than if ownership were felt, and assumed, to the center of the street, or at least to the driveway. I advise all landscapists and owners of pleasant residences to sweep away these things entirely, and let each person feel that he owns and is responsible for the cleanli- ness and beauty of the highway. The roadway is rightfully a part of those holnesteads through which it runs. It is only in a narrow sense a public afifair, to be temporarily used by the passer-by; while it is eminently private. The whole highway should be a continuous garden. If hedges appear adjoining it. or as a part of it, they should not be on a straigh.t fence line. It is much better to plant our lawns clear to the ditches. That is, let your shrubbery which HEDGES FOR SMALL LAWNS. 47 has heretofore extended to the fence Hne, occupy also the street Hne to the ditchi Then the driveway, which alone has public ownership, will pass througli continuous shrubbery. In some instances I find fruit trees along the highway. This is peculiarly the opposite of the use of hedges, for instead of fencing people out it invites them to participate with us. It is hospitable; but T have not observed that such trees are largely meddled with by pedestrians. I find the grouping of ever- greens down to the roadway is very agreeable. In New Jersey towns and a few New York towns I have seen the choicer shrubs in full bloom within reach of the hands of passers-by. The lilac reaches to you its perfume and the cherry tree its fruit in the suburbs and main streets of Ithaca. This is delight- ful ; and why not ? It is vastly more human than cultivating your fine things behind stone walls or board fences or hedges. Flower beds in the street are better than cows and swine. I think it will be the idea of the twentieth century. We shall prob- ably see by the end of twent3^-five more years all of our ugly, weed-bedraggled highways turned into a public garden, reaching everywhere ; and binding all homes together with bands of beauty and of good will. I have not undertaken to suggest all the appro- priate uses of shrubs and other hedge plants about our homes. It is enough to say that no one should undertake the establishment of a beautiful home until he has first made a thorough and personal study of his land, and so become identified with it that he will comprehend its best use and its possibilities for 48 HEDGES^ WINDBRliAKS, SHELTERS^ ETC. developing the beautiful. It is not enough that one shall employ a landscape artist, to get the highest good from this home-creating. A home should be the growth of a man's soul into house and land. If }^ou follow out this idea you will soon discover where a strictly ornamental hedge will assist you in making your home more home-like, and where a hedge, partly for utility, will best accomplish the ends which you seek. If a hedge has gone wild for a few years, the question arises, what can be done wath it. If the hedge be deciduous the problem is not so generally one that cannot be answered. Cut it down nearly or quite to the ground, as your first step toward improvement. Then inaugurate a system of careful trimming, not too severe ; but let the rapid growth have considerable free play. Give the plants one or two feet of new development the first year. Or if the hedge has been neglected for only a year or two, you may cut it down to two or three feet in hight, careful!}^ shaping the hedge as you cut it. Deciduous hedges have always this advantage that they can be built up again after neglect, whereas yon cannot do anything of the sort with evergreen hedges. I shall refer to this topic again in connec- tion with evergreens, but may as well say here that if an old evergreen hedge has gaps that you wash to fill up, this may be accomplished with no difficulty if you will have patience; whereas, if the hedge is badly killed in places and thoroughly out of shape, cutting back will do no good; it must be destroyed. CHAPTER IV. EVERGREENS FOR HEDGES. Notwitstanding the enthusiasm we may genu- inely feel for deciduous hedges, and the dehght we get from the shelters of sweet flowering shrubs, the longer a man cultivates gardens and garden homes, the more he will fmd himself convinced that no deciduous bush or tree of any sort makes as good a hedge for ornamental grounds, or so good a pro- tection against winds, as an evergreen. The latter creates a wall unchanged by the season. When the day is bitter outside, the moment I step into my drives between my arbor-vitae hedges the climate becomes comfortable. Here, behind and between these walls, I can grow shrubs and fruits that cann(.>t be grown across the street, where the wind and weatlier have their way. Even in November or in March I can find a cozy corner in a curve of arbor- vitce. My Concords and even my Isabellas are given a chance to ripen. Under the lee of protect- ing hedges, December not seldom gives me a dande- lion. Better yet, the birds know all about it ; robms linger in the lap of winter and do not find it so bad to tarry with us. But best of all is it to be able to look out the dreariest and bleakest days of mid- winter and rest my eyes on greenery as fresh as May or October. My own evergreen hedges and 4 49 o W <{•, w H O < w o Q W u o w :" ^-:'^^.r .1 S EVERGREENS FOR HEDGES. 5^ windbreaks, if extended in a continuous line, would cover over half a mile; nor do I wish to part with a single rod of them. SECTION I MATERIAL. The handsomest of all evergreen hedges is made of our native hemlock spruce. The foliage is fine and hangs with peculiar grace. Another advantage is that the color does not change during the winter months. Arbor-vitse becomes a russet brown, very beautiful, but hemlock is as green in January as in June. A hemlock hedge is, however, more easily spoiled by wrong trimming or neglect, and I cannot therefore recommend it for general planting, as fullv equal to the arbor-vitse. By all means, try it for small enclosures, especially near the house, or to pro- tect roses and delicate shrubbery. The Norway spruce makes an admirable hedge, but needs severe pruning, and is almost certain to get out of control or become unsightly after a few years. Nearly all that I have seen planted I have also seen dug out. The junipers can be more safely used, especially red cedar. Its special value is, however, to create shelter. It will readily make a wall from twenty to thirty feet high, and as such its value will be appre- ciated in keen wild weather. It is thoroughly hardy and the growth is quite rapid. The low-growing junipers make pleasant but irregular hedges, while the savin is important mainly to grow along the foot of high windbreaks, or to be associated with a rockery. Very similar in growth to the savin is our native evergreen bush, the mahonia. This is the 52 HEDGES, WINDBREAKS, SHELTERS, ETC. handsomest shrub in existence when well grown, with its glossy holly-like leaves that are red when young, and its flowers that appear in May as huge balls of gold. A line of these makes a magnificent sight early in spring. The mahonia is, however, slightly tender in northern latitudes. I find it essen- tial to cover my bushes with a sprinkle of leaves, held on with branches of evergreen or with brush. In the northeast angle of a building, where the winter sun cannot reach it freely, it shows no winter-killing. I have referred to tlie common hemlock (Abies Canadensis), but there are many other varieties of hemlock which may be used to vary landscape work. For low hedges and borders. Parsons' Dwarf is excellent. It must also be borne in mind that the hemlock, unlike most evergreens, is very much given to sporting. You will fixud so great variation in the growth, even in the same opening, as to almost con- stitute varieties. I have been able to select those which were very drooping in their foliage, and others nearly as stiff and formal in growth as the arbor- vitse. It must always be borne in mind that the hemlock loves moist soil, and that it does not take with any liking to pine lands or any other soils that are light and sandy. Yet it will thrive on high knolls, provided it be well mulched. I have seldom lost a bush by removing it from a swampy ground, unless from neglect of immediate mulching. I have ranked as next to hemlock, and in some respects superior to it, the arbor-vitse. I think that, as generally treated, it is preferable for long hedges. It is stififer and stouter in growth, and will bet- ter endure a degree of neglect. I do not mean. 54 HEDGES^ WINDBREAKS, SHELTERS, ETC. however, to imply that any hedge of any sort will be worth having after a protracted season of shifting for itself. The arbor-vit?e grows dense and stout lower branches, and I have left a fine hedge (during a season of illness) untrinimed for one full year. Bear in mind that the arbor-vitse is capable of adjusting itself to a wide range of climate, and for growth, hardiness and readiness to take the shears, is also useful. I think it is found over as wide a range of our Northern states as any evergreen that we have. While fond of Avet lands, it adapts itself quite as well to dry soils, and I have it successfully growing on knolls, ridges, and along the faces of cliffs. The hemlock, after the spring trimming, sends out a drooping growth which at the tip is almost equal to florescence. It is best suited for low hedges, and the arbor-vitae for taller ones. Select as a rule the evergreen that is native to your section. You will best understand its growth, and can secure the soil it desires. Do not think that because the tree is native it is less desirable in culti- vated grounds. The finest ornamental lawns in America, including their hedges, have a preponder- ance of shrubs and trees selected from adjacent wild land. You will find a veritable revelation when once you have set yourself to a study of your vege- table neighbors. You will also find that you can have for the digging some of nature's finest treasures. I have not attempted anything like a full list of evergreens suitable for hedges and similar work. Indeed, very few are unsuited to this purpose. Among the best are the following, with golden foliage : EVERGREENS FOR HEDGES. 5^ (i) The Golden arbor-vitse. This is a beau- tiful variety of Chinese origin, with a bright yellowish-green foliage. I have not found it entirely hardy in central New York, but nearly so. Its growth is compact and round. (2) Two other small-growing varieties of arbor-vitae with golden foliage are the Hovey and the George Peabody. These are capital little trees for low-growing and compact screens or hedges. (3) Among the Retinosporas are two exceed- ingly beautiful bushes or small trees, with rich golden color and foliage of a plume sort. These are very graceful, the R. plumosa aurca and the gracilis anrca. I do not know anything more pretty or graceful. (4) Among upright growing evergreens we have a number that are exceedingly well adapted to hedges and hedge-like growth. The pyramidaiis arbor-vitse resembles the Irish juniper when seen at a distance, but is useful where that is not and is more hardy. The foliage is a rich, deep green ; a color which it retains all winter. This tree is not made near as much use of as it should be. Indeed, our fine lawns rarely have a proportionate number of pyra- midal or erect-growing trees. (5) The Swedish juniper, the Irish juniper and the Neoboriensis constitute three exceedingly fine erect-growing evergreens suitable for hedges. The Irish is perhaps the finest in growth, making a splen- did column ten to fifteen feet high. Of the red cedar I have already spoken. (6) Of dwarf-growing plants nothing could be finer than the Tom Tnumb arbor-vitse. Much like 56 HEDGES^ WINDBREAKS, SHELTERS^ ETC. it is the heath-leaved arbor-vit^e, and the pumila. All of these are natural dwarfs. They will make a hedge from one to three feet high. (7) The Retinospora squarrosa is another very graceful and very beautiful small-growing evergreen, with glaucous green foliage. (8) At the South ma}^ be planted to great advantage the Irish yew, the English yew. and other varieties of the evergreen. The Variegata is edged with golden yellow. These cannot be recommended for the North as perfectly hardy. The yew is popu- lar in England because it can be so easily sheared. It grows with very dense foliage. (9) Among the large strong-growing ever- greens the Austrian pine and the Scotch pine make two of our very best for screens, but not the best for close hedges. (10) But whatever else we overlook we must not forget the Siberian arbor-vitse. This variety is very much like the American, except that its foliage is heavier and grows cultriform, that is, perpendic- ular instead of horizontal. It bears trimming per- fectly and can be kept in as good shape as our native arbor-vit?e. (11) The Balsam fir I mention not to recom- mend it, but simply to warn all hedge growers from undertaking the use of it. It is the most disappoint- ing of all our evergreens for every purpose what- ever. Exceedingly beautiful when young, it begins to die out at the base very early, and as it becomes a tree it becomes scraggy and unsightly. It also has the exceedingly bad fault of breaking down easily in high winds. EVERGREENS FOR HEDGES. 57 Our Southern states have a few other evergreens adapted to hedges, such as Ilex cassinc, a species of holly. The leaves are described as small and much like that of the arbutus. The berries are large and brilliant red — not liked by birds, and therefore per- sistent throughout the winter. The rhododendrons are peculiarly beautiful for hedges, where they are hardy, as are also the low-growing laurels or kalmias. However, they will not thrive in lime- stone soils sufficiently well to be of any use for hedge work. By using made soil, and by persistent atten- tion, individual shrubs may be grown, and short hedges. If you try them at all, get good garden soil without the least admixture of manure, add sand and wood mold, and take care to mulch in the winter. The Box deserves special notice. The low- growing bushy variety is admirable in garden work, bordering beds and walks. The larger growing makes an admirable low hedge. It endures cutting as well as the holly, and is responsible for no end of fancies and abnormal shapings called art. In Eng- lish and French gardens during the last century, houses of box were not uncommon. Topiary work is, how^ever, no longer as fashionable in English gardens or even in French. In this country it has never secured any serious attention from our better home-builders. As our own lives grow natural and democratic, the conventional in art becomes dis- tasteful. It is no small advantage to have near our homes such plants as can be cut for winter house decoration. The savin is admirable for this purpose. The mahonia is perhaps best of all ; for although the 58 HEDGES, WINDBREAKS, SHELTERS, ETC. leaves may be beneath the snow, they have lost none of their rich summer brightness. Below the line of New York, Magnolia glauca serves a similar pur- pose, while farther south it becomes so entirely hardy that it may be used for windbreaks with remarkable effect. Tlie leaves are large and glaucous, occa- sionally acting as deciduous. The flowers are exceedingly sweet as well as beautiful. Other mag- nolias are very valuable for hedges, especially con- spicua and Soulangcana. Indeed, a.11 of the Chinese varieties may be made useful for hedge work. Few of them are evergreen, but I name them here as asso- ciated with the glauca. The holly is a favorite in Europe as well as in our Southern states. It will thrive perfectly as far north as New Jersey and New York city. Its historical and poetical associations place it quite as high as its real beauty. It bears winter clipping as well as the mahonia. For this reason it has had its grotesque and fantastic shear- ing. Fortunately no one any longer cares for mon- strosities in landscape, and we shall probably never again have a reign of vegetable griffins, roosters and dogs. There are holly hedges in existence known to be over two hundred years old. This is one of the hedge plants that thrives best in sandy soil. It grows very slowly, but will at the last, if untrimmed, reach a hight of twenty-five feet. SECTION IT TREATMENT. (a) The time for planting evergreens is iden- tical with the time for planting deciduous trees. The old notion that it was advisable to plant them EVERGREENS FOR HEDGES. 59 in August is entirely given up. It resulted in a loss of a large proportion of all that were planted. Why the hobby ever found so general acceptance is diffi- cult of explanation. Set your plants early in April, and plant them precisely as you do deciduous trees — only with extra precautions. When I say April I mean for the sections of country running from Boston westward. (b) Before digging your trees, have your trenches dug for planting them. These should be of ample width, probably three feet will never be too wide for the trench, and two feet in depth. Let the bottom be filled with loose earth and then puddled, that is, thoroughly soaked with water. When set- ting, wet down the roots constantly, and thoroughly puddle each tree as it is planted. This is the impor- tant point with evergreens, that they be thoroughlv puddled. It is, however, equally important that the plants be handled right in digging. The roots of an evergreen should never be exposed to the sun, or the wind, or allowed to get dry. Wrap the roots as soon as out of the ground with wet straw or matting or old cloth. Keep these well wetted until you reach your planting ground. Then, if not to be imme- diately put into the soil, puddle the roots by thrust- ing them into a tank or pond or brook. Keep them here until you are ready to plant them, drawing them out one by one. It is necessary" to add that if the soil be exceedingly solid and retentive, drainage should be prepared beforehand. This may be accom- plished by tile drains or a series of tile drains. If the hedge be a straight one, I should be inclined to run a drain parallel, and within a few feet through 6o HEDGES^ WINDBREAKS, SHELTERS, ETC. the whole length. If the trench dug for setting your plants be a little deeper than needed for the plants, and the bottom filled with rubble stone, this will suffice, unless the soil is low. (c) As soon as planted and thoroughly soaked to the surface, let your hedge be mulched. This must never be overlooked or delayed. Use sawdust if convenient, or coal ashes, if more convenient, — always those of anthracite coal. Bear in mind that manure from the barnyard, and the commercial fer- tilizers, have nothing to do with the soil in which you place evergreens. If you wish to destroy your hedge impromptu, use barnyard manure. (d) If the hedge plants were not cut back before setting, let it be done at once, and let it be done very severely. Bring all the plants into as nearly the same size as possible. The only rule to be given is to remove from one-third to two-thirds of the wood, including all the long straggling and irregular branches. The permanent shaping of the hedge will require a watchful eye and careful hand for not less than four or five years. Meanwhile the hedge will have a somewhat open look, not altogether beautiful, but closing up steadily into a solid wall. This shaping is the key to all your success or failure. You cannot compel evergreens to continue healthy if you insist on artificial forms of growth. Whatever kind you are planting, study first its natural method of growth and outlines as the trees stand wild. Then follow very nearly these same outlines as you train the bushes into a hedge. The arbor-vitae should rise, on an easy slope from the ground, to near what you intend shall be the top of EVERGREENS FOR HEDGES. 6 1 the hedge; after reaching that point there should be an easy roll over the top to the other side. This top should never be sharp cut nor flat, nor should it be very broad from the sides. For some reason that I am unable to explain, the hemlock does not, when rounded from near the bottom, refuse to grow as well as when it takes the somewhat conical form of the wild tree. This roll of the hedge is not exactly what we might term the natural form of the hemlock tree, nevertheless, I have found it desirable, and entirely practicable to grow my hemlock hedges much more rolling from the bottom on the one side to the bottom on the other than my arbor-vitee hedges. I have never had a gap in either of these hedges due 'to winter-killing, or in any way traceable to the trimming. You will find it possible, probably, on this style of trimming to get a fairly compact hedge by the end of the fourth year. The hemlock should improve in form and compactness for ten years longer. With careful handling it should retain its completeness and beauty for forty or fifty years more. If trees grow near by, or shrubbery crowds against an evergreen hedge, there will surely be dead branches rapidly formed on the side encroached upon. Sometimes this may be endurable, where it occurs on the back side of the hedge, and you do not care to sacrifice a very choice shrub. Where I have found it necessary or desirable to fill up such gaps in arbor- vit« hedges, I have found it much more practicable to fill with hemlock than with arbor-vitse. Take small plants of not more than one foot in hight, set them carefully, and be patient. This fusion of two 62 HEDGES, WINDBREAKS, SHELTERS, ETC. Species of evergreens is not always undesirable. The arbor-vitse and hemlock work specially well together. It must be borne in mind that evergreen will not grow with equal thrift in sun and in shade, or when half shaded. These inequalities can be partially remedied by careful trimming. I have been able to run my arbor-vit?e hedges for over a quarter of a mile over the ground, and so adjust them to the grade that they do not give to the eye an unpleasant lack of either symmetry or uniformity. I know that they are not of equal bight or equal fullness, but I know that my shears have made them appear to be such. Evergreen hedges are ruined more often by errors in trimming than by all other causes com- bined. The following rules, if followed carefully, will be sure to keep any well-grown hedge in good condition for thirty or forty years, probably longer : ( I ) Trim only once a year, and always before nevv growth appears, in the latter part of April or early in May. That is, if the spring be warm, cut in March, if not, in April. Never cut in midwinter, for the tips that you cut away are intended by nature as a protection for the buds which will make next summer's growth. If cut away, the probabilities are that cold days and severe frosts will either kill back the hedge in spots, or nip the buds enough to spoil the beauty of the coming growth. Remember that a hemlock hedge is beautiful not simply for its shape, but for the exquisite blossoming of its fresh growth. Nor should you ever cut in autumn, and that for the same reason, that you would be cutting away the cloak that nature has ]:)repared for the hedge during the coming winter. If you do cut in autumn you will EVERGREENS FOR HEDGES. 63 almost certainly be inquiring of some one, in the spring, why some of your hedges are killed altogether and others show dead bushes. A gentleman of my acquaintance who owned very fine hemlock hedges insisted on keeping them clipped throughout the season. The result is that he now has so wretched a hedge and so unsightly that what he has not already dug out will soon be removed. I bear strong empha- sis on this point, because so many people who seek to have beautiful homes have a passion for eternally clipping something. Their hedges must be sheared ; the lawn must be equally sheared. To them growth is never beautiful — only smoothness. (2) When you trim, cut close to the wood of the previous year, but never so close that you do not leave a small portion of wood with leaves on it, for here are the only buds for new growth. Evergreens, unlike deciduous trees, have no dormant buds on old wood that can be developed. If you cut away the leaves, or needles as we should call them, entirely, then you have killed the hedge, or whatever part of the hedge you have so cut. This mischief also occurs from the employment of professional trim- mers — that is, of a class of men who do not under- stand anything beyond the formalities of cutting. They seldom comprehend the nature of the growth, and are intent only on keeping the outlines of the wood. You must bear in mind that they will charge the damage to the severity of the winter, or to the heat of the sum.mer, or to some other cause which will not stand investigation ; they will not be them- selves responsible. The evergreens I have indicated as hardy do not winter-kill, nor do they burn out in EVERGREENS FOR HEDGES. ^5 summer if properly trimmed. (3) Have as little of last year's growth as possible left by the shears, because if a hedge gains only one inch on each side each year, it will in twenty years have gamed forty inches or considerably over three feet. In many places this spread of the hedge will not be endurable. It will encroach too much on your drive or on your lawn. (4) There is great danger that your trrni- mer using long shears, will bear his weight a little more heavily as he reaches higher up, and so will valley in a hedge. Insist on it that the contour I have previously described be kept without infringe- ment.' If not, your hedge will begin to decay. (5) Do not allow the lower branches to be short- ened in with those that lie just above. They must reach out so as to form, from the very ground, a slight inclination all the way up, and leave a solid base for the hedge. If possible these lower branches should lie flat on the ground. (6) If your hedge runs east and west, or nearly so, the north side will be in danger from close pruning. It must have light and air. A few things must be borne in mmd m the care of evergreen hedges apart from the pruning: ( I ) That thev must not be touched roughly when hard frozen. The branches are then as brittle as glass and will break sharp ofif, leaving rents and breaches. It is clear, therefore, that careless drivers must not be tolerated among vour drives that are bordered with this class of hedges. If the hedge is loaded with snow that needs to be removed, let it be done if possible when the branches are not frozen. (2) Urine kills a hedge, and dogs become a nuisance. 5 66 HEDGES, WINDBREAKS, SHELTERS, ETC. If you keep a dog at all, a collie is the safest, and a spayed female the hest of all. I hardly need add that you must keep sharp watch lest ahout the roots of your hedge be poured brine or any other salty material. (3) You must not leave the heavy snows of winter to do as they will with your hedges. If a heavy snow falls on them, let it be loosened up and tossed off by the use of a rake or a pitchfork or with a long pole. I sometimes use a tool made of a bit of board firmly fastened to the end of a pole. It will of course be asked (i) How long- will it take to establish a perfect evergreen hedge? All depends on the common sense and care that it receives. An evergreen hedge should look very well, as I have before said, by the third year. It should be in splendid form b}^ the fifth year. (2) How long will an evergreen hedge last? I hav-e hedges of arbor-vitae thirty-five years old, which my friend. Professor Bailey, says are the finest between the Atlantic and the Pacific. My hemlock hedges of the same age are as fresh and as perfect as at ten years of age. One of the most important subjects is, where not to have an evergreen hedge. I do not know that it is possible to give any directions, excepting that you study your ground carefully before plant- ing. A hedge, a screen, or a windbreak may be so placed as to throw the drift of snow directly into your drives, or they may be so planted as to divert such lines of drift. This can be accomplished only, as I said, by a previous and careful study of your grounds and the tendency to drifting. Other sug- g'estions I prefer to make in the form of sketches. EVERGREENS FOR HEDGES. 67 Note. — I do not know of anyone in America better qualified to speak on evergreens than Samuel Parsons, Jr. I think so highly of a brief essay from his pen on Japanese evergreens that I shall close this section by copying the same. While it is not strictly a discussion of hedges, it will give precisely that information which will be sought for by those who desire to experiment with some of the more rare and beautiful of these trees. ''Abies polita, the tiger-tail spruce, is one of the finest and most valuable of the Japanese conifers. It is rich and very characteristic in form. The yellow-barked branches extend out stiff and straight, and the glossy, bright green, stiff- pointed leaves are as sharp and not unlike the spines of a hedgehog. The curious appearance of the ends of the young growth or half bursting leaf buds doubtless suggested the name, tiger-tail spruce. Abies polita grows slowly and, therefore, belongs to the class of evergreens specially fitted for small places. But this little cluster of evergreens close by is even better fitted for such work. They are Jap- anese junipers, and very hardy. Their elegant forms and rich tints would indeed render them distin- guished anywhere. One is silvery, at least on a portion of its leaves ; another is almost solid gold, and another (Juniper us aurea variegafa) has its leaves simply tipped with gold in the daintiest fashion imaginable. *'Let us look at these two Japanese pines that show so richly, even at a little distance. One is Finns densiflora, with bright green leaves, long and very effective. This tree grows very rapidly, soon requiring the application of the pruning knife. In 68 HEDGES^ WINDBREAKS, SHELTERS, ETC. coloring and general habit it is perhaps the best of Japanese pines, except Pinus Massoniana, which only surpasses it in a yellowish tint that generally per- vades the leaves. But the Pinus Massoniana par excellence is the golden-leaved form of that species. It is bright gold that seems to gain a touch of deeper gold as you pause to look at it. This peculiar effect is greatly enhanced by the fact that Pinus Masso- niana has two leaves only in a sheath, and these leaves are so clustered on the end of the branches as to spread in every direction. It was this peculiarity that gave rise to the name, sun-ray pine. But the noteworthy habit of this pine is its late variegation. In June, while in full growth, it is rather greenisli- golden than golden ; but all through the summer its yellow grows brighter, until in September it makes a very striking object amid the fading leaves of fall. It makes, in fact, a worthy companion for the golden oak (Quercns Concordia) , which you will remember has the same peculiarity. It should be also noted that the brightness of the sun-ray pine remains unin- jured during winter, and never burns in summer, a quality that other so-called golden pines have sadly needed. The bright yellow of the sun-ray pine is confined in a peculiar manner to about two-thirds of the leaf. Beginning at the base, first comes gold, then an equal amount of green and then again as much gold at the tip. The dividing lines between these colors are marked out with singular distinct- ness, thus giving the utmost delicacy and finish to the variegation. Pinus Massoniana varicgata is on the lawn in question, but it is. nevertheless, very rare and hardly to be obtained anywhere. EVERGREENS FOR HEDGES. 69 "We come now to the Retinosporas (Japan cypresses), choicest, I was about to say, of all ever- greens ; certainly the choicest, as a class, of all recently introduced evergreens. To Robert Fortune, the great English collector of plants in Japan, we owe probably the real introduction of the leading species of Retinosporas — namely, R. pluniosa aurca, R. pisifcra and R. ohtiisa — and a greater benefit could hardly have been done the lawn planter than the introduction of these evergreens. They are hardy, of slow growth and of most varied beauty in individual specimens, the latter being a quality greatly wanting among some evergreens commonly used throughout the country, arbor-vitses for in- stance. And, apropos of arbor- vitses, let me say that the Retinosporas bear a much more close rela- tion to that species than they do to cypresses, not- withstanding the latter has been adopted as the Eng- lish name. The Retinosporas graft readily on the Thujas or arbor-vitaes and bear a certain resem- blance to them, but the resemblance only that can exist between a beautiful plant and one much less attractive. Let us look at a group of the new and rare Retinosporas, although unfortunately all Retinosporas are comparatively rare on our lawns. In asking you to look first at fdicoidcs, I am selecting one of the very choicest and most curious green species or varieties. If it were not for a peculiarly thick curled border along the leaf of this Retino- spora, it might be readily taken while young for an evergreen fern. It is a spreading plant, of slov/ growth and great hardiness. Indeed, I might say. yO HEDGES, WINDBREAKS, SHELTERS, ETC. once for all, that the Retinosporas are of unexcelled hardiness, both winter and summer, and that their variegations are all permanent. Can a higher char- acter be given to any other evergreen? "There are two distinct kinds of weeping Retinosporas — namely, a beautiful fern-like pendu- lous form of R. ohtusa, originating in Flushing, and an extravagant, attenuated form, imported recently from Japan through Mr. Thomas Hogg. The long thread-like leaves of this variety fall directly down and curve about the stem in swaying, meager masses, which suggest that in this plant the extreme of the weeping form among evergreens has been reached. Almost as curious as this is another introduction of Mr. Thomas Hogg, R. Ulifcra aurea. We have known R. Mifera for some time as a rare tree with tesselated shaggy masses of green, thread-like foli- age, but Mr. Hogg's new variety offers the same strange mass of foliage, only in this case it is turned into gold, broad, solid, permanent gold. While I am pointing out the Golden Retinosporas, which are veritable sunbeams amid other evergreens, let me call your attention to R. obtiisa aurca, one of the best and most distinct of all variegated forms. It is free- growing, with a beautiful combination of gold color intermixed with glossy rich green, all over the plant. Although not exactly a new plant, I am constrained to call your passing attention to R. obtusa nana, one of the very best of dwarf evergreens, a dense flat tuft of glossy, deep green spray, a cushion or ball of evergreen foliage that will hardly grow two feet in ten years. The golden form of R. obtusa nana is charming. Its yel- EVERGREENS FOR HEDGES. 7 1 low is a rich bronze, and I do not know any- thing of the kind more attractive. R. pisifera nana varicgata is also very beautiful, a dense minia- ture bush of a general bluish-gray aspect, except a portion of the lesser branchlets and leaves, which are pale yellow. But do not think I have begun to exhaust the curious forms of these Retinosporas. I have only given the most noteworthy to be found on a superior lawn. Any large group of R. ohtiisa will give a dozen beautiful diverse forms of weeping, pyramidal and dwarf or spreading evergreens. All or practically all kinds of Retinosporas now used came from Japan, where they are common, but highlv valued in the beautiful gardens of that country. Mr. Hogg has not only introduced several of these new Retinosporas, but has given us possibly more new Japanese plants than anv collector since the time of Robert Fortune's famous horticultural explorations. '1 must not leave these Retinosporas without calling attention again to their excellent adaptation to small places. If we restrict the planting on a small lawn to Japanese maples, Retinosporas and two or three shrubs, like Spiraea crispifolia, we may almost defy, with a little skill, the power of time to compass, by means of trees, the destruction of our grass plots. I must add, however, one other conifer to this seemingly short, but really varied, list of new hardy plants suited to miniature lawn planting. I refer to Sciadopitys vcrticillaia, the parasol pine, one of the most extraordinary evergreens known. The plant we see on this lawn is scarcelv two feet high, and 3^et it is more than ten years old. Trav- elers in Japan tell us of specimens in Japanese gar- 72 HEDGES, WINDBREAKS, SHELTERS, ETC. dens fifty and one hundred feet high ; but certainly in youth the plant is wonderfully dwarf. Its strange habit is produced by the curiously long, broad, dark, green needles, or narrow-shaped leaves, that cluster in parasol-like tufts at the end of each succeeding year's growth. The color is as dark as. that of the yew, and the growth as compact. It is, moreover, very hardy, and thus presents a combination of choice qualities of the most strange, -attractive, and valuable character. The plant is so entirely original in its forms that it seems some lone type, the correlations of which are lost, or yet to be found. As we look upon it, we commence to realize how thoroughly most plants of the same genus, all over the globe, are related to each other, just because we can think of nothing else that resembles the parasol pine. "A Japanese yew, near by, of rich and spreading habit, exemplifies this resemblance between various members of a genus situated in various parts of tlie earth. This Japanese yew (Taxus cuspid a fa) is however, very noteworthy for great hardiness, a character that can be scarcely accorded to any other yew in this climate. TJiuiopsis Staudishii is another Japanese plant on this lawn, of comparatively recoit introduction. I want to call your attention to it, situated near the Retinosporas, not only because it is a beautiful evergreen, somewhat like the arbor-vit?e in general appearance, but because it does better here, apparently, than in England. This is a peculiarity remarkable in an evergreen, for the moist climate of England seems to make for them a very home." I do not need to apologize for inserting thi? essay in full ; because it will surely be helpful to a EVERGREENS FOR HEDGES. 73 very large class of those whom I desire to aid in making home delightful by the use of evergreens. Most of the trees which Mr. Parsons describes can be used in hedges, groups, and shelters. The true home builder is also a decorative artist. FIG. 8. GROUND PLAN OF VILLAGE PLOT, WITH FLOWERS, HEDGES AND WINDBREAKS. SI W u < w o o K <; O H W U pi O !.; u: ON d CHAPTER V. WINDBREAKS, SHELTERS. ETC. While the hedge proper also serves largely as a protection against wind and storm, it is presumed not to be planted primarily for that purpose. The true windbreak is a very tall hedge, or a close row of evergreens, or grove, or a strip of forest. While I am an enthusiast on beautiful and useful hedges, I believe the subject of supreme importance for Ameri- can agriculture and horticulture is just now how to protect ourselves and our grounds from violent winds and changes of temperature. Professor Bailey, in his admirable discussion of the subject, suggests that one reason why fruit growing is attended with increasing difficulties is because of the removal of the forests The result of forest destruction has been to make our summers hotter and dryer and our win- ters more extreme. It is not so much that the weather is colder than formerly, but that the changes are more frequent and sharper. The forest aids the fruit grower in two ways: first, it prevents the severe sweep of winds breaking trees, and creating sudden atmospheric changes; second, it conserves and balances atmospheric mois- ture. The sweep of winds when undisturbed bears away the moisture from the soil and also from the trees and their buds. It is well known that fruit ;5 76 HEDGES^ WINDBREAKS, SHELTERS^ ETC. buds will endure two or three degrees severer freez- ing when the air is moist than when it is dry. It is true that hedges and windbreaks and forests ma)^ hinder the free circulation of air over a very adjacent orchard, and they may harbor both insect ene- mies and fungous diseases. Professor Bailey suggests that we can and ought to do a great deal, in the way of eliminating from our forests, trees that are specially the breed- ers of our enemies. For instance, the wild cherry, which grows along the edge of our woods, is espe- cially occupied by the tent caterpillar, and as a rule should be cut down. I follow Professor Bailey still farther, in his suggestion that we do not wish or need to protect ourselves from all sorts of winds. If wind passes over a large body of water, it becomCvS warmer by taking heat from the water as well as moisture. In this case a windbreak would be detri- mental to the interests of the horticulturist. "From a general study of the subject it appears that, for interior localities, dense belts of evergreens, backed by forest trees to prevent evergreens from becoming ragged, are advisable, because winds coming off the land are liable to make the plantation colder. In localities influenced by bodies of water it is better to plant just enough to break the force of the wind." To sum up the whole subject : ''A windbreak may exert a great influence upon a fruit plantation. The benefits derived from it are, protection from cold, lessening of evaporation, decrease of windfalls, facili- tation of labor, enabling trees to grow more erect, encouragement of birds, and beauty of landscape." I am so loath to divorce the useful and the beau- WINDBREAKS, SHELTERS, ETC. "JJ tiful that my taste inclines very strongly to those forms of windbreaks that give more or less return of fruit. It is amazing how large an amount of grapes can be grown on a close row of deciduous trees, which become interlaced with the vines. It is true that as the vines climb higher much of the fruit will be out of reach for easy gathering, and that very little of it will be really marketable, but it is never out of reach of the birds. In the orchard we also have at hand an eminently fine tree for constructing fruit- ful windbreaks — I refer to the Buffum pear. This tree grows almost as a counterpart of the Lombardy poplar, erect, stiff and compact. It should never be cut back at the top, for it has no capacity for lateral growth. Set the trees about eight feet apart, and then let them take their own way. The result will be a wall, as smooth and perfect as a trimmed hedge. In blossom, the Buffum pear is simply superb, and later it will be loaded with golden pears, which while not first class are yet a very good second class. The fruit is one of the best that we have for pickling, and if picked before ripe becomes a very good dessert pear. Let them begin to yellow before picking, and then store or sell. The cropping power is astonish- ing. After the pears are gone, and in the later sea- son, the leaves become a brilliant crimson. Of all lawn trees there are only two or three equal to the Buffum pear in autumn coloring, and I do not know one other pear that is equal to it. The leaves hang on until late, and a wall of them cannot be surpassed for magnificence. If instead of a windbreak you desire an avenue that shall be part shelter for your drives the Buffum pear still surpasses all trees for y8 HEDGES^ WINDBREAKS^ SHELTERS^ ETC. close growth and rich foHage. In other words, here is a fruit that we would not select to any extent for orchard-growing, and yet it is so good that it will be welcomed when it affords us bushels, without any further labor than that of planting a windbreak. A close row of dwarf apples is another device for combining fruit and shelter. Some of the dwarfs are delightfully compact and beautiful, whether singly or in rows. They are useful, however, only where you will be content with a windbreak ten feet high. The Ben Davis is a good apple for this pur- pose. Its branches droop, and in autumn bend gracefully down with a load of crimson fruit. The Astrakhan, not dwarfed, makes a splendid wind- break, bearing quite as well as in an open orchard. The Kirkland is extremely fine for close-growing, for dense foliage and for heavy cropping. The main point to be looked after, in planting apple tree shel- ters, is to select varieties with tough enduring wood. Other varieties, like the Baldwin and the Pound Sweet, will soon give way under the loads of fruit, or in windstorms ; and present in the course of two or three years after bearing, a mass of brushwood. Such a windbreak must be trimmed of suckers as carefully as the trees in an orchard. I have seen nature create some remarkably good windbreaks with wild cherries and wild plums. The latter particularly are good for their fruit as well as their shelter. It is well for us to give nature the cue, by starting along a required line a choice variety of plums like the Lombard, from which suckers will soon fill up all the space allowed. But here again there will be constant need of the saw and pruning WINDBREAKS^ SHELTERS^ ETC. 79 knife, because as new trees appear, some of the old ones are sure of continually dying. I have already suggested the danger from wild cherry trees, that they will become breeders of tent and other cater- pillars, yet they are very beautiful in close rows. A protective wall of crab apple trees is one of the easiest to be made and one of the most useful. These trees, however, should not be set closer than fifteen feet. Let them branch out six or ei^ht feet in each direction, and let the branches start about five or six feet from the ground. After the first crop of apples these branches will droop to the sod. Remember that such a row of trees must have room. It must not be used as a close hedge, for then its beauty as well as its utility will be sacrificed. If you know of anything more beautiful tlian a Martha or Hyslop crab in full bloom, it must be the same tree in full fruit. A row of these trees standing twenty feet high, and touching the ground with their branches, will delight the dullest eye. The value of the fruit is at the same time considerable for home use, or market. The demand for the best varieties of crab apples is on the increase. Prices range about with the prices of dessert apples in the autumn months. No one can fail to get excellent hints from the way nature creates her windbreaks wherever she is permitted an opportunity. Watch how rapidly along every line of old fence these appear. The farmer can do no better than to let them grow. Oaks, ashes, elms, chestnuts, will thus stand close, or in groups, while underneath crowd elders, haws and hazels. Wild grapevines climb through and interlace the 8o HEDGES^ WINDBREAKS^ SHELTERS^ ETC. whole, with here and there a few loops of Virginia creeper. I defy you to find anything more beautiful. But it is the value of these palisades against the storm and the wind that we should most think of. I know farmers who have shown their first title to owner- ship by cutting down all such encumbrances. They look upon them as occupants of good soil which should be put to better purposes. In one case, where I have had excellent opportunity for observation, the owner has so changed the climate that where quince orchards grew to perfection, nothing of the kind will at present thrive. It is well sometimes to join hands with nature and board up or otherwise protect such a line of trees. Behind such a protection half-hardy crops and trees will be sufficiently helped to become toughened to the climate. Many of our shrubs and trees only need guarding carefully for the first four or five years of their growth, after which they become acclimated and hardy. In a few cases I have found it advisable to use movable winter fences instead of planting shrubs or trees, removing them wlien spring returns. These are especially useful to the north and west of vine- yards and quince orchards. I have also found them useful in making a currant crop certain and in break- ing from my gooseberry rows the full force of the wind, but in the latter case the protection is of more importance in breaking the force of the hot winds in summer. Such fences are not desirable to shield peach trees and plums, which are more likely to be induced to make late grovv'th or soften their blossom buds in the warm winter sun. Some of the pear trees, notably the Seckel and Sheldon, are easily ; WINDBREAKS, SHELTERS, ETC. 8l Started by warm exposure in midwinter, and the buds afterward killed by a sharp freeze. However, I believe that in most cases where the climate is severe, or where the winds have a broad sweep, our best resort is to evergreen trees. In this section 1 do not know of any tree that is better than the arbor-vitae, either the American or the Siberian variety. Next to this I should select the Norway spruce. This magnificent tree has shown its capacity for adapting itself to a f,reat range of soils, and is everywhere absolutely hardy. In planting the Nor- way spruce 1 should by all means prefer a row of trees standing so far apart that each one might be individually well developed. This would require a distance of at least twenty feet. If it be desirable to form a windbreak very speedily, plant interme- diate trees, which shall be carefully removed as soon as the trees begin to impinge. Where space and room are of no special importance, additional beauty can be secured by planting at determinate points groups of these trees, that is, at every ten or twenty rods let the line be broken by a group of three to five trees. These should stand closer together, so that when they are twenty or thirty feet high they will make but one compact outline. If desired these may be made very pleasant shelters for seats in summer. The arbor-vitcx I should plant as a rule more after the manner of a liedge, letting the plants at the outset stand four or five feet apart. The erect arbor-vitse is exceedingly fine iov the purpose we are considering, but it should stand even closer in the row than the common arbor-vitcT. The beautiful hemlock is not so i)erfect for a windbreak as it is for 6 o l-H WINDBREAKS^ SHELTERS, ETC. 83 a hedge, because of its propensity to lose the lower branches. Still its dense foliage and noble green color make it rank high for shelter. In New England and some parts of the Northwest, what can be finer than the white pine, wdiile in the Southern states the yellow pine is used by nature for a shelter and may well be used by man. One of the grandest of the pines to create a solid wall is Pinns Ccinbra. This tree does not rise with me above eighteen or twenty feet, and it makes a diameter of about ten feet, while each tree is compact and sits firmly on the sod. It is a grand tree for all purposes. I quote from a very judicious article issued by the Iowa Horticultural Society. For wind-swept prairies ''white spruce, silver spruce and Black Hills spruce are all good for single row evergreen shelters. Norway and arbor-vitae are good on dark, retentive black loams, but not generally on light, thin prairie soils or exposed hilly locations. Farm shelter belts should differ. They should be located around build- ing sites and yards, and the inside rows should be one hundred and fifty feet back to keep snowdrifts out of the yard. If land is not plenty, use only ever- greens, but if plenty the quickest growing deciduous Cottonwood and willow can be used. For the out- side rows, next to the wind, plant two rows of Cot- tonwood cuttings, then come in sixteen feet toward the buildings and plant two rows of willow^ cuttings parallel with the cottonwood. So in alternate plant- ing set four pairs of rows each. Thickly-set wil- low will keep wind out below, but cottonwood throws it up. Now, inside toward the buildings, thirty-two feet from the last row of willows, plant Scotch pine ; 84 HEDGES^ WINDBREAKS, SHELTERS, ETC. thirty-two feet further in a row of white pine ; and thirty-two feet in further a row of white spruce, Black Hill spruce, or silver spruce. Set evergreens twelve feet apart in rows alternate ; willows and Cot- tonwood four feet apart in rows. All trees should be planted on ground in high tilth. It should be given all summer annual cultivation, and mulch each fall for over winter. Continue cultivation until you cannot get through, then seed to clover, where it will grow. Evergreens ten to fifteen inches high, that have been transplanted, are best to use. A grove of all Northern red cedar makes the best grove for high dry prairie soil. Do not let evergreen trees lay around exposed to dry air or winds when planted. Do not water them, but cultivate and hoe them the same as the best garden crop." I agree with most of this so thoroughly that I give it in full. I do not, however, assent to the position that it is best to plant small evergreens ten to fifteen inches high. It is more than can be asked of most farmers to wait for the development of such trees to become good wind- breaks. I should set, by all means, trees four or five feet high, provided they can be obtained. As for watering trees, I have already suggested that they should be thoroughly watered, but it is understood by good cultivators that hoeing a plant is equivalent to watering it. At all events do not let an evergreen even approach dryness of the roots. Among deciduous trees and shrubs the willow is quite as good in the East as in the West. The Cottonwood is not procurable or usable in most of the Eastern states. Both of these trees prefer moist soil. I have seen some admirable windbreaks mad? WINDBREAKS, SHELTERS, ETC. 85 by thrusting long sticks of willows into the soil, about eidit feet apart. These develop into trees with o-reat rapidity. It is very desirable in some sections to multiply our nut trees by allowing them to grow along the fences. The butternut in this section makes a very good protection against the wind but the trees should not stand nearer than twenty feet. x\mong smaller trees, I recommend as exceed- ingly fine for both protection and ornament the cork- ba'rked maple. When I first procured this tree it was mentioned to me as not quite hardy, but 1 have found it entirely so and very enduring. The tree rises to a hight of twelve feet, is almost exactly round, and the foliage is as novel as the bark. t has almost the exact form of some of our round- topped evergreens. The beeches, which I have already spoken of as suitable for hedges, make als,> the very best of low windbreaks. In growth they are very solid, and the tendency is to retain leaves late in the winter. I do not know of anything more- superb than the thorns In blossom. None of them take a very large amount of root room, and a wall of double scarlet thorn would, I imagine, lead a pil- grimage of the whole population to gaze on it. A single tree is a marvel of beauty. If used for the purpose I suggest, plant them about eight feet apart. For low-growing windbreaks I would recom- mend very especially the Exochorda grandiHora, growing about ten feet high. It is very tough m wood and very rarely is affected at all by the severest weather. I have in a few cases had a few twigs killed back. The blossoms are saucer-shaped, large and pure white, and in May are among the most 86 HEDGES, WINDBREAKS, SHELTERS, ETC. bvyra\fc anA S » -r fc €. t u,|, V>;\\ "• — ^ FIG. II. GROUND PLAN OF COUNTRY PLACE WITH ARBOR-VITAE HEDGES. WINDBREAKS, SHELTERS, ETC. B/ beautiful of the flowers borne by our shrubs. To thicken the growth of such a windbreak or to make more beautiful the frontage, I would use with great freedom the Japan quince. This shrub occurs in red, white and pink flowers. The fruit is often quite abundant later in the season and is of the very highest quality for making jelly. It is also very valuable as a perfume in drawers of clothes. It will send out a rich fragrance for years without rotting. I would suggest for an ornamental windbreak, a background of hemlock or arbor-vitcC, with a row of thorns, fronted by a third row of Japan quince. Our gar- den quince, where it is entirely hardy, is also a really admirable plant for hedge or windbreak. Its growth is irregular, but it can be very easily controlled. There is some appropriate demand in our orna- mental grounds for shelters or hedges of double lines, through which we shall l.iave sheltered walks leading to sheltered seats. We have several small-growing trees suited to this purpose. Among the best are the weeping elm, the sassafras, the Judas tree and the wild apples. A densely covered walk of the latter, run over with wild grapes, makes a remark- ably cool retreat in summer and warm in winter. Scott, in his "Beautiful Homes," recommends the sassafras, cutting back the top, and compelling an umbrella form, until the trees weave their tops to- gether to make a complete canopy to cover as much space as you please. The mulberry can be compelled with ease to take on a similar growth. The Judas tree is equally good, and a double row of these, arched together, is a wonderfully fine sight in spring when, before leaves appear, the whole is a mass of bloom. 88 HEDGES, WINDBREAKS, SHELTERS, ETC. A single tree will cover a square of twenty feet, when grown under the best conditions. But it must be remembered that we have always to recKon with the tendency of this tree to split down directly through the heart or to break off large branches. This must be prevented by watching for indications of the split, and binding it with bands of hoop iron. The arrangement suggested above does not forfeit the rule of doing nothing antagonistic to nature. Such a development of these trees is entirely natural, be- cause in all ways the tree suggests massiveness. All weave on high a verdant roof, That keeps the very sun aloof ; Making a twilight soft and green Within the column-vaulted scene. SECTION I WINDBREAKS FOR SPECIAL PURPOSES. It will not be foreign to the purpose of this chapter if I suggest windbreaks for special purposes. ( I ) For bees : Every landowner will do well to have an apiary. Bees are indispensable to aid in polleniz- ing our fruits, many of which are unable to pollenize themselves. Besides half a dozen hives will give a ver}^ welcome supply of honey for family use, while a surplus is very useful in adding to the farm- er's income. The best honey tree in the world is the basswooa. This tree bears cutting remarkably well, and can be kept, by persistent cutting, in the form of a round-headed shrub. I have them thirty years old and ten feet in hight and diameter. Now let a hedge of this sort be established, and then let rise out of it, twenty feet apart, shoots that shall WINDBREAKS, SHELTERS, ETC. 89 make blossoming trees. Yon will then have a shelter for your bees as well as honey-making food. But a grove or double row of basswoorl, where there is abundance of land, will prove exceedingly valuable, both as a windbreak and honey producer. This tree should be planted much more freely in our streets, and everywhere, as the great American shade tree. (2) Give to your pastures corners where the w^ind cannot penetrate. This, even where your land is not extensive, will be no loss, but by affording your animals comfort will increase the flow of milk as much as good pasturage. It is the misery of animals, both in the cold of winter and the heat of summer, that makes them less valuable as milk producers. A very convenient arrangement can be made by growl- ing vines — preferably grapevines — over a group of small growing trees, wild apples, or thorns, or Eng- lish elms, or any trees with tough wood. You get your crops of grapes, or your cowboys do, and your cows get their shelter. They will accept of it at all seasons, for it is a mistake that the cow does not appreciate the beautiful. 1 think I never saw a cow lie down with her back to the moon and to a pleasant outlook. You will probably be astonished to find how much the general humidity of your acres is increased as you increase your windbreaks. For the same reason grow grapes all over your houses and barns. Let them climb not on the clapboards, but by a series of wires running a few feet apart across the whole of the faces of the building. You will then staple your wire at convenient distances, and tie the grow- ing vines as they climb. Here once more you will 90 HEDGES, WINDBREAKS, SHELTERS, ETC. get immense crops of grapes; and you will gain greatly in the coolness of the barn and stables for your cattle, and of the house for its occupants. While the temperature is equalized and the soil of your land is increased in humidity, you will find that there is no gathering of dampness in your walls, provided you have followed the directions I have given, that is, of tying to wires instead of nailing to the boards. The windbreak and the brook — this is the com- bination that expresses the most of possible delight. The farmer too seldom utilizes his water supply, except to serve the barnyard and house. A wind- break of willows archinjTf over the brook is not onlv useful, but one of the most beautiful pictures that nature allows. You have only to procure good sticks of willow and insert them in the moist banks. A neighbor's willow grove serves as a grand entrance way to his mansion, but for me, being on the east- ward side of it, it serves as a windbreak. But if you have a brook you should at least utilize it in some way as a summer retreat. It offers a place for a wild grape or bittersweet shelter. Let it be as wild as possible. But if the brook runs through the open meadow or pasture, a double row of nut trees on the banks will do far more than furnish a summer shelter and a winter windbreak, it will make home doubly joyful for the young folk. Almost all of the nut trees, such as butternuts, hickory nuts, walnuts, chestnuts, associate pleasantly with water. Of vines capable of use in interweaving wind- ])reaks, the bittersweet is exceedingly fine. It is perfectly hardy, very tenacious, and hangs in fes- toons and loops of vine and berry. Combined with WINDBREAKS, SHELTERS, ETC QI Virginia creeper we get the gold and the crimson together. Among the really good grapes, capable of helping us in the way of making shelters, I know nothing to surpass the August Giant. This grape should be better known on the farm. It is the most rapid grower that I have found among nearly one hundred varieties. It will make canes twenty, thirty and even forty feet long in a single season, while the foliage is very large, rich and abundant. The leaves are like palmleaf fans. The fruit is also thoroughly good. The time of ripening is rather late in central New York, but, as a rule, it perfects itself by the first to the tenth of October. The Gaertner and the Her- bert are also very large-leaved varieties and of mag- nificent growth, while their fruit is of the highest quality. They will both need considerable care, because not absolutely hardy, nor self-pollenizing, while August Giant will take excellent care of itself. It will quickly cover an arbor or interlace your trees, and will not be easily torn down by wind. But in the consideration of this subject I can do nothing so well for you as to say, get into some wild section and study nature. See what beautiful things she can construct, and then go you and do likewise, or as near likewise as your opportunities afford. The most beautiful things in this world are in the forest openings and in the wild glens and in the forests. "Whether we look, or whether we listen. We hear life murmur, or see it glisten ; Every clod feels a stir of might, An instinct within it that reaches and towers, And, groping blindly above it for light. Climbs to a soul in grass and flowers." Pi w < O O O Q I— I 6 I— I WINDBREAKS, SHELTERS, ETC. 93 Planting for winter is too much overlooked — that is, planting our grounds in such a way that they will be cheerful and warmer to the eye. But it is one of the most important matters in the country to warm up the landscape during cheerless months. I have before spoken of the use of the red-bark dog- wood. The high-bush cranberry is also admirable, although as it gets older its tallest stalks are liable to get topheavy and split down. The barberry, in its several varieties, makes a charming plant for this purpose. It is a delightful winter bush. The Euonymus is a bush that for early winter cannot be surpassed. Its growth is irregular and its form uncertain. I cannot recommend either this or the high-bush cranberry, excepting as they are inter- spaced with other bushes, as good for either hedges or windbreaks. However, the man who studies nature will find that he can use all of this class of trees and shrubs for beauty and utility alike. One of my nooks, made up in part of hemlock hedges and in part of these warm winter shrubs, I call my Sunlight Catcher. It catches the full rays of the winter's suns, and has complete protection from the northern and western winds. It is often a delightful spot during TTovember and December, and in the spring there are March days when it is an invigorating retreat. I can find a few spears of grass or a dandelion blossom almost in midwinter, when a single one is worth more than an acre of them in June. The hedge itself is eight feet high, curved completely around toward the northwest, while to the south at a distance of twenty-five feet is another windbreak. But now note the need of 94 HEDGES^ WINDBREAKS, SHELTERS, ETC. making things match well together. In here stands a great barberry bush, that all winter is so red that you can warm your fingers by it. Here come the earliest violets, like finger-tips of Spring thrust through the snow. While planting windbreaks we have of course to consult our neighbors' wishes and tastes, if they are near enough to be affected by what we propose. It is morally illegal to cut off the pleasures of a neigh- bor by a high hedge, a row of trees or a fence. With neighborly good will we can generally manage not to infringe on other's tastes or desires. I trust we shall see before long co-operation and town systems of establishing defenses against the wind. No per- son should be privileged to destroy that which affects his neighbor's crops and comforts as well as his own. If street trees should be under the protection of the law, so also should windbreaks and strips of forest land. Towns should assume the right in very exposed points to plant trees at public expense on private property. Co-operative tree planting, T think, may yet do a great deal for the general good of horticulture. I would especially recommend the establishment of rural societies, whose object it shall be to set out trees for the public welfare, and to pro- tect others in which the public has a general interest. Such societies will have much also to do in the way of investigating the causes of tree diseases, and their remedies. In central New York such a society has existed at Clinton for forty-five years, and it has fos- tered rural improvement in every direction. The meetings are held monthly, and the range of discus- sion covers every topic pertaining to the welfare of WINDBREAKS, SHELTERS, ETC. 95 rural homes. Clinton, Conn., has perhaps the parent society of this sort. Street trees are planted hy these associations; but better yet is the advice given to private owners, in the way of selecting- trees and plants for their lawns and hedges. SECTION II BIRD CULTURE. So very important at the present time is the cultivation of birds in the interest of horticulture and agriculture that I make a separate section of the discussion. Hedges and windbreaks may serve a very important end, both in furnishing shelter and in furnishing food for these feathered friends of ours. We are learning that success in agriculture depends much upon their alliance. Among the more impor- tant in this section are the catbirds, robins, song- sparrows and their cousins, wdth the goldfinches and other seed eaters. The first of these destroy vast quantities of insects, while the latter destroy the seeds of noxious weeds. The 1:)enefit that accrues to us is so great that we can hardly succeed in some branches of horticulture without them. Apart from the benefit which they do us in the w^ay of destroying our foes, we must count m the advantage to us from making home delightful with their songs. Man cannot live by 1)read alone — that is, he cannot live in a manly way. I will go so far as to say there is no other object in hedge planting and the growing of windbreaks more important than that of bird protec- tion and bird fostering. The destruction .of ou;- feathered friends is but one degree worse than their neglect. m W o Q W O H < >^ W D m CO o WINDBREAKS, SHELTERS, ETC. 97 It is winter as I write these words. The snow- covers the ground and is piled deep in every direc- tion. But as I look out of my window I see pine grosbeaks on my barberry bushes and high-bush cranberries ; and there are dozens of chickadees, nut- hatches and woodpeckers working at bones which my children have tied to the trees near the doors. These birds add much to the good cheer of life, and to feed them inculcates the very noblest sentiment of sympathy with God and God's world of life. I am sure that no girl brought up in this manner would ever wear a dead bird on her hat, or even the wing of one. I am farther sure that my children will appre- ciate better the relations of things ; love free nature better, and be students of that horticulture which includes all life. I should indeed be sorry if they looked upon horticulture as covering only the grow- ing of corn and fruit — all things which cannot sing and cannot express gratitude. The end of land cul- ture is noble men, not merely potatoes and parsnips. Put these things together, and you will see that you have not planted your hedges and made beauty and comfort for yourself alone, but for all that is animate. The birds must be fed ; this is our first duty and relation to them, — to make our places just as fully theirs as our owm. But our policy is also to feed them at the least possible cost to ourselves. A Tar- tarian honeysuckle hedge or windbreak of five rods' leno-th will feed all the robins and catbirds that will come to any household, and will do it just when it is desirable to attract them away from the raspberry gardens and from the blackberries. The crop of red 7 98 HEDGES, WINDBREAKS, SHELTERS, ETC. berries on these bushes is enormous, and while they are to us bitter and worthless, they seem to be pecu- liarly grateful to the fruit-eating birds. Perhaps next in importance is a row of mountain ash trees S^vee.^ FIG. 14. GROUND PLAN OF COUNTRY PLACE, SHELTERED BY NORWAY SPRUCE. grown as a windbreak. If you prefer, you may com- bine the two bv insertinsr a mountain ash at every twenty or thirty feet in your honeysuckle hedge. This mountain ash tree grows to a hight of about WINDBREAKS^ SHELTERS^ ETC. 99 twenty-five or thirty feet. A single fully-grown tree will feed flocks of birds from early August until late in winter. All winter through, birds of passage will drop down to a breakfast or a dinner. This en- livens your house besides making it a bird paradise. I should never establish a home without a liberal plant- ing of the mountain ash ; and to make them doubb/ useful, I would not only have them singly near my house, but growing as a windbreak at some distance. The twigs are set very thick and intertwined, so that they constitute a very excellent shield against the wind at all seasons. Another remarkably fine bush, both for its beauty and for the food which it affords the birds, I have before specified as the high-bush cranberry. If it were not for the liability of this bush to become sprawling with age, it would be ad- mirable for a tall hedge or low windbreak. The ten- dency can be counteracted by running a couple of lines of strong wire, with an occasional loop, about the heavier stalks. The flowers are inconspicuous, but the berries, which begin to color in July a bright yellow, hang in most prolific bunches of great beauty. In August these have become deepened in color to a dark, rich crimson. The birds rarely feed on these berries before winter, that is, if there be an abun- dance of the mountain ash. But in midwinter, cedar birds, stray robins and pine grosbeaks get from them many a hearty meal. The magnificent coloring and the hearty good nature of the pine grosbeak makes it a remarkably welcome bird. It is the winter robin. How far we can modify the migratory habits of birds by giving shelter and food, I do not dare to say, although some ornithologists insist that they do LVtt lOO HEDGES^ WINDBREAKS^ SHELTERS, ETC. not go South on account of the cHmate; but purely on account of the insufficiency of food at the North during the winter months. I am sure that we can do very much to retain our visitors through a longer season, and make them feel that this is not a mere summer home. I have noted the catbird catching liies and eating grapes about October first, indicating a shortage of the food which he prefers. But my pet bird (I have six catbirds' nests in my bushes and hedges, all of them members of my family) always sings to me the day before going away, and that is about the twenty-eighth of September. These glo- rious musicians, the mocking-birds of the North, do not sing at all as a rule after about August first, but this one, that nests every year near my library bal- cony and considers himself a little the most at home with us, hunts me up the day before leaving, peeps in at the window and sings a long and tender farewell. I do not think he needs to go away because food is cut off, or because of bad weather. It may be that he knows something that he likes is just then getting ripe down South, and he proposes to make it a visit. However, I am sure we can make these beautiful and useful friends feel at home with us by giving them acceptable nesting places and food. This one bird, of all others, most desirable as a singer and friend, will not come to us or near to our homes unless we furnish coverts for hiding, such as he will find in hedges and windbreaks. After you have once made the catbirds feel at home with you, so that they pour out their music without fear or restraint, you will never be willing to pass a summer without them. The berry grower is very likely to disagree with o u < M O w o d ft. 102 HEDGES, WINDBREAKS, SHELTERS, ETC. me, at first thought, with reference to the neighbor- hood of fruit-eaters. Bear this in mind, that if you plant a very few bushes of berries or a single cherry tree you are likely to find that you have only a supply for either the birds or yourself, and the birds will find out the same thing. As a consequence you will probably go without cherries and berries, and the birds will take them. The better plan is to count the birds into the family, and plant for both. I do not easily forget a father who, many years ago, I detected grafting the wild cherry trees with sweeter sorts, along the edge of the woods, in order that, as he said, "the birds might have all they wanted." That father was not only wise as a bird friend, but wise as a horticulturist. SECTION III THE WOMAN^S CORNER. Of course every woman is interested in all measures to beautify home and make it more valu- able, but there are certain feminine needs not quite covered in the general plan of horticultural work. For instance, woman is specifically the sewer of rents and the artist of the needle. As such she should have ( I ) a sewing balcony. Let me describe one. It is in the northeast corner of the house over a veranda. The building to south and west cuts ofi^ the afternoon sun. There is a grapevine that climbs up the north side of the veranda below, then goes up over a strong trellis that reaches over the balcony. It is a wild grape and a rampant grower, and it has made a complete awning overhead. It bears profit- ably a good jelly grape. The floor of the balcon}' WINDBREAKS, SHELTERS, ETC. IO3 is made waterproof. Opening upon it is a double door from the wife's chamber. It is called in house- hold terms, "My sewing balcony." I cannot posi- tively say that she does much sewing there ; but I do know that it is a most delightful spot of a summer afternoon, where one might sew if so inclined, and with great comfort. A hammock swings across one corner, admiral^ly fixed for an afternoon siesta. I will not say that the hammock and the book do not frequently displace the needle. The outlook is over lawns of flowers and trees, over hedges and groves, down the most beautiful of valleys, and overlooking hills that hold villages in their bosoms. Woman has a right to such retreats, sheltered from the sun, and peculiarly her own. She does the hardest task— the fretting, nerve-wearing work. (2) Woman should have a living arbor for a little tea partv of half a dozen neighbors. Let me also describe one of these. A circle of arbor-vitge, fifteen or twenty feet in diameter, and grown together overhead. Inside, the branches are cut out, up to a hight of fifteen feet. The only entrance is where you pull aside the branches. Inside you find a little table, a small solid, plain writing-desk, and half a dozen hardwood chairs that will endure the rain. A hammock swings on one side, which can be stretched across when it is desired. This shelter is adjacent to a fine croquet ground, and, if you please, you may invite your friends to a game, alternated with rest. Here a wife may fix a charming enclosure for a baby, giving him plenty of freedom as well as protection from the sun, or she may have her friends for a tea party. I have known a club of ladies meeting m 104 HEDGES^ WINDBREAKS^ SHELTERS, ETC. such a close retreat, and heartily enjoying the read- ing of their papers. (3) Woman should have a cozy nook for some outdoor household work, such as washing and hang- ing clothes to dry. This is the meanest desecration of a beautiful lawn — a lot of shirts and socks and "sich like" on exhibition once every week. Some of these are not yet mended, and they are not attrac- tive, at the best. A delicate housewife hates to pro- claim to all the world the condition of the family wardrobe. Why should not every beautiful home have a retreat and shelter, behind a windbreak, or high hedge, where famil}^ affairs of this sort may be kept private. It is not a tax on a householder to have a cistern in such a nook where the water can be easily drawn, and where the clothes may be hung out to dry without much walking or carrying. There is also the safety of the clothes to be looked after, and that is secured by such a retired spot. At any rate, let our pleasant country homes get rid of the display of their weekly cleansing. (4) Woman needs her particular flower nook, where she can work a little, rest a little, think a little, and sleep in a hammock if she likes. I assure you I shall feel that my book has done some good if I discover hereafter that I have induced some of our housekeepers to take an afternoon sleep of a single hour. Especially should farmers and farmers' wives have a rest corner, shut out of sight of the ordinary work of house and field, so that there will be sugges- tions of rest and peace, and none at all of toil. They will be able to do more in the long run by not running life's machinery down in great speed. CHAPTER VI. NEGLECTED BEAUTY. I should like to write a chapter on the neglected beautiful things that surround us, a sort of eye- opener to help folk see what is right before their faces. I know a man — not cut from a fashion plate ^ — who sees none of the things that most people see, an impracticable fellow ; but he sees everything that we do not see. If you will visit him, you will findi his barn is almost embowered with grapevines and bittersweet and Virginia creeper. He has cut holes for his team to drive through. "Pretty, ain't it," he says, "and it's sort o' comfortin' to see the red, and then I get lots of grapes for nothin'. The vines break the wind, and some days it's mighty nice to get inside of them. It's most like having two roofs on your barn, and growin' a crop between them. ( Besides the birds like it. There's a dozen nests of them up there — all snug as you please. Did you ever notice the two kinds of bittersweet ? This kind is the male and don't bear any seed. That clematis over there is female. See what splendid bunches of seed pods it has, like balls of flaxen hair." So he rattles on, full of natural enthusiasm, and I find he is quite a student as well as observer. In his shon he has a collection of esthetic birds' nests, the finest I ever saw or heard of. He has collected all the springs on his upper lot, and down below has scooped I06 HEDGES^ WINDBREAKS, SHELTERS, ETC. "Dec I Aoto vx s Tvcei a-ndt Vx'^e-' VY\-»\