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The Book of Alfalfa: History, Cultivation and Merits / Its Uses as a Forage and Fertilizer cover

The Book of Alfalfa: History, Cultivation and Merits / Its Uses as a Forage and Fertilizer

Chapter 155: EFFECT ON LAND VALUES
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About This Book

The volume surveys alfalfa’s history, botanical features, varieties, and growth habits. It provides practical instructions on seed selection, soil preparation, seeding, cultivation, harvesting, and storage. It compares yields with other crops and addresses enemies, diseases, and common difficulties in establishment and maintenance. It examines alfalfa’s uses as a forage and soil renovator, detailing its value and management for beef, dairy, swine, horses, sheep, poultry, and bees, including feeding, pasturing, and soiling methods. It also treats crop rotation, nitrogen-fixing properties, commercial aspects, urban planting, regional adaptability, and concludes with practical notes and illustrated state-by-state accounts.

CHAPTER XXII.
Alfalfa as a Commercial Factor

EFFECT ON LAND VALUES

Only a few years ago alfalfa hay was not named in the market reports. Now it is conspicuous in the lists of hays. Then there were thousands of sandy acres in Kansas and Nebraska being held at from $2 to $5 per acre that now, seeded to alfalfa, are selling at from $30 to $75 per acre. Then, cultivated farms in those districts could be rented for $1 per acre; now, seeded one-half to alfalfa, they rent for $3 to $5 and more per acre. In the South cotton lands rent for $5, and alfalfa lands at $15 per acre. Land in the Yellowstone valley was worth, wild, $1.50 per acre; now, under irrigation and seeded half to alfalfa and half to wheat it commands $100 per acre. A few years ago labor commanded in those districts that now raise alfalfa about $1 a day; since then, during alfalfa harvest, hundreds of men have been imported there and paid $2 or $2.50 per day. Then farmers were poor and trade was dull; now, a farmer who owns eighty acres well set in alfalfa, harvests about 300 tons of hay worth from $5 to $12 per ton and has the proceeds available for added comforts, improvements and luxuries.

A few years ago it was thought that America was approaching a crisis in the matter of beef and pork and mutton production because of the rapid diminishing of the free public ranges by the forest reserves, irrigation projects, and the like. It was insisted that the farmers could not nearly sustain the meat supply. Possibly they cannot, but alfalfa is doing wonders in helping to solve the problem of cheap meat production. Millions of sheep and thousands of cattle are being fattened annually on the alfalfa of California, Montana, Colorado, Kansas and Nebraska, and in some portions where a few years ago the sandy prairies gave but a scant subsistence to scrawny range cattle.

ENHANCES DAIRY INTERESTS

In parts of the East since the introduction of alfalfa, the number of dairy cows in many townships has trebled and the dairy product more than quadrupled. When two acres of alfalfa will carry ten dairy cows through a summer, the day and opportunity of the small dairyman are certainly at hand. When, as is the case, alfalfa increases the rental and selling value and consequently the taxable value of land; when it increases the demand for and price of labor; when it increases the fertility of the land for other crops that may follow; when it brings enlarged profits to the entire stock-raising and stock-fattening interests, and puts more money in circulation, it is inevitably to be considered a commercial factor.