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OSIER (through Fr. from See also: common See also: term under which are included the various See also: species, varieties and hybrids of the genus Salix, used in the manufacture of baskets
.
The chief species in cultivation are: Salix viminalis (the common osier) and S. triandra, S. amygdalina, S. purpurea and S. fragilis, which
botanically are willows and not osiers
.
The first named with some See also: forty of its varieties, formed until See also: recent times the See also: staple See also: basket-making material in See also: England
.
It is an abundant cropper, sometimes attaining on low-lying soils 13 ft. in height
.
Full-topped and smooth, it is by reason of its pithy nature mainly cultivated for coarse See also: work and is generally used as See also: brown stuff
.
Some harder varieties, known as
See also: stone osiers and raised on drier upland soils, are peeled and used for
See also: fine work
.
S. fragilis, with some See also: half-score varieties, is almost exclusively used by market gardeners for bunching greens, turnips and other produce
.
Owing to the increased demand for finer work much See also: attention has been given (see BASKET) in recent years to the cultivation of the more ligneous and tougher species, S. triandra, S. purpurea and S. amygdalina with their many varieties and hybrids
.
It is commonly supposed that osiers or willows will prove remunerative and flourish with little attention on any poor, wet, marshy See also: soil
.
This is, however, not the See also: case
.
No crop responds more readily to careful husbandry and skilful cultivation
.
For the successful raising of the finer sorts of willows See also: good, well-drained, loamy upland soil is desirable, which before planting should be deeply trenched and cleared of weeds
.
J . A . Krabe of Prummern near Aachen, the most scientific and See also: practical of See also: German cultivators, the results of whose experiments have been published in his admirable Lehrbuch der rationellen Weidenkultur (See also: Aix-la-Chapelle, 1886, et seq.) went so far as to assert that willows prefer a dry to a wet soil
.
T
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See also: Selby of Otford, Kent, in a report dated the 18th of See also: November 'Soo (see Jour
.
See also: Soc
.
Arts, 18or, xix., 75) stated that all kinds of willows invariably throve best on the driest spots of some wet See also: land planted by him
.
Krabe found that in addition to loam, willows did well on dry ferrugineous, sandy ground with a good top soil of about 6 in. in See also: depth; on poor loamy See also: clay, and even on peaty moors
.
At any See also: time, from See also: late winter to early spring, the ground may be planted with " sets," i.e. cuttings of about 9 to 16 in. in length, taken from clean, well-ripened rods
.
These are firmly set to within 3 to 6 in. of the top in rows, 16 to 20 in. apart and spaced at intervals of 8 to 12 in
.
Yearling sets are largely planted, but the experiments of Krabe tend to prove, and the practice of the best Midland and West of England growers confirms, the See also: superior productiveness of sets cut from two yearling rods
.
W
.
P . Ellmore of See also: Leicester, the most experienced and enterprising of Midland cultivators, preferred to plant his sets in squares, 18 to 20 in. apart, in See also: order to admit of the use of the See also: horse See also: hoe in both directions and a freer See also: play of See also: sun and air
.
See also: Great care should be exercised in planting lest the bark be fractured, loosened or removed from the See also: wood
.
The ground should be kept See also: free of weeds by frequent hoeing and, if not subject to periodical alluvial floods, manured yearly
.
The coarser S. viminalis may be raised on See also: lowland soil if not See also: water-logged or marshy, but the same attention to trenching and weeding Is imperative
.
Approved varieties of willows cost from 5s. to 17s
.
6d. per moo sets
.
The more valuable kinds are known as: New kind, Black mauls, Spaniards, Glibskins, Long-bud, Long-skin, See also: Lancashire red-bud, French, Italians, Pomeranians and Councillors and scores of other See also: local names
.
A hybrid of S. viminalis and S. triandra, known as Black-top and introduced by Ellmore has been found to produce the heaviest crops on the best See also: Leicestershire grounds
.
Cutting and binding take place in early winter after the fall of the leaf, the crop being known as See also: green whole stuff
.
The coarser kinds are sorted, cured (dried in the sun and See also: wind) and stacked ready for market
.
These are known as brown rods
.
The finer kinds, after the more shrubby or See also: ill-grown rods, termed Ragged, have been rejected, are peeled or buffed
.
Two methods of stripping are chiefly practised: from the heads (sets) and from the pit
.
By the former method the rods are See also: left on the ground until spring advances, when a rapid growth of the See also: cork cambium begins
.
They are then cut See also: direct from the See also: head and the bark is easily removed by See also: drawing the rods through a bifurcated See also: hand-See also: brake of smooth, well-rounded See also: steel, framed in wood
.
Improved brakes worked by a treadle See also: strip two rods at a time
.
For the smaller sizes, See also: rubber brakes are sometimes used and, for the very smallest, the fingers either See also: bare or protected by See also: linen bands
.
This method ensures a clean-butted unfractured See also: rod, but unless great See also: judgment is exercised in selecting the proper time for cutting, the rods will remain See also: double-skinned and the head may bleed
.
By the " pit " See also: process the green rods are stood upright in shallow pits of water at a depth of about 6 to 9 in. until the See also: sap rises and growth begins, when they are ready for the brake
.
The defects of this method are that the tops are liable to split in the brake and the butts to remain foul
.
A third, known as the " See also: pie " See also: system enables the grower to See also: bridge over the See also: interval, and to keep his hands employed, between the end of the " head " and the
beginning of the " pit " strippings
.
The willows are cut at the first indication of the sap rising and " couched " in rotten peelings and soil at a slight angle, the butts being on the ground, which should be strewn with See also: damp See also: straw from a manure heap
.
The tops are covered lightly with rotted peelings and by periodical application of water, See also: fermentation is induced at the bottom, heat is engendered, the leaves force their way through the covering and peeling may begin
.
Peeling is chiefly done by See also: women and lasts from early May to the See also: middle of See also: July
.
After stripping, the rods are bleached in the sun and stored for sale as See also: White
.
If the rods are to be buffed they are immersed in large tanks of boiling water from 4 to 6
See also: hours
.
They are then allowed to cool and mellow, are stripped and carefully dried in sun and air and remain dyed a See also: rich tawny brown or See also: buff colour
.
Brown rods may also be buffed by sinking them in cold water which is heated to boiling point, and maintained at that temperature for the requisite See also: period
.
Sticks (two or three yearling osiers) are also grown for whitening and buffing: the less ligneous varieties of S. viminalis are best adapted for this purpose
.
Osiers or willows when tied for market vary locally in girth
.
In the west of England, the See also: Thames valley, See also: Cambridgeshire and See also: Norfolk a " See also: bolt " of green stuff See also: measures 42 to 45 in. in circumference at Io in. from the See also: butt; a bolt of white or brown, 40 in
.
In the See also: northern and midland counties the stuff is invariably sold by See also: weight
.
On the continent of See also: Europe osiers or willows are bunched in sizes of one metre in girth at the butts and (except in Belgium) are also sold by weight
.
The cost of planting an See also: acre of fine willows varies greatly; it was estimated by R
.
L. and R
.
Cotterell of Ruscombe, Berks, as follows: trenching and cleaning ground, £12; sets, 20,000 at 5s. per See also: I000, £5; planting and levelling £I
.
Hoeing, first See also: year, £2; succeeding years about £3, 15s. per annum
.
After 12 to 15 years the heads become ' tired," and should be grubbed up
.
The first year's crop, known as the " See also: maiden " crop, is of small value but should be cut and the ensuing years of maturity will yield crops of about 130 bolts, green, per acre, worth £9, 15s
.
If whitened, the loss in bulk and in rejection being two-thirds, this would produce about 44 bolts, which at £3o per load of 8o bolts, the appreciated market value of 1907, would be worth £16, Ios
.
The cost of whitening is Is
.
6d. per bolt, but against this the value of the rejected Ragged, sold as Brown, should be set off
.
In years of abundant crops and See also: short demand, prices have fallen to £24 per load
.
The cost of planting and the outlay for manuring and weeding during the years of maturity of the crop, are higher in the Midlands and the yield was estimated by Ellmore at 6 to to tons per acre, green, worth from £3, Ios. to £6, per ton
.
White rods, costing from £3, to £3, 7s
.
6d. per ton for extra labour, will realize from £22 to £24 per ton
.
Buff rods costing (with See also: coal at Ios. per ton) £5 per ton extra, will realize from £22 to £32 per ton
.
From 24 to 3 tons of green are required to produce one ton white or buff . Wm . Scaling of Notts estimated the entire cost of an osier See also: plantation at £33, 125. per acre for the first year and the outlay for the next two years at £7, 5s. and £6, 15s. respectively
.
The maiden crop he valued at £8, 125. and the second and third years' crop at £17 and £22
.
A table given by Krabe, based on results obtained for 12 plantations amounting to 20 hectares (5o See also: English acres) during 20 years showed the value of produce per Prussian acre (.2553 of an hectare) to be in the 1st year, £3, 6s
.
In the 2nd year the value of the produce was £8, t9s; in the 3rd year, £9, t5s.; in the 4th year, £8, Ios.; in the 5th year, £8, Is.; in the 6th year, £7, 6s.; in the 7th year, £5, 19s
.
; in the 8th year, £8, 9s.; in the 9th year, £5, 5s.; in the loth year, £6, Ios
.
; in the i nth year, £5, Its.; in the 12th year, £4; in the 13th year, £6, is.; in the 14th year,
£2, 9S.; in the 15th year, £2, 8s.; in the 16th year, £1, 18s.; in the 17th year, See also: f2, 7s.; in the 18th year, £2, 2S.; in the 19th year,
£3, t.3s.; and in the loth year, £1, Its
.
The cultivation of osiers is attended with many disturbing causes—winter floods, spring frosts, ground vermin and See also: insect pests of various kinds, sometimes working great havoc to the crop
.
The best comprehensive work on the subject is that by Krabe, which has passed through several See also: editions
.
A pamphlet on the cultivation of osiers in the Fen districts is issued in England by the See also: Board of See also: Agriculture
.
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