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<h2> XIV. Back from the Land </h2>
<p>I have just come back now with the closing in of autumn—to the city.
I have hung up my hoe in my study; my spade is put away behind the piano.
I have with me seven pounds of Paris Green that I had over. Anybody who
wants it may have it. I didn't like to bury it for fear of its poisoning
the ground. I didn't like to throw it away for fear of its destroying
cattle. I was afraid to leave it in my summer place for fear that it might
poison the tramps who generally break in in November. I have it with me
now. I move it from room to room, as I hate to turn my back upon it.
Anybody who wants it, I repeat, can have it.</p>
<p>I should like also to give away, either to the Red Cross or to anything
else, ten packets of radish seed (the early curled variety, I think),
fifteen packets of cucumber seed (the long succulent variety, I believe it
says), and twenty packets of onion seed (the Yellow Danvers,
distinguished, I understand, for its edible flavour and its nutritious
properties). It is not likely that I shall ever, on this side of the
grave, plant onion seed again. All these things I have with me. My
vegetables are to come after me by freight. They are booked from Simcoe
County to Montreal; at present they are, I believe, passing through
Schenectady. But they will arrive later all right. They were seen going
through Detroit last week, moving west. It is the first time that I ever
sent anything by freight anywhere. I never understood before the wonderful
organization of the railroads. But they tell me that there is a bad
congestion of freight down South this month. If my vegetables get tangled
up in that there is no telling when they will arrive.</p>
<p>In other words, I am one of the legion of men—quiet, determined,
resolute men—who went out last spring to plant the land, and who are
now back.</p>
<p>With me—and I am sure that I speak for all the others as well—it
was not a question of mere pleasure; it was no love of gardening for its
own sake that inspired us. It was a plain national duty. What we said to
ourselves was: "This war has got to stop. The men in the trenches thus far
have failed to stop it. Now let <i>us</i> try. The whole thing," we
argued, "is a plain matter of food production."</p>
<p>"If we raise enough food the Germans are bound to starve. Very good. Let
us kill them."</p>
<p>I suppose there was never a more grimly determined set of men went out
from the cities than those who went out last May, as I did, to conquer the
food problem. I don't mean to say that each and every one of us actually
left the city. But we all "went forth" in the metaphorical sense. Some of
the men cultivated back gardens; others took vacant lots; some went out
into the suburbs; and others, like myself, went right out into the
country.</p>
<p>We are now back. Each of us has with him his Paris Green, his hoe and the
rest of his radish seed.</p>
<p>The time has, therefore, come for a plain, clear statement of our
experience. We have, as everybody knows, failed. We have been beaten hack
all along the line. Our potatoes are buried in a jungle of autumn
burdocks. Our radishes stand seven feet high, uneatable. Our tomatoes,
when last seen, were greener than they were at the beginning of August,
and getting greener every week. Our celery looked as delicate as a
maidenhair fern. Our Indian corn was nine feet high with a tall feathery
spike on top of that, but no sign of anything eatable about it from top to
bottom.</p>
<p>I look back with a sigh of regret at those bright, early days in April
when we were all buying hoes, and talking soil and waiting for the snow to
be off the ground. The street cars, as we went up and down to our offices,
were a busy babel of garden talk. There was a sort of farmer-like
geniality in the air. One spoke freely to strangers. Every man with a hoe
was a friend. Men chewed straws in their offices, and kept looking out of
windows to pretend to themselves that they were afraid it might blow up
rain. "Got your tomatoes in?" one man would ask another as they went up in
the elevator. "Yes, I got mine in yesterday," the other would answer, "But
I'm just a little afraid that this east wind may blow up a little frost.
What we need now is growing weather." And the two men would drift off
together from the elevator door along the corridor, their heads together
in friendly colloquy.</p>
<p>I have always regarded a lawyer as a man without a soul. There is one who
lives next door to me to whom I have not spoken in five years. Yet when I
saw him one day last spring heading for the suburbs in a pair of old
trousers with a hoe in one hand and a box of celery plants in the other I
felt that I loved the man. I used to think that stock-brokers were mere
sordid calculating machines. Now that I have seen whole firms of them busy
at the hoe, wearing old trousers that reached to their armpits and were
tied about the waist with a polka dot necktie, I know that they are men. I
know that there are warm hearts beating behind those trousers.</p>
<p>Old trousers, I say. Where on earth did they all come from in such a
sudden fashion last spring? Everybody had them. Who would suspect that a
man drawing a salary of ten thousand a year was keeping in reserve a pair
of pepper-and-salt breeches, four sizes too large for him, just in case a
war should break out against Germany! Talk of German mobilization! I doubt
whether the organizing power was all on their side after all. At any rate
it is estimated that fifty thousand pairs of old trousers were mobilized
in Montreal in one week.</p>
<p>But perhaps it was not a case of mobilization, or deliberate preparedness.
It was rather an illustration of the primitive instinct that is in all of
us and that will out in "war time." Any man worth the name would wear old
breeches all the time if the world would let him. Any man will wind a
polka dot tie round his waist in preference to wearing patent braces. The
makers of the ties know this. That is why they make the tie four feet
long. And in the same way if any manufacturer of hats will put on the
market an old fedora, with a limp rim and a mark where the ribbon used to
be but is not—a hat guaranteed to be six years old, well weathered,
well rained on, and certified to have been walked over by a herd of cattle—that
man will make and deserve a fortune.</p>
<p>These at least were the fashions of last May. Alas, where are they now?
The men that wore them have relapsed again into tailor-made tweeds. They
have put on hard new hats. They are shining their boots again. They are
shaving again, not merely on Saturday night, but every day. They are
sinking back into civilization.</p>
<p>Yet those were bright times and I cannot forbear to linger on them. Nor
the least pleasant feature was our rediscovery of the morning. My
neighbour on the right was always up at five. My neighbour on the left was
out and about by four. With the earliest light of day, little columns of
smoke rose along our street from the kitchen ranges where our wives were
making coffee for us before the servants got up. By six o'clock the street
was alive and busy with friendly salutations. The milkman seemed a late
comer, a poor, sluggish fellow who failed to appreciate the early hours of
the day. A man, we found, might live through quite a little Iliad of
adventure before going to his nine o'clock office.</p>
<p>"How will you possibly get time to put in a garden?" I asked of one of my
neighbours during this glad period of early spring before I left for the
country. "Time!" he exclaimed. "Why, my dear fellow, I don't have to be
down at the warehouse till eight-thirty."</p>
<p>Later in the summer I saw the wreck of his garden, choked with weeds.
"Your garden," I said, "is in poor shape." "Garden!" he said indignantly.
"How on earth can I find time for a garden? Do you realize that I have to
be down at the warehouse at eight-thirty?"</p>
<p>When I look back to our bright beginnings our failure seems hard indeed to
understand. It is only when I survey the whole garden movement in
melancholy retrospect that I am able to see some of the reasons for it.</p>
<p>The principal one, I think, is the question of the season. It appears that
the right time to begin gardening is last year. For many things it is well
to begin the year before last. For good results one must begin even
sooner. Here, for example, are the directions, as I interpret them, for
growing asparagus. Having secured a suitable piece of ground, preferably a
deep friable loam rich in nitrogen, go out three years ago and plough or
dig deeply. Remain a year inactive, thinking. Two years ago pulverize the
soil thoroughly. Wait a year. As soon as last year comes set out the young
shoots. Then spend a quiet winter doing nothing. The asparagus will then
be ready to work at <i>this</i> year.</p>
<p>This is the rock on which we were wrecked. Few of us were men of
sufficient means to spend several years in quiet thought waiting to begin
gardening. Yet that is, it seems, the only way to begin. Asparagus demands
a preparation of four years. To fit oneself to grow strawberries requires
three years. Even for such humble things as peas, beans, and lettuce the
instructions inevitably read, "plough the soil deeply in the preceeding
autumn." This sets up a dilemma. <i>Which</i> is the preceeding autumn? If
a man begins gardening in the spring he is too late for last autumn and
too early for this. On the other hand if he begins in the autumn he is
again too late; he has missed this summer's crop. It is, therefore,
ridiculous to begin in the autumn and impossible to begin in the spring.</p>
<p>This was our first difficulty. But the second arose from the question of
the soil itself. All the books and instructions insist that the selection
of the soil is the most important part of gardening. No doubt it is. But,
if a man has already selected his own backyard before he opens the book,
what remedy is there? All the books lay stress on the need of "a deep,
friable loam full of nitrogen." This I have never seen. My own plot of
land I found on examination to contain nothing but earth. I could see no
trace of nitrogen. I do not deny the existence of loam. There may be such
a thing. But I am admitting now in all humility of mind that I don't know
what loam is. Last spring my fellow gardeners and I all talked freely of
the desirability of "a loam." My own opinion is that none of them had any
clearer ideas about it than I had. Speaking from experience, I should say
that the only soils are earth, mud and dirt. There are no others.</p>
<p>But I leave out the soil. In any case we were mostly forced to disregard
it. Perhaps a more fruitful source of failure even than the lack of loam
was the attempt to apply calculation and mathematics to gardening. Thus,
if one cabbage will grow in one square foot of ground, how many cabbages
will grow in ten square feet of ground? Ten? Not at all. The answer is <i>one</i>.
You will find as a matter of practical experience that however many
cabbages you plant in a garden plot there will be only <i>one</i> that
will really grow. This you will presently come to speak of as <i>the </i>cabbage.
Beside it all the others (till the caterpillars finally finish their
existence) will look but poor, lean things. But <i>the</i> cabbage will be
a source of pride and an object of display to visitors; in fact it would
ultimately have grown to be a <i>real</i> cabbage, such as you buy for ten
cents at any market, were it not that you inevitably cut it and eat it
when it is still only half-grown.</p>
<p>This always happens to the one cabbage that is of decent size, and to the
one tomato that shows signs of turning red (it is really a feeble
green-pink), and to the only melon that might have lived to ripen. They
get eaten. No one but a practised professional gardener can live and sleep
beside a melon three-quarters ripe and a cabbage two-thirds grown without
going out and tearing it off the stem.</p>
<p>Even at that it is not a bad plan to eat the stuff while you can. The most
peculiar thing about gardening is that all of a sudden everything is too
old to eat. Radishes change over night from delicate young shoots not
large enough to put on the table into huge plants seven feet high with a
root like an Irish shillelagh. If you take your eyes off a lettuce bed for
a week the lettuces, not ready to eat when you last looked at them, have
changed into a tall jungle of hollyhocks. Green peas are only really green
for about two hours. Before that they are young peas; after that they are
old peas. Cucumbers are the worst case of all. They change overnight, from
delicate little bulbs obviously too slight and dainty to pick, to old
cases of yellow leather filled with seeds.</p>
<p>If I were ever to garden again, a thing which is out of the bounds of
possibility, I should wait until a certain day and hour when all the
plants were ripe, and then go out with a gun and shoot them all dead, so
that they could grow no more.</p>
<p>But calculation, I repeat, is the bane of gardening. I knew, among our
group of food producers, a party of young engineers, college men, who took
an empty farm north of the city as the scene of their summer operations.
They took their coats off and applied college methods. They ran out,
first, a base line AB, and measured off from it lateral spurs MN, OP, QR,
and so on. From these they took side angles with a theodolite so as to get
the edges of each of the separate plots of their land absolutely correct.
I saw them working at it all through one Saturday afternoon in May. They
talked as they did it of the peculiar ignorance of the so-called practical
farmer. He never—so they agreed—uses his head. He never—I
think I have their phrase correct—stops to think. In laying out his
ground for use, it never occurs to him to try to get the maximum result
from a given space. If a farmer would only realize that the contents of a
circle represent the maximum of space enclosable in a given perimeter, and
that a circle is merely a function of its own radius, what a lot of time
he would save.</p>
<p>These young men that I speak of laid out their field engineer-fashion with
little white posts at even distances. They made a blueprint of the whole
thing as they planted it. Every corner of it was charted out. The yield
was calculated to a nicety. They had allowed for the fact that some of the
stuff might fail to grow by introducing what they called "a coefficient of
error." By means of this and by reducing the variation of autumn prices to
a mathematical curve, those men not only knew already in the middle of May
the exact yield of their farm to within half a bushel (they allowed, they
said, a variation of half a bushel per fifty acres), but they knew
beforehand within a few cents the market value that they would receive.
The figures, as I remember them, were simply amazing. It seemed incredible
that fifty acres could produce so much. Yet there were the plain facts in
front of one, calculated out. The thing amounted practically to a
revolution in farming. At least it ought to have. And it would have if
those young men had come again to hoe their field. But it turned out, most
unfortunately, that they were busy. To their great regret they were too
busy to come. They had been working under a free-and-easy arrangement.
Each man was to give what time he could every Saturday. It was left to
every man's honour to do what he could. There was no compulsion. Each man
trusted the others to be there. In fact the thing was not only an
experiment in food production, it was also a new departure in social
co-operation. The first Saturday that those young men worked there were,
so I have been told, seventy-five of them driving in white stakes and
running lines. The next Saturday there were fifteen of them planting
potatoes. The rest were busy. The week after that there was one man hoeing
weeds. After that silence fell upon the deserted garden, broken only by
the cry of the chick-a-dee and the choo-choo feeding on the waving heads
of the thistles.</p>
<p>But I have indicated only two or three of the ways of failing at food
production. There are ever so many more. What amazes me, in returning to
the city, is to find the enormous quantities of produce of all sorts
offered for sale in the markets. It is an odd thing that last spring, by a
queer oversight, we never thought, any of us, of this process of
increasing the supply. If every patriotic man would simply take a large
basket and go to the market every day and buy all that he could carry away
there need be no further fear of a food famine.</p>
<p>And, meantime, my own vegetables are on their way. They are in a soap box
with bars across the top, coming by freight. They weigh forty-six pounds,
including the box. They represent the result of four months' arduous toil
in sun, wind, and storm. Yet it is pleasant to think that I shall be able
to feed with them some poor family of refugees during the rigour of the
winter. Either that or give them to the hens. I certainly won't eat the
rotten things myself.</p>
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