CHAP. 34.—OTHER PLANTS THAT ARE CUT FOR POLES AND
STAKES.
The chesnut is found to produce better stays
1 for the vine
than any other tree, both from the facility with which they
are worked, their extremely lasting qualities, and the circumstance that, when cut, the tree will bud again more speedily
than the willow
2 even. It requires a soil that is light without
being gravelly, a moist, sandy one more particularly, or else a
charcoal earth,
3 or a fine tufa
4 even; while at the same time
a northern aspect, however cold and shady, and if upon a
declivity even, greatly promotes its growth. It refuses to
grow, however, in a gravelly soil, or in red earth, chalk, or,
indeed, any kind of fertilizing ground. We have already
stated,
5 that it is reproduced from the nut, but it will
only grow from those of the largest size, and then only when
they are sown in heaps of five together. The ground above
the nuts should be kept broken from the month of November
to February, as it is at that period that the nuts lose their
hold and fall of themselves from the tree, and then take
root. There ought to be intervals of a foot in width left
between them,
6 and the hole in which they are planted should
be nine inches every way. At the end of two years or more
they are transplanted from this seed plot into another, where
they are laid out at intervals of a couple of feet.
Layers are also employed for the reproduction of this tree,
and there is none to which they are better
7 adapted: the root
of the plant is left exposed, and the layer is placed in the
trench at full length, with the summit also protruding from
the earth; the result being, that it shoots from the top as well
as the root. When transplanted, however, it is very hard to be
reconciled, as it stands in dread of all change. Hence it is,
that it is nearly two years before it will begin to shoot upward;
from which circumstance it is generally preferred to rear the
slips in the nursery from the nut itself, to obtaining them from
quicksets. The mode of cultivation does not differ from that
employed with the plants already mentioned.
8 It is trenched
around, and carefully lopped for two successive years; after
which it is able to take care of itself, the shade it gives sufficing
to stifle all superfluous suckers: before the end of the sixth
year it is fit for cutting.
A single jugerum of chesnuts will provide stays for twenty
jugera of vineyard, and the branches that are taken from near
the roots afford a supply of two-forked uprights; they will last,
too, till after the next cutting of the tree.
The æsculus,
9 too, is grown in a similar manner, the time
for cutting being three years at the latest. Being less difficult, too, to propagate, it may be planted in any kind of earth,
the acorn—and it is only with the æsculus that this is done—being sown in spring, in a hole nine inches in depth, with intervals between the plants of two feet in width. This tree is
lightly hoed, four times a year. This kind of stay is the least
likely to rot of them all; and the more the tree is cut, the
more abundantly it shoots. In addition to the above, they
also grow other trees for cutting that we have already mentioned—the ash for instance, the laurel, the peach, the hazel,
and the apple; but then they are of slower growth, and the
stays made from them, when fixed in the ground, are hardly
able to withstand the action of the earth, and much less any
moisture. The elder, on the other hand, which affords stakes
of the very stoutest quality, is grown from cuttings, like the
poplar. As to the cypress, we have already spoken of it at
sufficient length.
10