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pieces only of their tuberous root: for the plants of those varieties always acquire a considerable age before they begin to generate tubers, and therefore do not too soon begin to expend themselves in the production of tubers; and the size which these acquire within any given period in the spring will be to a great extent regulated by the strength of the plants at the period when they first spring from the soil; and strong plants of such varieties can be afforded only by sets of considerable size. I have, in consequence, for some years past, selected in the autumn the largest tubers, and these nearly of an equal size, for planting in the spring; and I have found that these not only uniformly afford very strong plants, but also such as readily recover when injured by frost: for, being fed by a copious reservoir beneath the soil, a reproduction of vigorous stems and foliage soon takes place, when those first produced are destroyed by frost, or other cause.
When the planter is anxious to obtain a crop within the least possible time, he will find the position in which the tubers are placed to vegetate by no means a point of indifference; for these being shoots, or branches, which have grown thick instead of elongating, retain the disposition of branches to propel their sap to their leading buds, or points most distant from the stems of the plants of which they once formed parts. If the tubers be placed with their leading buds upwards, a few very strong and very early shoots will spring from them; but if their position be reversed, many weaker and later shoots will be produced; and not only the earliness, but the quality of the produce, and the size, will be much affected.
In the spring, when the young plants are just beginning to appear in the rows, I have often found it very advantageous to raise the mould over them in ridges by an operation perfectly similar to moulding the plants. Protection has been thus given against frost, and I have not found the period of maturity of the crop to have been in any degree retarded.
It has been contended that there is much waste in the practice above described of planting large sets; because the old tuber is often found to have lost little in weight, when an early crop is taken up in an immature state: and it has thence been inferred, that a very small part only of the matter of the old tubers enters into the composition of the new. But I believe a false inference