COi. 
 
 UNIVERSITY OF CALIFORNIA. 
 
 AGRICULTURAL EXPERIMENT STATION. 
 BERKELEY, CAL. 
 
 E. W. HILGARD, Director. BULLETIN No. US. 
 
 Remedies for Insects and Fnngi. 
 
 DECEMBER, 1896. 
 
UNIVERSITY OF CALIFORNIA 
 AGRICULTURAL EXPERIMENT STATION 
 
 (Correction and Supplement to Bulletin 115.) 
 
 This sheet is published in response to numerous inquiries for formulas 
 not included in Bulletin 115, recently issued by this Station, 
 and for the purpose of correcting quite an important typo- 
 graphical error in the above-mentioned bulletin. 
 
 C. W. Woodworth. 
 
 CORRECTION. 
 
 Oil page 12, lines 12 and 13, the formula for the Lime, Salt, and 
 Sulphur Mixture should read : "The proportions are about 6 pounds 
 of lime, 2 of salt, and 3 of sulphur, for 10 (not 66) gallons." 
 
 SUPPLEMENT. 
 
 Professor Hilgard' s Sulphid of Potash Wash. — This has proven so 
 useful for removing moss from trees that a number have requested it. 
 The formula is as follows: Caustic soda (98 ), 1 pound; commercial 
 potash, 1 pound ; sulphur, 3 pounds. Boil together one hour. Dis- 
 solve 20 pounds whale oil soap (8o°) in hot water; add, and boil one 
 half-hour. Dilute to 100 gallons. Apply hot. 
 
 Professor Pierce" s Bordeaux Mixture. — This is the modification of 
 the Bordeaux mixture with which Professor Pierce had such good 
 results against the curl-leaf of the peach. It contains double the 
 amount of lime generally recommended. The formula is as follows : 
 5 pounds of Milestone, 10 pounds of lime, for 45 gallons. Prepare in 
 the same manner as other Bordeaux mixtures. For curl-leaf apply 
 from one to three weeks before buds open. 
 
 Paris Green and Bordeaux Mixture. — We neglected to state in the 
 Bulletin that when it is desirable to use these two washes at the same 
 time, as for codlin moth and scab, the green may be stirred into the 
 Bordeaux mixture at the usual proportion, i.e., 1 pound to 200 gallons. 
 
 Bkrkki.Hy, Cal., March 9, 1S97. 
 
Digitized by the Internet Archive 
 
 in 2012 with funding from 
 
 University of California, Davis Libraries 
 
 http://www.archive.org/details/remediesforinsec115wood 
 
REMEDIES FOR INSECTS AND FUNGI 
 
 By C. W. Woodworth. 
 
 It is very important that every one who has the care of crops, whether 
 of garden, orchard, or field, should have a clear idea of the remedies 
 available for preventing the injuries due to insects and fungi. Not only 
 must one know how to make and apply the remedies, but it is equally 
 essential that he should fully understand when to apply and when not 
 to apply. It is safe to say that, even in California, where this matter 
 has been agitated for so many years, in only a very small fraction of the 
 cases where injury might be prevented is the proper treatment made. 
 On the other hand, it may also be said that when a treatment is made 
 it is often of no effect, and a waste of time and money. Careful obser- 
 vation of the practices in this State in reference to treating insects and 
 fungi makes it appear that fully half of what it now costs to treat our 
 crops is wasted. 
 
 Mistakes Made. — The chief mistakes made in applying remedies are 
 the following: 
 
 First — Applications are often made when there is absolutely no need 
 for treatment — when there is nothing to destroy nor to prevent; 
 
 Second — Applications are often wrongly timed; either applied before 
 there is any chance to produce good results, or after the injury has all 
 been done; 
 
 Third — Often the wrong kind of an application is chosen for the 
 particular trouble, so that no results can follow; 
 
 Fourth- 1 - Applications are often made for troubles that are incurable 
 by any known practical method; 
 
 Fifth — Expensive methods are employed when cheaper ones will ac- 
 complish the results, both as regards the material used and the labor 
 employed. 
 
 There is no reason why these might not to a great degree be avoided. 
 Mistakes of judgment will always cause loss in this as in any other 
 operation, but there is no reason why these mistakes of ignorance should 
 be allowed to amount to half the cost of such applications. In the 
 following pages we will attempt to present, in a brief compass, the more 
 important points to be considered in the treatment of plants. But it 
 should be distinctly recognized that local experience and experiment is 
 the only real guide for successful practice. Especially in this State, 
 where our conditions are so wonderfully diversified, is it impossible to 
 formulate detailed programs or calendars of operations which will be of 
 general value. 
 
 Any one with ordinary intelligence, however, who is willing to 
 observe and think, has no excuse for falling into the mistakes indicated 
 above. 
 
- 4 
 
 CLASSES OF PESTS. 
 
 Almost all the serious pests that attack plants are either insects or 
 fungi. These we may classify, according to their way of attacking the 
 plant, into a number of groups, as follows: 
 
 1. Boot-feeding insects, which attack the roots of plants; they may 
 devour the roots, suck the sap, or cause swellings to form; and the same 
 insect may even attack the plant above ground as well as on the roots. 
 
 2. Boring insects, which live within the plant and mostly attack the 
 stem or trunk, but may also bore into the larger roots on the one hand 
 and into the interior of leaves and fruit on the other. 
 
 3. Sap-sucking insects, which attack the upper parts of the plant, 
 puncturing the leaves and stems to obtain their food. These resemble 
 the forms that suck the sap from the roots, but the latter are a different 
 and much more difficult economic problem. 
 
 4. Defoliating insects, which eat up the leaves and other green parts 
 of plants. 
 
 5. External fungi, growing over and living upon the exposed parts 
 of the leaves and stems of plants, and only sending feeding suckers 
 into the plant. 
 
 6. Local fungi, which enter the plant, but remain at the point where 
 they found an entrance, and only spread by the spores, which corre- 
 spond to seed, being carried to other parts of the leaf or plant and there 
 growing into the plant again. 
 
 7. Penetrating fungi, which have the power of passing from one part 
 of a plant to another by boring their way right through the plant. 
 
 Each of these classes of pests must be treated in a different way, and 
 usually the remedy for one would be entirely useless if applied for a 
 pest of another class. 
 
 INSECTS. 
 
 Root-Feeding Insects. — Fortunately the number of root-feeding insects is 
 not large, for there is no application known, that is practical for general 
 use, by which they can be treated. It is not that the insects are hard to 
 kill, but that the nature of the soil is such that it is very difficult to reach 
 them. The best of the known processes — the use of carbon bisulphid — is 
 not certainly effectual, unless used in such quantity as to destroy at the 
 same time the roots of the plants; and thus is practically useless, except 
 for disinfecting soils. The very exhaustive and unsuccessful experiments 
 made with the phylloxera, especially in France, make it appear doubt- 
 ful if anything will ever be found in the way of treatment for root insects. 
 
 The solution of the problem for trees and vines seems to be along the 
 line of the use of resistant roots. 
 
 For annual crops, the most promising methods at present known are 
 crop rotation, starvation, and trapping. 
 
 The crop rotation method depends for its success upon the fact that 
 most of the injurious root- feeding insects or worms are decidedly more 
 numerous in a certain field in certain years, and especially after certain 
 crops. By planting only those crops that are the least injured by the 
 attacks in the years following these crops, the injury can, to some degree, 
 be avoided. Local experience will show the particular system of rota- 
 
— 5 — 
 
 tion which will give the best results with the insects most abundant in 
 that particular region. 
 
 The starvation method is by clean fallowing the land, and is not par- 
 ticularly useful after a crop like potatoes, where there is left considerable 
 living vegetable matter in the soil. It is the most thorough method if 
 everything is kept off the ground, and can be used to advantage in con- 
 nection with trapping. 
 
 The trapping method consists of providing food for the insects which 
 has first been treated with a strong dose of poison. It is especially 
 useful in gardens where root-feeding insects are often a very serious pest. 
 Any green food will do for traps. Alfalfa is commonly used. It is scat- 
 tered around in small piles and may be partly covered with soil to pre- 
 vent it from drying out too fast. 
 
 Boring Insects. —About the only thing that can be done for boring 
 insects is to prevent, by some means, their entrance into the plant. 
 This may be done by mechanical means, by covering the threatened 
 parts with something which will either prevent the egg-laying or form 
 a barrier to the young insect. Thus, the use of cylinders of wire mos- 
 quito net, an inch or two larger than the trunk of the trees, is an 
 effectual bar against the borer that attacks the butts of peach trees. 
 Borers may also be prevented entrance by coating the part of the plant, 
 liable to attack, with a poisonous substance, which will be eaten by the 
 young borer as it attempts to burrow into the plant. Such a coating for 
 the trunks of trees is a paint composed of glue made green with Paris 
 green. For green parts of plants, especially against fruit insects, Paris 
 green is applied in water and the application must be repeated often 
 enough to keep the parts well poisoned. 
 
 After the insects have entered the plant, about the only thing remain- 
 ing to be done is to dig them out one by one, though for some living 
 very near the surface it is said that scalding hot water applied freely to 
 the trunk will destroy the insect without injury to the tree. 
 
 It is doubtful, however, if by either of these means enough injury is 
 not directly or indirectly done to the plant to more than equal the good 
 attained. 
 
 Sap-Sucking Insects. — In this category are included some of the easiest 
 as well as some of the most difficult insects to destroy, but they are all 
 capable of successful treatment, so far as we know. It may often be, 
 however, that the cost of a treatment which is effective will be so great 
 as to be prohibitive. This is true generally of field crops, where the cost 
 per acre for treatment may often be more than the saving that can ensue 
 from the application. The insects of this class are not affected by 
 poisons like Paris green, because they get their food by inserting their 
 beak into the plant; nothing, therefore, on the surface of the leaves will 
 have any particular effect. 
 
 There have been many attempts at injecting some substance into the 
 plant which will poison the sap, but the cells of the plant are, if any- 
 thing, more delicate than the insect, so that the plant is always killed 
 first. 
 
 The only feasible plan, therefore, is to spray on them some caustic 
 or oily substance, or to envelop them with some poisonous gas. 
 
 Plant-lice are ordinarily very easy to kill, but protected insects, like 
 
— 6 — 
 
 the scale insects, or very active ones, like the so-called grape thrips, are 
 much more difficult to deal with. The latter are probably best treated 
 by causing them to leap or fly against a " hopper doser" of some form. 
 A hopper doser consists of a surface of tin, or other material, covered 
 with tar, printer's ink, or some other sticky substance, which will hold 
 captive the insects touching it. 
 
 Defoliating Insects. — The insects eating the leaves of plants are, as a 
 rule, the easiest insects to destroy, and at the least expense, because the 
 leaves may be covered with relatively cheap poisonous substances; and 
 as the insects eat the leaf, they will also consume the poison and be 
 killed. Only the more valuable field crops can be treated economically, 
 however, for even as cheap a process as this is too expensive for most of 
 the staple crops. 
 
 When insects are excessively abundant, as in the case of attacks of 
 locust swarms and invasions of army worms, all known applications 
 become useless, because with their great numbers everything green is 
 devoured before any one insect can have taken enough poison to kill it. 
 
 Insects of the defoliating class can also be killed by the same remedies 
 used for sap-sucking forms; but with those remedies, as is true of the 
 insects of the former class, the insect must actually be touched by the 
 remedy to be affected by it. 
 
 FUNGI. 
 
 External Fungi. — The molds or mildews occurring on the leaves of 
 plants in this State belong almost exclusively to this class of fungi. 
 
 One can easily, with the aid of a small microscope, see the threads of 
 the fungus. All parts of the plant above ground are affected, but the 
 young leaves and the ends of stems are most readily attacked. 
 
 They may be destroyed and the spread of the fungus stopped by the 
 use of the vapor of sulphur. 
 
 Local Fungi. — Most of the rusts and spot fungi may be classed under 
 this head. They live within the plant, and so cannot be destroyed 
 after they once gain an entrance. A cure, therefore, is impossible", and 
 attention must be turned to preventing their entrance. The spores 
 are produced very abundantly and quickly in most species, so that, if 
 treatment is not given soon after the first appearance of the trouble, it 
 will be seen to spread with great rapidity and involve a much larger 
 part of the plant. 
 
 The theory of treatment is to keep the plant covered with some sub- 
 stance which will prevent the germination or sprouting of the spores, 
 thus preventing the fungus from entering a new part of the plant. We 
 now know a number of very effectual substances which will produce 
 this result. 
 
 Penetrating Fungi. — This is the most difficult group of fungi we have 
 to deal with. Grain smuts, blackberry rust, and curl-leaf of the peach 
 are examples. In annual plants the infection usually occurs at about 
 the time that the seed sprouts, so that the destruction of the spores 
 that may be on the seed is often sufficient to insure practical immunity. 
 
 In perennials, the only thing usually to be done is the removal and 
 destruction of the infested plants. 
 
Some diseases of trees due to these fungi may possibly be controlled 
 by preventing the spread of the disease (by spores), by the use of the 
 remedies that are so effectual against the local fungi, and by vigorous 
 pruning and removing the new growth, in which the disease is chiefly 
 carried over from one season to another. This is, at least at present, 
 the most promising line of experiment in these cases. 
 
 The experience in some parts of this State with curl-leaf, where it 
 seems to be entirely controllable, would seem to indicate that the disease 
 is not, in every region, to be properly classed with these penetrating 
 fungi. 
 
 Further study may show that other fungi may, in certain seasons or 
 in certain regions, be a local and in others a penetrating fungus, and so 
 in one place be easily controlled, and in another not at all controllable 
 without the destruction of the plants affected. 
 
 REMEDIES. 
 
 There are a great many substances that may be used successfully 
 against insects and fungi; but we recommend only a small list, selected 
 because of their effectiveness and cheapness. Remedies are applied as 
 a dry powder, as a gas, or as a fluid, spray or wash; the great majority 
 being in the latter form. 
 
 Powders. — The most common way of applying powders is the " pepper- 
 box " method, in which the material is carried in a vessel provided 
 with perforations, through which it sifts as the vessel is shaken over the 
 plant. A modification of this, much used in the cotton fields of the 
 Southern States, consists of bags of the material suspended from the 
 ends of a pole long enough to reach from one row of cotton to the next. 
 This is carried by a man riding on a mule, and the jar causes the 
 powder to sift through. Cloth is chosen for this purpose which is fine 
 enough to allow only the right quantity to be distributed. A third 
 method, much used in this country, is a blowing device, which is very 
 satisfactory for field use, and does very rapid work. Only three reme- 
 dies are recommended to be used in the dry form, and these have a rather 
 limited use. 
 
 Air-Slaked Lime. — This is the powder resulting from the exposure 
 of ordinary lime to the action of the air for some time. It is only 
 recommended as a remedy against insects which have a slimy coating 
 over the body. For these it is a cheap and effectual remedy. It is not 
 as cheap, however, as Paris green, and is particularly recommended 
 where the latter is objectionable because of its poisonous nature. 
 
 For true slugs, which are not insects, but have a similar slimy coat, 
 it is the best remedy we know of ; but it must be applied in the evening 
 or early morning, while the animals are on the plants; and may have 
 to be repeated two or three nights in succession to kill all. Except in 
 gardens, it may not pay to make more than the one application, which 
 will, if rightly timed, destroy most of the slugs. 
 
 Sulphur. — This is a widely used remedy for the mildew, which is so 
 common on plants in this State. The powder is usually applied by the 
 pepper-box method. It only becomes effectual as the heat of the sun 
 
— 8 — 
 
 vaporizes it; the field thus treated smells strongly of the sulphur during 
 the warmer part of the day, when the vapor is being produced. On wet, 
 cloudy days, when the mildew is growing and spreading rapidly, the 
 sulphur is inert, but the first bright day makes it effective. It may be 
 possible to artificially vaporize the sulphur on a large scale for use in 
 such weather; but no attempt has yet been carefully made, except in 
 greenhouses, and then with the best of results. The vapor of sulphur 
 must be used, and not the gas produced by burning, which is very inju- 
 rious to foliage. 
 
 Sulphur has been found to be a successful remedy for the so-called 
 red spiders, also called yellow mite — animals somewhat related to the 
 true insects; fairly good results are also reported in its use against the 
 thrips. For these purposes the sulphur is used in the same way as for 
 the mildew. 
 
 Paris Green or London Purple* — These two arsenical poisons are occa- 
 sionally used in a dry form, but chiefly suspended in water as a spray. 
 They are used for the same purposes in either form. A common prac- 
 tice is to dilute the poison with flour, dust, or other powder, so that it 
 can be more easily and evenly distributed. If not so diluted, care must 
 be taken not to apply it so thickly in places as to endanger the foliage. 
 
 Gas Treatments. 
 
 Gases have the property of diffusing themselves with great rapidity, 
 so that when applied in a closed space every part of that space will in a 
 short time contain some of the gas. Thus, no other method of killing 
 insects is calculated to be as thorough in its work. In an open space 
 this property of diffusing destroys, to a great extent, its utility. Sulphur 
 applied as a powder, as has already been stated, is not effective until it 
 becomes a vapor; and then the dissipation is not as much as with most 
 gases, because of the weight of sulphur vapor and the fact that it is 
 applied over whole fields at once. 
 
 The impracticability of inclosing most cultivated plants, and the cost 
 of the treatment, both in time and chemicals, makes the method useful 
 to only a very limited extent. We recommend but two gases. 
 
 Carbon Bisulphid. — This substance is not available for plants in 
 active growth, and is chiefly useful for stored products, such as seeds 
 and grains. It can be used for disinfecting soils and ridding other 
 articles of insects. 
 
 In disinfecting soils an injector is used. A number of forms of the 
 latter are on the market in Europe, where phylloxera eradication has 
 required them. It is doubtful if this method of soil disinfection would 
 be profitable in this country for the destruction of any insect. 
 
 For destroying insects in seeds or grain, carbon bisulphid is a very 
 cheap and satisfactory means. The bin or box containing the seeds to 
 be disinfected should be tight, at least at the sides and below. 
 
 A dish is placed on top of the material to be treated, and a quantity 
 of the carbon bisulphid poured in. This evaporates rapidly, and the 
 vapor, being heavier than air, sinks down into the lower part of the bin. 
 
 *For a general account of their action, see under sprays. 
 
— 9 — 
 
 The top should be covered also, in order that the vapor may remain a 
 long time in the grain. 
 
 Very rarely will bins be perfectly tight, so that the exact amount 
 necessary cannot be stated. Usually the estimate is made at one pound 
 to the ton of grain, which is sufficient for a fairly tight bin. 
 
 Grapevine cuttings are most successfully disinfected in a similar way, 
 by placing a saucerfull of the bisulphid on the cuttings in a tight box, 
 and leaving for forty minutes. 
 
 The yellow jacket, our common wasp, which is so injurious to fruit, 
 and which makes its nest in the ground, is easily killed by this 
 substance. The nest is located, and about dark, when the wasps are all 
 in, about an ounce of carbon bisulphid is poured down the hole and a 
 handful of earth thrown over it to keep the vapor in. By morning all 
 will be found to be dead. Ants' nests can be destroyed in the same way. 
 
 Carbon bisulphid is also one of the best remedies for gophers. If used 
 in the fall, after the rains have begun (so that the ground is not too 
 porous), an ounce poured over a rag and stuffed into a hole and covered 
 with earth will destroy the inmates. 
 
 Hydrocyanic Acid Gas. — This is practically the only gas which is 
 strong enough to kill the insects on a tree with safety to the leaves, and 
 within a time short enough to make its use practical on a large scale. Its 
 work is very effectual and satisfactory, but is very expensive, and, 
 therefore, is only available for the more profitable trees, such as the 
 citrus varieties. It may also be used for disinfecting. The gas is 
 extremely poisonous, and, sometimes, for reasons not entirely under- 
 stood, is very injurious to the foliage; but the injury is almost all 
 prevented by its use at night. 
 
 The process is to cover the tree with a tent of sail-cloth, oiled to make 
 it tight, and in a vessel beneath the tent the chemicals which make the 
 gas are placed. After half an hour the tent is removed and put over 
 the next tree. The chemicals needed for every 100 cubic feet are -J 
 ounce of potassium cyanide, § ounce of water, and i ounce of sulphuric 
 acid. 
 
 The common practice in this State is to use it decidedly stronger for 
 small trees and weaker for the largest trees. In the smaller trees it is 
 safe to use it stronger, as the small amount of gas used is very quickly 
 diffused. When it is produced in large quantity, as is necessary for 
 a large tree, some of the gas, scarcely at all mixed with air, may come in 
 contact with the leaves and injure them. The practice probably arose, in 
 part, from some tables which have been published widely in this State, 
 where the contents of the tent was calculated by multiplying the height 
 of the tree by its breadth. The practice is not justifiable, and if the 
 weaker amount is successful there is no reason for not using the same 
 proportion on smaller trees. 
 
 There are many kinds of tents used, and many plans for changing 
 them from tree to tree, the details of which we cannot give here. The 
 tent is usually of an octangular shape, and is furnished with rings for 
 hoisting. The largest tents require a derrick for lifting them into place. 
 
— 10 — 
 
 The following are the amounts of cyanide of potash to be used for trees 
 of varying heights: 
 
 
 Amount of Cyanide of Potash. 
 
 Height of Tree. 
 
 
 If as broad as 
 
 high (Navel 
 
 Oranges, etc.) 
 
 If % as broad as 
 high (Seedling 
 Oranges, etc.) 
 
 jounce .- 
 
 6 feet. 
 
 8 feet. 
 10 feet. 
 12 feet. 
 15 feet. 
 19 feet. 
 
 8 feet. 
 
 1 ounce __ . 
 
 10 feet. 
 
 2 ounces . . 
 
 12 feet. 
 
 4 ounces . - 
 
 15 feet. 
 
 8 ounces __ 
 
 20 feet. 
 
 lpouncL. . - - 
 
 28 feet. 
 
 
 
 SPRAYS OR WASHES. 
 
 The most important remedies for plant pests are applied as a spray 
 or wash. By the word wash one would naturally understand a more 
 copious application than a spray, but in ordinary usage the terms are 
 identical. 
 
 For very low plants an outfit working on the principle of a sprinkling- 
 can will do; but for better and more economical work, and work on 
 higher plants, some form of force-pump and spray nozzle is necessary. 
 
 There are many forms of pumps on the market that are good for the 
 purpose. A good spray pump should maintain a fairly constant and 
 sufficient pressure, and its valves and general construction should be 
 simple and its parts easily replaceable. 
 
 The nozzle should, for most spraying work, be such as to break up the 
 stream into a fine mist; but for scale insects one giving a stream of con- 
 siderable force is desirable. The shape of the spray is usually either 
 conical or fan-shaped, and each has its particular advantages for a par- 
 ticular class of work. 
 
 The construction of the nozzle should be such as to permit of easy, 
 quick, and thorough cleaning. A few forms designed to clean themselves 
 automatically, work well. 
 
 In most spraying the object is to get the largest possible proportion of 
 the spray to remain on the leaf or stem, and to have it well distrib- 
 uted. This is best accomplished by covering the leaf with minute 
 globules like dew. As soon as they run together and drip from the 
 leaf the distribution is not perfect, and there is actually less left on the 
 leaves. 
 
 When the nozzle is held as far from the plant as the stream will carry, 
 the full effect of the nozzle is obtained in the breaking up of the stream 
 into mist, and so can produce most perfectly this dew-like condition. 
 
 For scale insects the object is somewhat different. The plan for these 
 is to thoroughly wet the surface of the bark and the edges of the scale, 
 to insure the penetration of the wash beneath the scale, and thus to kill 
 the old scale or the eggs and young hidden beneath. This thorough 
 wetting is secured by holding the nozzle close to the plant and applying 
 a great deal of the wash with a high pressure. Washes are sometimes 
 applied hot, and when the nozzle is held close to the plant the spray 
 will penetrate better, and for this reason do better work. 
 
— 11 — 
 
 Heat is to be recommended as a remedy only when it can be abso- 
 lutely controlled. 
 
 Grain Smut. — The method of treating seed wheat and oats for smut 
 is as follows: 
 
 For wheat, soak fifteen minutes in water at 132° F.; for oats, ten 
 minutes. The grain should first be placed in water at, say, 115°, to 
 partly warm it up. See that the grain is all wetted and do not treat 
 too much at a time, or it will be impossible to keep the water at the 
 proper temperature. Have boiling and cold water at hand, so as to add 
 to keep the temperature just right. It must not go above 135°, or it 
 may injure the seed; nor below 130°, or it will not be effective. After 
 treating, dip in cold water to cool, and spread out to dry. 
 
 Bordeaux Mixture. — This is the most used and the most satisfactory of 
 the known washes for prevention of fungous attacks. When sprayed 
 upon the plant it prevents the development of the spores of any fungi 
 upon the surface covered; and it is thus a perfect preventive of all the 
 fungi which gain an entrance to the plant in this way. To be effective 
 it must be kept continuously on the plant that is to be protected. A 
 single spraying will last from two weeks to a month, or even longer if 
 the conditions are favorable. With our dry summers one application 
 will often be found enough for some kinds of fungi. 
 
 Late spring rains may make additional sprayings necessary; and 
 some fungi may, in some localities, require the repeated sprayings neces- 
 sary in a more humid climate. Local experience will have to determine 
 these points. 
 
 Bordeaux mixture is made of equal parts of bluestone (copper sul- 
 phate) and lime. Some formulas give 6 parts of bluestone to 4 parts 
 of lime, and will do if the lime is good. Slake the lime, and dissolve 
 the bluestone separately. Both should be cold when they are mixed, 
 and the resultant mixture will be a beautiful blue wash. If mixed hot, 
 a black compound (copper oxide) is produced, which reduces the value 
 of the wash. 
 
 As to the amount of water, we recommend, for ordinary spraying, 1 
 pound of each of the above to 10 gallons of mixture; and for winter 
 use, 1 pound of each for 4 gallons. 
 
 Ammoniacal Copper Carbonate. — This solution is very effectual, but 
 is not as lasting as the Bordeaux mixture. It is a perfect solution, and 
 therefore has no tendency to clog the nozzle (as is the case with the 
 Bordeaux mixture), and can be used on fruit near the picking season, 
 and on ornamental plants, which would be disfigured with the lime wash. 
 
 The usual way of making this wash is to dissolve copper carbonate in 
 ammonia, and then dilute. If the carbonate is not fully dissolved before 
 the water is added it cannot be further dissolved, and not only is the 
 carbonate wasted, but the fluid will not be up to standard strength. It 
 is well, therefore, to give the ammonia ample time to act, say over night, 
 before adding the water. The proportions are 1 ounce of the copper 
 carbonate in 10 ounces of ammonia for every 10 gallons of spray. 
 
 Another way of producing the mixture is to mix solutions of bluestone 
 and sal soda, dissolving the carbonate of copper thus produced in 
 ammonia, and diluting with water. The bluestone and the sal soda 
 
— 12 — 
 
 should be mixed in about the proportion of 3 to 4, after having been 
 dissolved separately in a small quantity of warm water, and cooled 
 before mixing. 
 
 Three ounces of bluestone with 4 of sal soda and 20 of ammonia is 
 sufficient for 20 gallons of spray. 
 
 Lime, Salt, and Sulphur Mixture. — This wash is useful both as an 
 insecticide and a fungicide, but only for winter use on deciduous trees. 
 
 It is usually made by boiling the sulphur for one hour and a half 
 with about one fourth of the lime, in a covered kettle, with enough water 
 to cover well; then the rest of the lime and the salt are added, and the 
 boiling continued half an hour longer. 
 
 The proportions are about 6 pounds of lime, 2 of salt, and 3 of sul- 
 phur, for 60 gallons. 
 
 Resin Soap. — The cheapest insecticide which kills by contact is resin 
 soap. It is for scale insects, and so has good penetrating power. Like 
 all insecticides killing by contact, the effect of the spray is soon gone, and 
 it only kills the insects which are wet with its spray. It is generally 
 applied warm. 
 
 In making the soap, the ingredients are placed in a closed kettle with 
 enough water to cover, and are boiled for two hours, when all will be 
 united into a soap. In diluting, only a little water should be added at 
 a time, and stirred in; or, better, hot water should be used, because of the 
 danger of chilling the soap and causing it to harden, when it is almost 
 impossible to dissolve it again. 
 
 The proportions are 8 pounds of resin, 2 pounds of standard caustic 
 soda, and 1 pint of fish oil for 40 gallons, for use on trees in foliage; 
 and the same for 25 to 30 gallons for winter use. 
 
 Kerosene. — There has recently been placed on the market devices for 
 mixing kerosene with water in the pump as it is being applied; and 
 with very good results. Full directions as to proportions accompany 
 the device, and we will here only discuss the precautions to be observed. 
 These are, chiefly, the use of a nozzle capable of producing a very fine 
 mist; and applying the spray so that the drops do not run together, i. e., 
 holding the nozzle as far as possible from the plant, and not applying 
 too much. 
 
 Pure kerosene has great penetrating power, perhaps the greatest of all 
 the insecticides, and with the above precautions can be safely used. 
 
 Kerosene Emulsion. — While not as cheap as resin soap, kerosene 
 emulsion is easier to make; and, in small quantities, or where the con- 
 veniences for boiling are not at hand, is the most satisfactory remedy. 
 Like resin soap, this spray only kills by contact. 
 
 The ordinary form of the emulsion is something of an art to properly 
 manufacture. The ingredients are 2 parts of kerosene to 1 of sour 
 milk, or of strong soap solution. The latter must be made boiling-hot 
 and added to the kerosene, and the whole pumped through a spray 
 nozzle for fifteen minutes. After pumping a few minutes the whole 
 mass will become beautifully creamy and apparently perfectly emulsi- 
 fied; but if a little is placed in water it will be seen that some of the 
 kerosene separates out and rises to the surface. When the emulsion is 
 
— 13 — 
 
 perfect there will be no separation when diluted. If the soap is of poor 
 quality or the water is hard, more soap must be used; and, on the other 
 hand, if both are good not as much is needed as recommended below, 
 which is intended to suit the average condition. 
 
 The proportions are 3 ounces of soap in 3 pints of water or sour 
 milk, and 3 quarts of kerosene for 10 gallons of emulsion for scale insects, 
 or for 15 gallons for plant-lice. 
 
 Another formula, which is easier made but more expensive, and so only 
 recommended for use on a small scale, consists of using eight times as 
 much soap. When so made, the creamy mixture described above, 
 obtained within five minutes, is a permanent emulsion. 
 
 Paris Green and London Purple. — These poisons kill only those insects 
 that eat the leaves covered by them, and are useless against sucking 
 insects like plant-lice and scales. They are also useless against over- 
 whelming numbers of insects, such as swarms of grasshoppers, which are 
 able to eat up the plant before getting enough poison to kill them. 
 
 Arsenic is the active principle in both these poisons, and is about 
 equally strong in both. Paris green is copper arsenite, and London 
 purple an arsenite of lime containing an aniline residue, to which the 
 purple color is due. The latter is a finer powder and remains better 
 suspended in water, but the Paris green is, as a rule, safer to apply. 
 Both poisons, if applied too strong, will burn the foliage, and both 
 require constant stirring, or the material will settle to the bottom, and 
 so not be uniformly distributed. For the best results, the poison should 
 not be allowed to drip from the tree, and the finer the spray the better. 
 
 These poisons do not as a rule remain any great length of time on the 
 plant, but must be renewed every two or three weeks, or while the 
 danger of insect attack exists. In mixing the poison it is well to first 
 make a paste with a little water and then dilute, as otherwise it is diffi- 
 cult to wet the leaves with it. The amount used is about one pound to 
 two hundred gallons of water. 
 
14 
 
 THE TABLE. 
 
 The following table is intended to give, in a glance and in small 
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