8clJool HOUlo·Gl\rd~n Circular G. E'ebruary, lOW. DEPARTMENT OF THE INTERIOR BUREAU OF' EDUCATION, WASHINGTON HOTBEDS AllD COLDFRAllIES FOR HOllE GARDENS All teachers of home gardening should be able to help children construct hotbeds and coldfmmea Even small back-yard gardens may be made much more profitable and interesting if frames are used to lengthen the growing season. By the use of a. hotbed, plants may be started from four to six weeks earlier- thnu in the open ground, and a st.'U't of from two to four weeks may be made by the use of ccldfrnmes. Early vegetables always bring higher prices, Glass covers may also be used to lengthen the season in the fall, and even in the Northern States lettuce, radishes, and similar Cl'OpS may be kept growing in coldfnunes until Thanksgiving and often until the Christmas holidays. By protecting seedlings early in the sea- SODI crops may be .grown for which the gr-owing period ill it given locality 15 otherwise too short. The use of frames will make it possible to increase by several months the period of out-of-door activity of children making gardens. Fresh vegetables ma.y be pro- duced uL u. season when the home is unable to get them or the high prices make their use prohibitive, If all the children can not have hotbeds, a few of the older boys will find it profitable to supply plants to the other children at low prices. LOO,\TlON O}' 'rRE HOTBED, The hotbed should be placed on n well-drained spot at one end or nt the side of the garden, where it will be least in the way of other garden activities,' A good locution is 3 feet from the fence on the north side or direction from which the prevailing wind strikes the garden. If this fence is ninde of wire, boards should be- nailed to the posts to serve ns 11 shelter. Very often it will be found mere coo- venient to place the hotbed wholly outside of the garden, If there is room on the south 01' southeast aide of tbe house it will provide an. excellent site. It is important, however, to place the frame at least 4 feet from the building, so that water from the eaves mny not fal l on it, and also that there may be ample room for the operator to work from the side nearest the building, I For (lInn or placinll hotlJ.eda and coldtrnml!ll In the gardeD. see Bulletin 0. S. Dept. or Agriculture No. 2.52, ttgl:l, 1-2; NQ, 647, JIb" 1_2. 24871"-16 2 HO'l'Bl::DS Al.'n COLDERAMES ron rrOlliIE GARDENS. JLHUNO THP. I'lOTDt:D. FALL wos«. As soon us the location of the hotbed has been selected, its size should be considered. This decision will be governed by the size of the sash on band. The children should be urged to look in the base- ment, attic, end shed for old window sash, 01' see if storm windows can Dot be pressed into service. If this searc-h does not reveal suit- able covel', and sash must be purchased, it may be bought in two sizes--3 by 6 feet (standard sash) 01' 3 by 3 feet (pony 01' junior sash). For the use of graded school children the smaller size is pref- eruble, as it is easier to lift, and all of the plants grown under it muy be reached without stepping into the bed. The pit for the snsh should be dug before the ground freezes in the fall. It should be 30 inches deep, and just as long and wide a,s the sash will covel". This pit should be lined with wood, using 2-inch plank, if possible, but boards found in the yard or taken from heavy packing boxes will be fnirly satisfactory. Special oura should be tulcan to have this lining level at the surface of the ground. The next step is the construction of a. top frame, which should be 16 inches high at the back (north) and 8 inches in front for standard sash 01" large storm windows, and 12 inches in the back and 6 inches in the front for pony or half-window sash. If marc than one sash is to be used, strips of board 4: inches wide should be nailed from front 60 buck in the top frame at the point where two sashes meet. The top frame must be so made that it will exactly fit on the pit fr-ame. As soon ns the top frame is in place fill the whole pit with dry straw or leaves nnd cover with boards to keep out frost, snow, and ice. As the ground will be frozen when it is time to plant the hotbed, planting soil should be obtained in ilia fall. By mixing thoroughly one-half good garden loam RDd one-half well-rotted manure, and placing in a box in the bnseuicut, the soil will be ready as early as .it is needed in the spring. This aoil needs to be kept moist throughout the winter. S"''UNO WOIIK. Wllen the planting senson is from four to six weeks i;lwny, enough fresh horse manure should be obtained to fill the pit 24 inches deep. Somewhat less manure may be used in the Southern Stat-es. This manure should be piled for a few days and forked over at least once. The boards end straw should then be removed and 2 or 3 inches of fine stones or coal ashes placed in the bottom of the pit, and a or 4 inches of straw or leaves covered over it, so that the manure may HOTBEDS AND CQLDFRAMES FO'R l'fO'MF. GAilPENS. a not come i.n contact with the cold ground nnd good drainage may be assured. The manure should then be packed into the pit in layers 6 OJ' 8 inches thick) each layer being tmmped down thoroughly. The manure should contain enough straw to make it c< springy under foot." Over the manure 2 or 3 inches of straw should be placed, and over this 6 inches of planting soil. (Fig. 1). The sash should then be put in place) but planting should not be done at once, ns the fermen- tation of the manure will cause too much heat for n few dnys. The bulb of It the.rmometer may be buried in the soil, and when the tern- pemmre has fallen to between 15 lind 80 degrees it is time to put in Ar========= the seed. Ho~ 4... J... FIG. 1.-A, 8Mh: n. frame: C. plnotll: D, grouna le,·cl; E. wcll.prcp!l-red ""II; I!', lhln Infer of ~trnw: G, oonrda In I,ll: H, IlliLnIH\!: I, Il!llVI18U furnished through COllrtur ot llhOlle Islnnll !Slat~ College. I In case the pit was not prepared before the ground from in the fall, it is still possible to ba ve a hotbed, but the method of making is more costly and not as sutisfnctoey. To make this bed (fig. 2), fresh horse manure should be obtained and forked over as before ; it will need to be (1 larger amount than before. The millime should be spread directly on the frozen ground and tramped into a flat-topped pile 24 to 80 inches deep and ot least 1 foot wider end longer than the sash to be used. The top frame should be placed on the manure and straw and planting soil put on ns directed above. MOI'C hent will he retained by bunking tho ruuuure on the outside as high as the top of the frame. 4 H:OXBEOSc AND COLDFRAMES FOR HOME GARDENS • .HOW AND WHAT TO PLANT, The seeds of most plants grown in the hotbed ure small and should be planted in rOWS 3 inches apuct, ~ to 1 inch between seeds, and about i inch deep. The trench £01' tho seeds can be mnde by press- ing the edge of a i-inch board into the soil. A.s soon as the seeds have germinated find the seedlings have three leaves, they should be transplanted to 4 inches apart in another part of the hotbed. Long season crops, such as tomatoes, eggplant, peppers, cabbage, should be planted in the hotbed in order to give them 1111 early start. Plants that grow tall should be planted at the back of the frame. OARE o,~'TIm nOTBlID. As soon as seeds are planted, careful attention must be given to keeping just the right temperature inside the hotbed. A. thermom- eter should be suspended just above the soil find it should never register higher than 80 in the daytime or less than 55° at night. 0 FIG. 2.--Crou aecucn or hotOOilwade or top fram" and mnnure, Children should visit their frames about an hour after sunrise, re- move the sash covel'S, nnd raise the sash a· very little on the opposite side from which the wind is blowing. J ust before starting for school the thermometer should be consulted and the opening in- creased if the sun gives promise of a wnrm day. Another inspection should be made at noon, and the ventilation should be governed by the temperature registered by tho thermometer. 'Then moisture gathers on the underside of the glass more ventilation needs to he gi ven. At sunset the sash should be completely closed and the whole top covered with old milts or burlap sucks, boards being laid on the covers, so that they will not be blown nwny. Plants in a hotbed should be watered about us house plants are watered, not n slight sprinkling every day, but a, thorough watering early in the morning when needed. The. soil should be examined carefully j when it be- gins to dry out below the surface layer it is time to wnter ngaiu. Work with tbe coldfmmea is much like that with the hotbed ex- cept that the coldfmme is easier to build, nod since jt is started Inter in the season it is not ns bard to control the temperature for it. HOTBEDS AND COLD'FRA.1tfES :FOR HOME GAIIDENS. 6 A pit with manure or other heating material is not necessary. The top frame nnd sash are placed directly on the ground und 4 inches of: planting soil are put in for a seed bed. Coldframes are used for burdening off plants that are beginning to crowd each other in the hotbed. In the extreme Southern States the coldframe takes the place of the hotbed, and muslin is often substituted tal' sash, but in most States both ccldfmmes and hotbeds can be used with profit. UEFEKENOE BULLE"fINs. United stntea Department of AgI:lculture, wasurngton. D. O. snnnar's Bulletins: 255. The Home Vegetable Garden. 642. Tomato Growing In nie Bcuth. &17. The Home vegemute Garden in the South. 4(;0. s'ramcs as Fuctors Iu Truck Growing. The co-neu He;.lllIllg Oouraes. Doltege of Agrtcutture, CQI"Ul')1lUniversity, Ithaca, N. Y. Vol. II, No. 30. Hotbell Construction nlHl Muuugeruent. Rhode Island State ooueee, Kingston, n. I. tsstenston Bulletin. Vol. Lff, No. 11. Bow to Build Hotbeds and Cold Frames. Alni)nllla Agrlculturnl T:hmerlment Station. Auburn, Aln. Orrcuiur H. vegetebte Growing In Alnbaum. Oeorgtu Experiment Station, Experiment, 011. Bulletin No. 106. vegetubte Onrdetung. West Virginia Experiment guuton, MOI·guntown, W. Vn. Olrcular 13. Use of Hot1>eds uud Oolclfl'Ume$ 011 the Farm. WA~HINI1TOX' 1100'ERN~fF.liT I'lliliTIMI OFII'1CE: IDID