Growth
of the Cotton Plant at Gocup 17
March 1863 The Sydney Morning Herald |
Mr. James Brennan of Gocup has left with us a pod from one of his cotton plants. He says that from the time he sowed
the seed in October last, he has never, beyond once hilling the plants, bestowed
any attention on his cotton crop, and it is looking as fresh and healthy as
possible. The New Orleans and Egyptian were sown in
rich soil, and those plants are now nearly five feet in height. The Sea Island was sown in less sandy
soil, and they have not thriven so well. As many as fifty to sixty pods are on
a plant, each the size of an egg. The hot sun does not affect these
plants as it does others, for when other crops looked withered, the cotton
leaves maintained their verdure. Wynyard Times. |