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PREPARING THE GROUND AND MAKING THE PLANTATION

To make a good plantation, you must:

Preparing the soil

Choose deep soil that is never flooded.

Then the tap-root of the rubber tree
can go down well into the soil.

Once the site is chosen, you have to:

  Clearing the ground

Remove the trees by grubbing them.
Take the earth away round the base of each tree
and cut the roots.
Then the tree will fall, pulling out its stump.

At the beginning of the dry season,
do any burning that is necessary.

  Staking the rows

This means putting stakes
where the trees are to be planted.
If the ground slopes,
the stakes must be placed along the contour lines.
Put the stakes 2 metres apart in each row.
Make the rows 8 metres apart.
This will give 625 plants on 1 hectare.

After this,
you must put the grubbed-out trees between the rows.

  Making terraces on the contour lines

When the ground slopes,
terraces must be made along the contour lines
to prevent erosion.

Take away the soil above the stake
and put it lower down.
The terrace should be 2 metres wide.
Dig a trench 0.35 metre deep and 0.35 metre wide.
Make the terrace slope
a little against the slope of the land.
The stake is 1.40 metres from the trench.

Everything must be finished
by the beginning of the rainy season before planting.

At the beginning of the rainy season,
sow cover crop plants between the terraces.
In forested country use Tithonia diversifolia,
in savanna, plant Pueraria.

The site is then ready for the plantation.

Putting the young plants in the plantation

At the beginning of the rainy season,
put the young plants in the plantation.

A month before planting,
make holes at the points marked by the stakes.

The holes should be 60 centimetres deep,
60 centimetres long and 60 centimetres wide.
The bottom soil must be kept separate
from the top soil.

Refill the hole 10 days before planting,
putting the bottom soil down below.

Take out the young plants in the nursery
by cutting the tap-root at a depth of 70 centimetres.

Then trim the plant as follows:

Then make a hole with a dibber.
Push the tap-root into the soil at the bottom of the hole,
and pack the soil well all round the tap-root.
The plant must stand upright.

Then fill up the hole,
putting back a little soil and pressing it down well.
You must put only a little soil at a time
and press it well down as you go on.


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