To have a good plantation that gives a lot of latex,
the planter must:
To look after the plantation before tapping,
you must:
take good care of the trees;
make clearings,
that is, remove the less good trees,
and those that have not grown well;
look after the soil.
• Taking care of the trees
The trees must be:
• Disbudding
Disbudding means to remove buds that have grown.
When the scion grows, it forms a stem;
on this stem shoots appear.
All the shoots up to a height of 3 metres from the ground
must be removed.
There will then be a fine trunk
with branches only above 3 metres
that will form the crown of the tree.
(The crown is all the branches
that grow from the trunk.)
• Replacing missing trees
During the first year after planting,
trees that have not grown must be replaced.
• Pruning the trees
It may happen that a tree grows
without forming a crown of branches
at a height of 3 metres.
In that case, cut the stem at this height,
so that a crown of branches will form.
If the crown is too dense,
or if one part has more branches than another,
it must be pruned 3 or 4 years after planting.
• Making clearings
As some trees will die,
and some will be ill,
extra trees have been planted.
When tapping begins (5 years after planting),
there must be 500 trees to the hectare;
the trees should be 50 centimetres in circumference
at a height of 1 metre from the ground.
So from the second year after planting,
some trees have to be removed.
Remove about 30 trees every year
during the second, third, fourth and fifth years.
In choosing what trees to remove,
take account of the following:
• Looking after the soil
The rubber trees are planted in rows;
between the rows of trees are ground cover plants.
So you must look after the rows,
and look after the ground between the rows.
• Looking after the rows of trees
They must be cultivated with the hoe, by hand, as follows:
in the year after planting,
carry out one cultivation every 3 weeks;
in the second and third year,
one cultivation every month;
in the fourth year, one cultivation every 6 weeks;
in the fifth year, one cultivation every 2 months;
in the sixth year, one cultivation every 3 months.
If the dry season is very dry,
the number of cultivations can be reduced.
Weed killers can also be used,
making an application every 3 or 4 months.
• Looking after the ground between the rows
The ground cover plant must be cut 3 or 4 times a year
to a height of 30 or 40 centimetres.
One cutting must be done before the dry season;
the cut stems and leaves are used to mulch the rows.
You must remove weeds such as Imperata
(a herbaceous plant with hard, long, straight leaves
and very long roots).
You can pull up the Imperata by hand
and then dig up the underground roots with a pick.
If the plantation is well looked after
before tapping,
it will have fine trees
when the time for tapping comes.
But you must also take care of the plantation
after tapping begins.
To keep the plantation in a good state
after tapping has begun, you must:
• Removing unwanted trees
After about 12 years
there should be about 350 trees to the hectare.
(There were 450 when tapping began.)
Trees must be removed
one year after tapping begins;
three to four years after tapping begins;
and in the twelfth year,
so as to have 350 trees to the hectare.
• Care of the soil
By this time the rubber tree is full grown
and covers the soil well,
so that few plants grow beneath it.
All the same, the soil must be kept clear
at the base of the trees.
The cover plants between the rows
must be cut once a year.
The terraces must be kept up,
so that they do not crumble away.
By looking after the plantation well,
you will get fine trees.
But you must not let them be attacked by diseases.
The most serious disease is root rot.
It destroys the roots and makes the tree die.
The rubber tree may also be attacked by insects;
they do less serious damage.
• Control of disease of the roots
The tree may be attacked by white root rot (Fomes),
which makes the roots rot.
Then the tree dies.
It is very important to see
if white root rot has attacked a tree,
because, by the time you see that the tree is ill,
it is too late.
Control of white root rot is carried out in two stages:
• First, detecting the disease
During the first five years after planting,
twice a year, you must get freshly cut grass
and put it close up against the base of each tree.
A fortnight later, look to see
if there are little white threads on the trees
underneath the dry grass.
If you see little white threads,
the tree is ill, it has white root rot.
So you must treat it.
• Second, treatment of the disease
Dig a hole to uncover the roots of the tree,
without injuring them.
The hole should be 40 to 50 centimetres deep.
If the roots have been attacked,
the tree must be cut down and the roots taken out.
If the roots have not been attacked,
and there are only white threads on them,
you put a special product on the tap-root
and the beginnings of the side roots.
This product is called quintozene.
• Control of insects
The most dangerous insects are mites
and crickets.
The treatment for insects is to apply lindane.