If there is one fruit that Queensland
can grow to perfection, it is undoubtedly the pineapple.
This is not merely my own personal opinion, but is
the universal admission of all who are qualified to
judge. On many occasions I have taken men thoroughly
conversant with pineapple-growing, and who knew what
a good fruit really is, through some of our plantations,
where I have given them fruit to test, and, without
exception, they have had no hesitation in saying that
they have never tasted better fruit. Our fruit
has a firmness, freedom from fibre, and a flavour
that is hard to beat. It is an excellent canning
fruit, superior in this respect to the Singapore article,
which it surpasses in flavour. This is admitted
by English and European buyers, and its superiority
is bound eventually to result in a great increase in
canning and the establishment of large works run on
thoroughly up-to-date lines.
Like the banana, the pineapple is
a tropical fruit, and is very sensitive to cold, hence
its culture is confined to frostless districts.
It is grown all along our eastern seaboard, where,
when planted in suitable soils and under suitable
conditions, it is, undoubtedly, our hardiest fruit,
and is practically immune from any serious disease.
Its culture is entirely in the open, no shelter whatever
being given, so that we are not put to the great expense
that growers of this fruit in Florida and some other
pineapple-producing countries must incur if they wish
to secure a crop. Here we have no severe freeze-outs,
and, though dry spells retard the growth at times,
we have never suffered any serious injury from this
cause. In the Southern part of the State, the
coolness of the winter retards growth somewhat,
and occasionally the tops of the leaves and young
fruit are slightly injured, particularly in low-lying
land, or where the plants are growing on land having
a cold subsoil. When grown under more favourable
conditions, however, they sustain no injury, and produce
fruit, more or less, all the year round. Pines
are always in season, though there are times when they
are comparatively scarce. There are usually two
main crops a year viz., a summer and a
winter crop. The former is the heavier of the
two, and the fruit is decidedly the best, as its sugar
contents are much higher. The main summer crop
ripens in the North from the beginning of November,
and in the South from January to as late as March
in some seasons. The main winter crop is usually
at its best in July and August, but there is always
more or less fruit during the other months of the year.
The pineapple likes a warm, free, well-drained soil,
that is free from frost in winter, and that will not
become soured by heavy rain during summer. Sandy
loams are, therefore, our best pineapple soils, though
it does well on free loams of basaltic or alluvial
origin. Unlike the banana, the pineapple does
not do too well in newly burnt off scrub land, owing
to the difficulty in working the ground and keeping
it clean. It requires a thorough preparation
of the soil prior to planting in order to be grown
to perfection. In the case of new land of suitable
texture, the timber should all be burnt off, and all
stumps and roots taken out of the soil, which should
then be carefully broken up and reduced to a fine
tilth, all weed or grass growth being destroyed.
It should then be again ploughed, and, if possible,
subsoiled, so as to permit of the roots penetrating
the ground to a fair depth instead of their merely
depending on the few top inches of surface soil.
Careful preparation of the land and deep stirring
prior to planting will be found to pay well, and turn
out far the cheapest in the end. Given suitable
soil, well prepared, the growing of pineapples is
not at all difficult, as the plants soon take root,
and once they became established, they prove themselves
to be extremely hardy. Pines will grow and thrive
on comparatively poor soil, provided it is of suitable
texture, but in such soils it is necessary to supplement
the plant food in the soil by the addition of manures,
if large fruit and heavy crops are to be obtained.
Pineapples are propagated by means of suckers coming
from the base of fruit-bearing plants, or from smaller
suckers, or, as they are termed, robbers or gill sprouts
that start from the fruiting stem just at the base
of the fruit. They are also sometimes propagated
by means of the crown, but this method is usually
considered too slow. Well-developed suckers are
usually preferred, as these come into bearing earliest,
but equally good, if not better, returns are obtained
by planting gill sprouts. The latter have the
advantage in that they always develop a good root
system before showing signs of fruit, hence their first
crop is always a good one, and the fruit is of the
best, whereas suckers sometimes start flowering as
soon as they are planted, before they are properly
established, with the result that the first fruit is
small and inferior, and the plants have to throw out
fresh suckers before a good crop is produced.
Gill sprouts are slower in coming into bearing than
suckers, but the results are usually more satisfactory.
Like the banana, once a pineapple plant has borne
fruit the fruiting stalk dies down, and its place
is taken by one or more suckers, which in their turn
bear fruit and die. Pineapples are planted in
Queensland in several ways, but by far the most common
method is to set the suckers out in single or double
rows, from 8 to 9 feet apart, with the plants at from
1 to 2 feet apart in the row. The rows soon increase
in width by the growth of suckers, and the throwing
up of ratoons surface roots thrown off from
the original plant, which send up plants from below
the ground as distinct from suckers, which come from
the base or even higher up the stem of a fruiting
plant. It is not at all an uncommon thing to see
the rows grown together, so that the plantation appears
to be a solid mass of plants, but pathways have to
be kept between the rows to permit of gathering the
fruit, manuring, &c. Pineapples have been grown
in the Brisbane district for the past sixty years,
and I have been shown beds of plants that have not
been replanted for over forty years that are still
producing good fruit. This shows how well at home
this fruit is with us; but, in my opinion, it is not
desirable to keep the plants so long in the same ground,
as the finest fruit is always obtained from comparatively
young plantations, the older ones producing too large
a proportion of small fruit. From the Brisbane
district this fruit has spread all over the eastern
coast, and its production is increasing rapidly in
several districts. Once the pine is planted, its
cultivation is comparatively simple. If in single
or double rows, all weed growth is kept down between
the plants, and the ground between the rows is kept
in a state of good cultivation by means of ploughing
or cultivating, the soil being worked towards the
rows so as to encourage the formation of suckers low
down on the fruiting plants. Manure is given when
necessary, the manure being worked in on either side
of the rows.
The pineapple comes into bearing early,
and, except where suckers throw fruit as soon as planted,
bear their first crop in from twelve to twenty months,
according to the type of suckers planted and the time
of year at which they are set. Practically every
sucker will produce a fruit at the first fruiting,
and these will be followed by succeeding crops, borne
on the successive crops of suckers, so that when the
whole of the ground is occupied by plants, the returns
are very heavy. One thousand dozen marketable
fruits is by no means an unusual crop for Queen pines
in a plantation in full bearing, and, taking these
at an average of 2-1/2 lb. each, you get a return
of 30,000 lb., or 15 tons American per acre. The
illustrations herewith give a good general idea of
the usual method of growing pines, and the method
of handling and marketing, as well as of the nature
of the country on which they are grown. The illustrations
are mostly of smooth-leaved pines, which bear a fruit
averaging from 6 to 8 lb. each, but occasionally running
up to as much as 14 to 16 lb., though the latter is
an extreme weight. The single pine shown is just
under 12 lb. Several kinds of pines are grown,
which are generally classified into roughs and smooths.
The rough, or rough-leaved pines, such as the Common
Queen and Ripley Queen, and local seedlings raised
from them, are very prolific, and though not equal
in size and appearance to the smooth-leaved Cayenne,
our principal smooth-leaved kind, are usually considered
to be of superior flavour, and to be better for canning
or preserving. Rough pines run up to as much as
6 lb. weight each, but this is uncommon, the best
average I have met with being about 4 lb. per pine,
and they were exceptionally good. The price at
which this fruit sells here seems absurd to those
living in cold countries, who are accustomed to look
upon it as a luxury only found on the tables of the
wealthy, as good rough-leaved pines are worth about
1s. per dozen during the summer season, and smooth-leaved
pines from 1d. to 2d. a dozen. Prices
are certainly higher during the off-season, but growers
would be well satisfied to get 1s. per dozen for rough
pines all the year round. I have no hesitation
in saying that pines can be grown at a profit at from
L3 to L4 per ton, so that the cost of growing is so
low that there is nothing to prevent us from canning
the fruit and selling it at a price that will defy
competition.
Pineapple-growing has been a very
profitable industry, particularly in the older plantations
of the Brisbane district, and still continues to be
so in many places despite the fact that prices are
much lower now than they were some years since.
The plantations from which the illustrations are taken
are comparatively new ones, the land having been in
its virgin state from six to eight years ago, and,
as shown, some is only now being cleared. The
owners of the plantations started without capital,
and, by dint of hard work and perseverance, are now
reaping an excellent return of some L50 per acre net
profit. This is by no means an isolated example,
but is one that is typical of what can be done, and
has therefore been chosen. There is a great opening
for the culture of this fruit in Queensland, and its
cultivation is capable of being extended to a practically
unlimited extent. We have a large amount of land
suitable for the growth of this fruit that is available
in different parts of the State, much of it at very
reasonable rates, so that there is no difficulty in
this direction for anyone wishing to make a start.
It is an industry from which returns are quickly obtained,
and is a branch of fruit-growing that holds out strong
inducements and every prospect of success to intending
growers. At present our production is about sufficient
for our presently existing markets, but there is nothing
to prevent these markets being widely extended.
Our present means of utilising our surplus fruits,
by canning or otherwise preserving same, are by no
means as complete or up to date as they should be,
and before they can become so, it is necessary to greatly
increase our output. Small works cost too much
to run as compared with large canning establishments,
hence we are not yet in a position to make the most
of our fruit. With increased production we will
have an increase in the facilities for utilising the
fruit. This requires labour, and there is right
here an opening for many industrious workers, a business
that I have no doubt will pay from the start, a business
of which we have the Australian monopoly, and in which
there is no reason that I can see in which we should
not compete satisfactorily in the markets of the world.
Queensland possesses many advantages
respecting the growth of this fruit as compared with
other countries in which it is grown commercially,
which may be briefly enumerated as follows:
1st. Freedom
from loss by freeze-outs;
2nd. The
ease with which the fruit can be grown, and its freedom
from disease;
3rd. The
large area of land suitable to its culture, and the
low
price at which suitable
land can be obtained;
4th. The
fine quality of the fruit;
5th. The
superiority of our fruit for canning purposes;
6th. The
low price at which it can be produced, and the heavy
crops that can be grown.
These are enough reasons to show that
in the pineapple we have a fruit well suited to our
soil and climate, a fruit in the cultivation of which
there is room for great extension, and which will provide
a living for many industrious settlers.