Vanilla culture as practiced in the Seychelles Islands
| Language | en |
|---|---|
| First published | 2025-10-11 |
| Rights | Public domain in the USA. |
| Gutenberg ID | #77026 |
Description
Vanilla culture as practiced in the Seychelles Islands by S. J. Galbraith is a scientific agricultural bulletin written in the late 19th century. It explains the practical cultivation and processing of vanilla, emphasizing climate, soil, planting systems, hand pollination, curing, and marketing, with guidance shaped by experience in the Seychelles. The bulletin opens with a warning by D. G. Fairchild about a devastating fungous disease and the need to exclude it from new growing regions, then presents Galbraith’s field-tested methods. He describes the Seychelles’ humid, warm conditions and suitable soils; advocates wider spacing and training vines on individual support trees to reduce disease; and explains how to start a vanillery using long cuttings, mulching, shading, and careful tying and lowering of vines. He details preparing vines for flowering by timely checking of growth to align with a short dry spell, then outlines precise hand pollination, prudent fruit set per vine, and harvest cues to avoid splitting. The curing method features brief hot-water scalds, sweating in blankets, and slow drying through a heated, then warm, then cool room, followed by sorting by length and quality, neat bundling, and tin packing. Practical notes cover variable yields tied to weather, labor organization, pruning, replanting from cuttings, alternative sun-curing, and root mulching strategies. A closing summary lists ideal conditions and step-by-step best practices for culture, cropping, curing, and marketing. (This is an automatically generated summary.)