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It
is a cheerful sight to see the workers, men and women,
dressed in all the colors of the rainbow, trooping out from
their quarters to begin the day's work. The tapping must be
done early in the day, for the latex or rubber juice stops
flowing a few hours after sunrise.
When
the trees reach eighteen inches in girth at a point eighteen
inches from the ground, they are ready for tapping. This
growth is usually attained when the trees are about five
years old.
In
tapping, a narrow strip of bark is cut away with a knife,
the cut extending diagonally one-quarter of the way around
the tree. At each succeeding day's tapping the tapper widens
the cut by stripping off a sliver of bark one-twentieth of
an inch in width. He must be careful not to cut into the
wood of the tree, as such cuts not only injure the tree but
permit the sap to run into the latex and spoil the rubber.
When the tapper has made the proper gash in the bark he
inserts a little spout to carry the dripping latex to a
glass cup beneath.
Later
in the morning the workers make the rounds of the trees with
large milk cans, gathering the latex from the cups. When the
cans are full they are carried to a collecting station,
called a Coagulation Shed. It is as clean and well kept as a
dairy. Here the latex is weighed, and when each collector
has been credited with the amount he has brought, it is
dumped into huge vats.
The
next step is to extract the particles of rubber from the
latex and to harden them. The jungle method of hardening
rubber is to dip a wooden paddle in the latex and smoke it
over a fire of wood and palm nuts. It is a back-breaking
process to cover the paddle with layer after layer, until a
good-sized lump, usually called a "biscuit," is
formed. The plantation method is a quicker and cleaner one.
Into the vats is poured a small quantity of acid, which
causes the rubber "cream" to coagulate and come to
the surface. The "coagulum," as it is called, is
like snow-white dough. It is removed from the vats and run
in sheets through machines which squeeze out the moisture
and imprint on them a criss-cross pattern to expose as large
a surface as possible to the air.
These
sheets of rubber are then hung in smoke houses and smoked
from eight to fourteen days in much the same way that we
smoke hams and bacon. After being dried in this way they are
pressed into bales or packed in boxes ready for shipment.
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