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Disc vs tiller
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<blockquote data-quote="JCDEERMAN" data-source="post: 5223531" data-attributes="member: 5787"><p>Exact same scenario here. We've worked our fields (9 acres total) for 22 years now. They don't hardly have a rock in them now from being thrown off into the woods. Now, the newly-added 11 acres that was hardwoods 4 months ago will be a work in progress. All ridge-top as well. We plan on liming/fertilizing in Jan-Mar (whenever it is dry enough) in hopes there will be a ton of green tonnage growing up on into May. Then drilling soybeans and spraying a couple weeks later. Love the no till method, no matter which way you do it.</p><p></p><p>I'm on a lease on the plateau with my FIL and he got a tiller over the summer. That worked really well until the ground bent one of the tiller blades causing it to bang on the side wall every time it turned. We had to get a maul and hammer it back in two separate times.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="JCDEERMAN, post: 5223531, member: 5787"] Exact same scenario here. We've worked our fields (9 acres total) for 22 years now. They don't hardly have a rock in them now from being thrown off into the woods. Now, the newly-added 11 acres that was hardwoods 4 months ago will be a work in progress. All ridge-top as well. We plan on liming/fertilizing in Jan-Mar (whenever it is dry enough) in hopes there will be a ton of green tonnage growing up on into May. Then drilling soybeans and spraying a couple weeks later. Love the no till method, no matter which way you do it. I'm on a lease on the plateau with my FIL and he got a tiller over the summer. That worked really well until the ground bent one of the tiller blades causing it to bang on the side wall every time it turned. We had to get a maul and hammer it back in two separate times. [/QUOTE]
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