Drag harrow of sorts

   / Drag harrow of sorts #1  

Mtsoxfan

Veteran Member
Joined
Nov 19, 2021
Messages
1,136
Location
Newark Vermont
Tractor
Kioti 3520SEH Holland TC29D
I have a lot of clumps of soil on top of my grass. Created by small animals under the snow. Best way to deal with normally is with a rake, but raking tweaks my back something fierce, and this winter was brutal, so the mound quantity is immense. So, with having a section of chain link fence, I figured I create a type of harrow. The challenge is the topography of grassy area. it is not level, like a rolling hills. Small hills. So the traditional DIY harrows would not work, in my mind, due to unlevel ground.
My thought is to secure the fencing to a front "pulling pole" using some field wire, tying it at every link, rolling fencing around "pulling pole" for added security. Then, just add small weights, (I found someone dumped of some exercise rectangular weights) 1'x1' in a checkerboard pattern, so there is contact with the ground as much as possible. I've seen the 2011 thread on DIY harrows, but they look like they are for pretty flat land.
Any thoughts on this? Advise?
 
   / Drag harrow of sorts #2  
Try fastening log to fence near the front than log half the weight near end of the fence.
 
   / Drag harrow of sorts #3  
This is a cheap fix
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   / Drag harrow of sorts #4  
This is cheaper

 
   / Drag harrow of sorts #5  
Chain link fence harrows work very well in all types of situations. Go for it.
 
   / Drag harrow of sorts #6  
I was thinking used tires would make good flexible weights for chain link, but have never tried this.
 
   / Drag harrow of sorts #7  
A few years back i used a railroad tie with chain link fence and it worked pretty good.

I think there was around 8 to ten feet of fence. IIRC I was going to add a landscape timber or concrete blocks to the rear of the fence but decided I didn't need it.
 
   / Drag harrow of sorts #8  
I was thinking used tires would make good flexible weights for chain link, but have never tried this.
I’ve always had pretty good results with using a pipe on each end to keep the fencing open and flat. Wire the fence links to the pipe.
 
   / Drag harrow of sorts
  • Thread Starter
#9  
Thanks, like I said, the topography is very wavy. A straight bar/timber will only scalp the tops of bumps. Tires could work, I just don't want tires hanging around. The straight bars front and rear sounds like good ideas for keeping the surface area of fencing in shape. I picked up the rectangle weights last evening, I'm sure my neighbor/friend will appreciate me picking up someone else's trash from his property. Again, this is just to smooth out the dirt "trails" animals left under the snow. I should have it assembled this morning, after garage warms up, and give it a run this afternoon, before snow comes back tonight...
 
   / Drag harrow of sorts #10  
Give us pics and a follow up report
 

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