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Yes, I can tell your a city farmer.
1. "Save Your Money"!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
2. "It's your money"!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
3. "Read the entire flail mower thread"!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
a. yes its must.
4. Talk to Joel at Earth Tools!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
5. read number one, read number two, read number three, read number four, read number five 6 times.
Do you really have the time, money, will, and good weather to do this????
OK if your starting with two acres I would only invest in a 2 wheel mule like the BCS853 with a rotary plow and the widest BCS flailmower. you can cover a lot of ground with a Berta flail mower and a BCS 853 as long as your willing to invest in the time needed.
The rotary plow on a BCS or Grillo two wheel mule will let you till below the hardpan at 14 inches deep and eliminate compaction every year.
You will need lime and gypsum to dissolve the clay and reduce the acidity of the soil.
Forget about rolling your cover crops they wont stay down unless cut them or you till them in!!!
You can build raised beds with the rotary plow and plow 14 inches deep and till in tall cover crops in one pass.
You need to "spend a lot of time talking to Joel" at Earth Tools to do this the right way.
You can always invest in a four wheel drive Series One JD or a Kubota 1870 later and add implements "as you can afford them".
You may end up with an walk behind German import flail mower that is branded as an ORECK flailmower.
BUT you will be limited as to what you can purchase for attachments for the ORECK Flail Mower being a rotary mower attachment.
You can do a lot of work with a two wheel mule like a BCS gas or diesel or Grillo gas or diesel mule with implements that are used in Europe in many small farms on a daily basis.
If you have a sulky to ride on the mowing is easy and will go quickly if you mow in spirals to recut the brush and grass.
Your going to spend less money this way and will allow you to build a truck farm garden with narrow raised beds that will choke out weeds quickly with the crops as they will grow much quicker blocking out the sun on the ground killing the weed seedlings.
It works, I have done it, I will do it again this coming season with my TroyBuilt tiller.
The whole reason I'm even talking about 4 wheel tractors at all is that when I called EarthTools and described what I wanted to do, they told me to go 4 wheel!! He said I'd be putting in a solid week of tilling from sunup to sundown, just for 1 acre, and that's if the weather cooperates. The guy at EarthTools made me rethink my whole plan and readjust everything for 4 foot beds (+1ft path) and 3pt hitch implements and tractor. Originally, yes, I'd planned everything for the 2-wheeler!
As for saving money... actually it'll come out to be about the same, because I'm using an old $400 chisel plow, the tractors are more like $3000-3500 instead for $4000 for BCS (I'm looking at vintage Ford 660s, etc), the Caroni mower costs about the same as the little Berta, and yes the larger harrow does end up about $4000 but that's offset by the cheaper tillage implement. If I really wanted to save money I could use an old disc harrow for like $300, an option I do not have for the BCS. But then I'd be spending a lot more time in the tractor seat, going back and forth with multiple passes.
I have the time - this will be a fulltime career for me. But I want to make sure that my time is used efficiently. If I'm spending too much time operating machinery that's too small for the job, that's that much less time I'm spending harvesting and selling.
Pam Dawling (who writes for Growing for Market) has been successfully rolling cover crops by turning off the PTO on the flail mower.