A couple of years ago, we purchased 6 acres of farm land surrounding our property. Long story short, I let it go to weeds and just mowed it, just as a quick "fix." I would like to smooth it out and plant grass on it all. It was last planted in beans so it's not as rough as the corn would have been, but it still busts my kidneys when I mow out there. So here are my questions:
First, can I till it all, or do I need to plow/disc it? The ground is rocky in the front acre or two, I have removed a great deal of grapefruit sized and larger rocks but I think I have most of the big ones out of there.
I had a local farmer offer to plant alfalfa on all of the land on his dime, but I have to let him harvest it for 4 or 5 years to recover his money, so he says. I would rather do it myself and be in control of it all myself than to hire it out. In that time period you never know what you might want to do.
Second, what would be a good grass to plant out there? It's basically open to the sun, with large trees on the South side. The North side is bordered by the remaining farmed land which will be planted in beans this year. I'm in Indiana if that helps, and the ground here is what the lady from the Conservation district called "stone lick" if I'm remembering correctly. It drains extremely well, it's sandy and of course, has rocks as I described above. The rear 4 acres borders a river and the land back there is healthier looking, just from digging around back there and observing it first hand.
I don't currently have any animals but my wife wants miniature horses at some point. If I could plant something that they would like AND it looked good, that would be great. The horses are not 100% going to happen, so I'm not basing what I plant on them, but I just wanted to throw that out there just in case. Our main goal for now is to smooth out the ground and plant something out there that's uniform rather than let the weeds dominate it all.
I have literally tons of good soil I could spread on the land if that would help. I'm sure I need to do some kind of soil test(s) but for now I just kind of want some expert opinions. I'm hoping that tilling would be a suitable option. It would give me a reason to buy a tiller this spring (which I could also use on our garden), plus give me seat time on the tractor.
My current equipment is: Kubota L3400, 5' rock rake, 5' rear blade, 5' brush hog and a 7 bushel (I think it's 7 bushel, it's fairly large) 3pt broadcast spreader.
I might be able to concoct a way to water it all, that's a topic for another thread. I suppose initially I would have to rely on mother nature.
What would you experienced guys do here? All opinions and ideas are welcome, and if you could offer up economical ideas (such as what's the best seed for the money), that would be great as well as ideas when to till or plow and when to plant, etc. All ideas are welcome here!
First, can I till it all, or do I need to plow/disc it? The ground is rocky in the front acre or two, I have removed a great deal of grapefruit sized and larger rocks but I think I have most of the big ones out of there.
I had a local farmer offer to plant alfalfa on all of the land on his dime, but I have to let him harvest it for 4 or 5 years to recover his money, so he says. I would rather do it myself and be in control of it all myself than to hire it out. In that time period you never know what you might want to do.
Second, what would be a good grass to plant out there? It's basically open to the sun, with large trees on the South side. The North side is bordered by the remaining farmed land which will be planted in beans this year. I'm in Indiana if that helps, and the ground here is what the lady from the Conservation district called "stone lick" if I'm remembering correctly. It drains extremely well, it's sandy and of course, has rocks as I described above. The rear 4 acres borders a river and the land back there is healthier looking, just from digging around back there and observing it first hand.
I don't currently have any animals but my wife wants miniature horses at some point. If I could plant something that they would like AND it looked good, that would be great. The horses are not 100% going to happen, so I'm not basing what I plant on them, but I just wanted to throw that out there just in case. Our main goal for now is to smooth out the ground and plant something out there that's uniform rather than let the weeds dominate it all.
I have literally tons of good soil I could spread on the land if that would help. I'm sure I need to do some kind of soil test(s) but for now I just kind of want some expert opinions. I'm hoping that tilling would be a suitable option. It would give me a reason to buy a tiller this spring (which I could also use on our garden), plus give me seat time on the tractor.
My current equipment is: Kubota L3400, 5' rock rake, 5' rear blade, 5' brush hog and a 7 bushel (I think it's 7 bushel, it's fairly large) 3pt broadcast spreader.
I might be able to concoct a way to water it all, that's a topic for another thread. I suppose initially I would have to rely on mother nature.
What would you experienced guys do here? All opinions and ideas are welcome, and if you could offer up economical ideas (such as what's the best seed for the money), that would be great as well as ideas when to till or plow and when to plant, etc. All ideas are welcome here!