bigtiller
Super Member
- Joined
- Feb 1, 2006
- Messages
- 6,492
- Location
- central Iowa
- Tractor
- John Deere 2720 John Deere 3039R John Deere Z545R
I did it once and I advise to not waist your time doing it. The tiller will just bounce up/down.
We had an early Easter one year and a customer just had to get his potatoes planted on Good Friday. So he removed eight, 5x5 round bails of hay from his garden the morning before I came to do the tilling.
It was a sunny 50 degree day and the garden tilled up great, except for where the hay was stored. That ground was still frozen.
I ran 3 passes over that spot, getting less than an inch deep, and all I worked up was thin slivers of soil that the sun quickly turned into a greasy mess.
We had an early Easter one year and a customer just had to get his potatoes planted on Good Friday. So he removed eight, 5x5 round bails of hay from his garden the morning before I came to do the tilling.
It was a sunny 50 degree day and the garden tilled up great, except for where the hay was stored. That ground was still frozen.
I ran 3 passes over that spot, getting less than an inch deep, and all I worked up was thin slivers of soil that the sun quickly turned into a greasy mess.