When you're finished tilling, you could make one pass ACROSS each end to level it out. Then you'd only have one starting and one stopping point on each end to level out by hand.
This is what I do. Raising and lowering while in motion helps as well.
When you're finished tilling, you could make one pass ACROSS each end to level it out. Then you'd only have one starting and one stopping point on each end to level out by hand.
This is what I do. Raising and lowering while in motion helps as well.
This is also what I do, too.
If you till in alternate directions, so there are start humps next to finish troughs, then it will level out nicely.
If you till in the same direction, leaving a row of humps at one end of the garden and a row of troughs at the other, then it doesn't work so well. Sometimes I choose to till this way. To get everything even again, I use the FEL to move the hump material to the trough. Sometimes, if nobody is watching, I might even use a shovel and iron rake to get a really level surface, but that's just between us.
This is what I do if I'm tilling the whole garden up first. Most time I till and plant in sections though. So I till the ends (perpendicular) full length first. Then as I till the rows I gradually lower to begin and slowing lift the tiller at the end of the row (since the soil has already been worked) and that reduces the humps and trenches quite a bit.When you're finished tilling, you could make one pass ACROSS each end to level it out. Then you'd only have one starting and one stopping point on each end to level out by hand.