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953 nut

TRACTOR TRIVIA and other interesting stuff 1/8/2024

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JoeM

Spent a little time riding around on a set of harrows. When I was a kid one of my friends had a small farm and raised potatoes. When they harvested the potatoes, his dad would run the harrows down the rows to loosen dirt. Me and Steve rode on the harrows for added weight.  We would drag burlap sacks and start picking.  Odd but worked. 

I would say you can't do that today. 

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ebinmaine

Very interesting. I've been around Farms of various sizes my whole life but never participated actively.

I really had no idea what most of these tools were used for and when, until I joined up on this site. The only thing I had ever seen used for farming directly involved in my own life was my grandparents with a rototiller. A lot of folks in New England, especially on Side Hill country, don't use a dirt turning plow because the soil just isn't friendly to it. 

 

 

I'll be very much looking forward to seeing what other implements pop up and how they are put to use.

 

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953 nut
7 hours ago, ebinmaine said:

A lot of folks in New England, especially on Side Hill country, don't use a dirt turning plow because the soil just isn't friendly to it.

I will be covering No Till farming in a couple days. Our family farm in upstate NY stopped turning the soil over twenty years ago and the results have been wonderful. 

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ebinmaine
3 minutes ago, 953 nut said:

I will be covering No Till farming in a couple days. Our family farm in upstate NY stopped turning the soil over twenty years ago and the results have been wonderful. 

 

Excellent Richard.  Thank you.  

 

Trina has a Single Ripper Spike we'll be using in combination with...  (probably a rototiller??) 

Then go over the top with a disc.  

 

I'll be looking forward to seeing your No Til information.  

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Handy Don
19 hours ago, 953 nut said:

I will be covering No Till farming in a couple days. Our family farm in upstate NY stopped turning the soil over twenty years ago and the results have been wonderful. 

I was a systems consultant on an engagement at Case IH Corporation just as they got “deeply” into No Till farming equipment. Really fascinating to see the amount of research and development that informed the engineering and production methods. They were expanding to make “Red" a significant global competitor to the big “Green" and technical innovation was a big part of their game plan.

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Sailman

Growing up on a working farm in NE Iowa in the 60's we always used a 3 step field prep before planting. My dad went first with the 3 or 4 bottom plow to turn the furrow, my brother followed with the disc to break down the furrows and I finished with the "drag" that broke up the clumps and left a smoother, finer finish for planting.

I'm sure the no till is much more prevalent today.

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Handy Don
1 hour ago, Sailman said:

I'm sure the no till is much more prevalent today.

A year ago I visited a vineyard that was experimenting with techniques to overcome the increasingly dry climate in their area (southeastern Spain). Grapevines' roots can extend quite deeply into the ground, depending on the soil conditions--easily as far as six to eight feet. But grapes need a LOT of moisture at the right time in the growing season to thrive. The ground crew had started using a light, narrow tractor with a subsoiler/ripper to put two-foot-deep “slots” into the ground between the vines that would catch rainfall before it could run off. They had also begun maintaining, instead of killing or scraping, the low ground cover between the rows to lessen soil erosion and evaporation.

Of course thorough “scientific" sampling of the wine ensued and was deemed successful!

Edited by Handy Don
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ebinmaine
1 hour ago, Handy Don said:

The ground crew had started using a light, narrow tractor with a subsoiler/ripper to put two-foot-deep “slots” into the ground between the vines that would catch rainfall before it could run off.  

 

I've seen videos of vineyards in the western US doing that. 

Seems to work well.  

They occasionally need to call in dozers  as big as Cat D11s to make the grooves.  

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