[Farmall] O/T...but serendipity
farmall36 at vci.net
farmall36 at vci.net
Mon Nov 19 16:30:56 PST 2007
James, you better Not use the tiller at all. I think some spring oats or
cover crop wheat. Sowed in febuary would be a good start, just chisel plow
it and disc it ahead of time. Then the freezes will pull the seed in, add a
few # of clover also. That will make some good plow down about June, add
good organic matter to the soil.
Lime it sometime this winter before you chisel and disc
I would hold off on any fertilizer untill the seed is up 6"
and go light on the nitrogen and heavy on the potash - potassium. Like
10/60/60 just about 100# to the acre combined or less your field your
choice.
Just my opinion, but it has worked for me in the past.
Kevin Mosier
PS/ hear you have an elderly IHC 340 that you may part with ? If so you can
email me about it or send a ph # and I will give you a call.
Take care.
----- Original Message -----
From: "James Moran" <jrmoraninc at yahoo.com>
To: "Farmall/IHC mailing list" <farmall at lists.antique-tractor.com>
Sent: Monday, November 19, 2007 9:01 AM
Subject: Re: [Farmall] O/T...but serendipity
> Interesting point. Well...the main reason why there is this preponderance
> of stones/rocks within the "intended area" is due to that scraping
> (topsoil removal) activity many years ago. Now, if you can envision
> this...the total "front field" is on the order of about 5 acres. The
> front 1/3 (or so) and the rear 1/3 (closer to our house and a fairly wide
> strip that runs along the driveway (maybe 800 feet) supports grass very
> well with very minor rock outcroppings. These described portions "border"
> the "crappy-clay", which is maybe two or so acres in what one might call a
> "random shape" (not a neat rectangle, if you get me). So...to return the
> field to NATURAL would, I guess, command hauling in tons of topsoil and
> spreading is evenly (undoing the scraping, so to speak). This would be
> very costly, time consuming, and (frankly) the idea of profuse wildflower
> color (and the new wildlife that would be attracted) really appeals to
> us.
> To your point(s)...yes, I know that the frost will (annually) heave the
> rocks about and, in terms of "amount", there is a lot and they vary in
> size widely. One concern, I guess, would be that, if I opted to try to
> bust up and "invigorate" the soil with a 540 PTO rear tiller, the "effect"
> upon the tiller by the stones would be negative. Optionally, I could
> merely disc or chisel plow the surface down a few inches and, then
> spread/cut in some sort of appropriate mulch material.
> Sure, I would rather NOT spend days out there prying up rocks and dumping
> them elsewhere.
> We'll see and thanks for your comments (and any more advice/suggestions
> you and others might offer).
>
> szabelsk at gdls.com wrote: If the intent is to return the field to as
> natural a state as possible, I
> would not take the time and effort to remove and rocks/stones. They are
> natural. Also, unless you plan to make the rock/stone removal a yearly
> effort, you are still probably going to have rocks/stones every year when
> the frost causes them to surface. But then I don't know how many
> rocks/stones you have to deal with, so this is up to you. Depending on how
> many and what size of rock/stone you are dealing with, you may be able to
> sell them off and use the proceeds to offset other costs.
>
> Carl Szabelski
>
>
>
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