[AT] garden question; potatoes

charlie hill charliehill at embarqmail.com
Wed Jun 19 05:34:47 PDT 2013


That's what disc harrows are made for!

-----Original Message----- 
From: David Bruce
Sent: Wednesday, June 19, 2013 7:37 AM
To: Antique tractor email discussion group
Subject: Re: [AT] garden question; potatoes

For us it is either in winter wheat stubble as Charlie suggests or a few
times planted earlier in a field that was allowed to lay fallow over the
winter.  Winter wheat harvest started here last weekend and now that we
should have a couple dry days I'm sure it will continue followed quickly
by planting soybeans.  Things in general running a bit later this year.

A few years ago I was working in a customer's textile plant just outside
Dillard, GA.  The valley between that operation and the Dillard House (a
tourist attraction with a huge and great country breakfast) was planted
with cabbage for fall harvest.  One trip I was there about a week after
the harvest when the remains were beginning to rot.  Quite a stench.
Needless to say we did not work with that mill during leaf peeper season.

David
NW NC

On 6/19/2013 6:34 AM, charlie hill wrote:
> That's interesting John.  We never see that happen here, 140 miles or so
> from you.
> I believe over in the mid-west folks plant soybeans early before they 
> plant
> corn.
> Here we plant them usually in the stubble of winter wheat sometime in late
> may
> or up to about June 20th.  I guess you plant about the same as us.
>
> Charlie
>
> -----Original Message-----
> From: jtchall at nc.rr.com
> Sent: Tuesday, June 18, 2013 9:44 PM
> To: Antique tractor email discussion group
> Subject: Re: [AT] garden question; potatoes
>
> I can relate to that one, often our late soybeans are barely starting to
> turn yellow when a killing frost comes, stinks pretty bad the next couple
> days, but probably no where near as bad as what you experienced.
>
> John Hall
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