Using a Rotary Hoe on your hay field?
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- čas přidán 26. 07. 2024
- Using a Rotary Hoe on your hay field? We do this to break up surface or top soil compaction, allow nutrients and air to enter the root systems more easily, and break up any clumps from manure we spread on our hayfield. The rotary hoe has been very useful for this and we are loving the results!
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Equipment used on our farm:
2017 Polaris Ranger 1000XP
2004 Chevy Silverado 3500
2002 Bobcat S250
2000 Tunitti 10 wheel V rake with kicker wheel
2000 M&W 1815 Rotary Hoe
1992 John Deere 1360 MoCo
1991 Bush Hog 2615 Batwing
1984 Allis Chalmers 8030 with Westendorf TA-46 Loader
1978 Gehl Bale 1500A Round Baler
1970's Kelly Ryan manure spreader (the politician)
Various Implements:
Bale Spikes
Subsoiler/Ripper
Bale Unroller
When I was on the farm we used a rotary hoe a couple times we had a couple soybean fields that got heavy rain on right after we planted and it got really hot and dry before the seeds could get out of the ground so we had to use it to crack the top layer of hard soil so when the plant tried to climb out it didn’t break its little stem/neck lol 😂 great video buddy that should work great for what you’re trying to do thanks for sharing
That is a great use for them as well! I have heard of several folks using them for that! Thanks for watching! and for the comment too!
You are doing what we do each season using a Aerator made by Industrus America that stabs bigger holes allowing everything you stated but with one added benifit, With Hybrid Bermuda grass it cuts the under ground rhyzones stimulating the runner to grow new plants, more stems more leaves..... Ceased Row cropping Cotton and peanuts 6 years ago to sell hay commercially..... Yearly average is about 10 4x5 rounds from 200 acres...........
It works pretty dang well for us.
We use a pasture renovator. It rips down about 12” to get past hard pan. Only problem is when I get where we have shallow rock it brakes the shear bolts and gotta do quick repair. I have learned where the rock is and just stay away from it. Also you need a lot of horsepower for them. Thanks for sharing.
As mentioned in the video any kind of tillage brings up tons of rocks here in south central Missouri. The rocks are literally everywhere and realistically anything that turns dirt over is going to be a rock picking fest. You will see in our later videos from last year when we made a new hayfield on some land that we will be farming. It's unfortunate but just how our ground is.
From all the broomsedge in the field, it needs lime badly! Or you could brush hog it early to promote grass growth and help choke out the broomsedge.
Soil tests would show our souls are healthy and not lacking any nutrients. We have limed it to bring it back to healthy soil, the problem is that when you have a strong stand of broomsedge it takes time to overtake it with other grasses. Last year we did not do a second cut which helps the broomsedge but there were other warm season grasses we wanted to let seed out
@Freedom Farms If your soil test say it's good then I'd go with it.
@@jonathanfrecking1210 that's our plan