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Agricultural Matters
What is "heavy" land?
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<blockquote data-quote="teslacoils" data-source="post: 6858189" data-attributes="member: 127792"><p>It can be really ace. It's a sod to remember be, but you can take it out of work really easy. Extra weight is often a good thing on the plough here. Most of the time it does very little. One day I will take every other Tyne off and replace the remaining with brackets to hold a 1" cultivator point. This won't weather now. Best bet will be either hit it right with the power Harrow, or let it bake and smash it up with the press. Forecast would suggest we won't crop it, but it is coming a legume fallow / red clover ley so no rush. Want a flush of crap off it first anyway.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="teslacoils, post: 6858189, member: 127792"] It can be really ace. It's a sod to remember be, but you can take it out of work really easy. Extra weight is often a good thing on the plough here. Most of the time it does very little. One day I will take every other Tyne off and replace the remaining with brackets to hold a 1" cultivator point. This won't weather now. Best bet will be either hit it right with the power Harrow, or let it bake and smash it up with the press. Forecast would suggest we won't crop it, but it is coming a legume fallow / red clover ley so no rush. Want a flush of crap off it first anyway. [/QUOTE]
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What is "heavy" land?
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