kthompson
Elite Member
- Joined
- Sep 12, 2008
- Messages
- 3,509
- Location
- South Carolina
- Tractor
- Kubotas B2710, M6800, L6060 cab, Volvo EC excavator, 2 ZTRs and various implements.
To begin with: working with four different lawns here. Age of lawns range from 50 plus to brand new. The soil runs from sandy loam to medium sand and to heavy dirt that will hold water staying wet with frequent rains. My wife's home place is the most varied, one side lawn has major slope to be part of with water seeping out of it with heavy rains and the front yard much sandier and needing water much of the summer. Centipede will not cover the full front year in some areas due to higher sand content (I think) while the back yard and sloped side yard are the thickest centipede I have ever seen.
I have never seen a core plug aerator other than say in big box store. Light weight not impressed. At least for our heavier soils. Have found some that are made for tractor and prices are rather strong for something will use on few acres (possible 10) per year. If not going to me at least 2 but better 3 or 4 inches think wasting my time and maybe adding more to compaction doing so than helping.
The price of decent looking tractor core plug aerator is rather high to me for the amount of use I have but not aware of being able to rent one in my area. Three-point implements are seldom rentable at least here. So my question is if a core plug aerator does a great job with plugs say 3 to 4 inches deep, then why would not a subsoiler running say 6 or 8 inches deep work? In my small farming operation I used subsoiler at about 18 inches to crack the subsoil and it really made a different in wet years and no doubt in dry years also but really noticed it with ground that did have ponding issues.
I was thinking about subsoiler with coulter cutting the grass and not ripping it May need a wheel to press the dirt back into place on the subsoiler. Two concerns of that are buried water and drain lines and tree roots.
Let me extend my wondering here: if a core plug aerator is as good as many on youtube say, any idea how they would work in a grass hay field? I know our few acres of farmland and all is in Bermuda for hay now. I know most of the land will form a hardpan with row crops, subsoiling it about every two years showed benefits. I think there is as much weight running over it as hay field as it ever did with corn or beans. Tractor, pickups and loaded trailers many times in that field. Only saved the weight of loaded combine.
I do find it interesting how fam land and lawns are treated so different to eliminate hard levels of dirt.
I have never seen a core plug aerator other than say in big box store. Light weight not impressed. At least for our heavier soils. Have found some that are made for tractor and prices are rather strong for something will use on few acres (possible 10) per year. If not going to me at least 2 but better 3 or 4 inches think wasting my time and maybe adding more to compaction doing so than helping.
The price of decent looking tractor core plug aerator is rather high to me for the amount of use I have but not aware of being able to rent one in my area. Three-point implements are seldom rentable at least here. So my question is if a core plug aerator does a great job with plugs say 3 to 4 inches deep, then why would not a subsoiler running say 6 or 8 inches deep work? In my small farming operation I used subsoiler at about 18 inches to crack the subsoil and it really made a different in wet years and no doubt in dry years also but really noticed it with ground that did have ponding issues.
I was thinking about subsoiler with coulter cutting the grass and not ripping it May need a wheel to press the dirt back into place on the subsoiler. Two concerns of that are buried water and drain lines and tree roots.
Let me extend my wondering here: if a core plug aerator is as good as many on youtube say, any idea how they would work in a grass hay field? I know our few acres of farmland and all is in Bermuda for hay now. I know most of the land will form a hardpan with row crops, subsoiling it about every two years showed benefits. I think there is as much weight running over it as hay field as it ever did with corn or beans. Tractor, pickups and loaded trailers many times in that field. Only saved the weight of loaded combine.
I do find it interesting how fam land and lawns are treated so different to eliminate hard levels of dirt.