leonz
Super Member
tractor and pasture saga begins;
Yes I would like to see the plow myself as if it was left in float it would have sunk and sucked itself into to the ground and stalled your tractor.
Something tells me you skidded over a piece of shale or a tapered boulder if it was an in furrow plow or on land plow set up if you have a flat or fluted coulter.
You would have sheared the pin and or broken the plow share or if it has a break away plowshare or broken the share and arm and the damage would have been obvious.
If your tractor is equipped with the right lower link that cranks out to allow the plow to drop further it must be cranked all the way in.
And The Landpride overseeder will plant directly in the dirt for you and the existing sod after you mow it also.
This late in the season I would mow to the sod with a 48-60 inch flail mower and use a powered overseeder to cut into the ground or broken sod and seed winter wheat as it will grow all winter.
You will use the overseeder all the time planting grass seed with little effort
and it wont be a wasted purchase.
You would be able to mow the winter killed brush with a flail mower faster if it is not snow covered as well.
If you do anything tommorow by an overseeder you will get more use from it than a disc harrow as you will be limited to
how much disc you can buy due to the discs working width and power available from your tractor to pull its width.
A three point disc even with tearing coulters may not be enough to do it if the tractor is light and you set the needle valve closed if you have one under
the seat to leave the 3 point hitch in one position.
Huh???
No way will green trash cause a bottom plow to "pop right out of the ground". A bottom plow when used correctly, will flip the top 6-8" of soil over upside down leaving a nice dirt only view. You either have a broken coulter wheel or some other issue -- probably a setup issue. A bottom plow is pushed down under the ground by design that's why it takes so much draw bar hp to pull.
Fix your issue with the plow and use it, it's your best bet for prepping the field.
Yes I would like to see the plow myself as if it was left in float it would have sunk and sucked itself into to the ground and stalled your tractor.
Something tells me you skidded over a piece of shale or a tapered boulder if it was an in furrow plow or on land plow set up if you have a flat or fluted coulter.
You would have sheared the pin and or broken the plow share or if it has a break away plowshare or broken the share and arm and the damage would have been obvious.
If your tractor is equipped with the right lower link that cranks out to allow the plow to drop further it must be cranked all the way in.
And The Landpride overseeder will plant directly in the dirt for you and the existing sod after you mow it also.
This late in the season I would mow to the sod with a 48-60 inch flail mower and use a powered overseeder to cut into the ground or broken sod and seed winter wheat as it will grow all winter.
You will use the overseeder all the time planting grass seed with little effort
and it wont be a wasted purchase.
You would be able to mow the winter killed brush with a flail mower faster if it is not snow covered as well.
If you do anything tommorow by an overseeder you will get more use from it than a disc harrow as you will be limited to
how much disc you can buy due to the discs working width and power available from your tractor to pull its width.
A three point disc even with tearing coulters may not be enough to do it if the tractor is light and you set the needle valve closed if you have one under
the seat to leave the 3 point hitch in one position.