Spring Plowing

   / Spring Plowing #11  
The best surprise for me since getting a 4wd tractor 6 years ago is that my spring planting gets done an average of one month earlier. To me that is a bigger deal than even the 20% fuel savings the 4wd produced. My flat, bottomland farm has many mudholes that take a good while to dry out in the spring, but the 4wd will plow right thru them with hardly even any wheelspin. It is cool watching the wakes roll off the plow as you pull it thru standing water. Back when all I had were 2wd's, I dreaded spring plowing and always kept my biggest tractor in reserve before complete dry-out, in case I got the second biggest one stuck (happened several times each year). Now I also love it, and I have not been stuck in 6 years.

Would help to know where you are located. :)
 
   / Spring Plowing #13  
The OP's original question reminds me of, "How long is a piece of string?"

Are you moldboard or chisel plowing? What are you turning under? What is your soil type? Is erosion a problem?

That said, I detect a touch of "Spring Fever"in the question, and more a desire to swap stories than seek answers!:D

-reminds me of what we said, back in my army days, when somebody used the F word: "Might as well; can't dance, and too wet to plow!":laughing:
 
   / Spring Plowing #14  
Fall cultivation can lead to wind and water erosion in some areas.

Other areas have adopted the No Till approach.

So; the choice may depend on the area you are in and also the type of crops raised.

But pretty consistent is staying off the land till the moisture content is proper for the cultivation type work you are doing.:):)
 
   / Spring Plowing
  • Thread Starter
#15  
The OP's original question reminds me of, "How long is a piece of string?"

Are you moldboard or chisel plowing? What are you turning under? What is your soil type? Is erosion a problem?

Moldboard plowing in a sandy type of soil. Not really a threat of erosion.
 
   / Spring Plowing #16  
The OP asked about plowing dirt, not sand. :D
 
   / Spring Plowing #17  
Moldboard plowing in a sandy type of soil. Not really a threat of erosion.

Since you have sandy soils, as do I, you can work it, likely, as soon as the frost is out of the ground and it has dried for a few days. Ours is sand, and it dries out super fast.

Since there is no threat of clay lumps, go to it as soon as possible, that is, if winter ever decides to actually give way.:)
 
   / Spring Plowing #18  
I live in lower Wi. and turned some horse manure in semi frozen clay 10 days ago,30 deg. overnite. Worked beautiful, looked better than the fall plowing right next to it, will do it again as ag tires picked less sod also.When the sun came it was time to quit.
 
   / Spring Plowing #19  
snows gone here, but ground is still frozen after a few inches and down to 18 or so ... few more weeks before ill be ploughing the rest of my fields
 
   / Spring Plowing #20  
spring ploughing here is suicide on this clay , heavy fall work 4-5 inches with chisel ploughs then just a touch with a light cultivator or super harrow in the spring to warm and level it and dry it out a bit before seeding and incorporate fertilizer.
 

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