bhh
Silver Member
Middlebuster vs Subsoiler.
I've got an excavator and a 12" chipper reserved next week to clear 1 acre of woods for a new food plot.
Per the soils test, I've got 2.5 tons of pelletized lime lime and 250lbs of 19-19-19 stored in the barn.
Fall planting will be winter rye as it is cold hardy and pH tolerant while the lime does its thing followed up probably by buckwheat next summer also as a soil conditioner. I hope to rotate into perennial clover with a winter rye nurse crop the following fall once the soil gets into better shape. I will be no-till/throw and growing so I am reluctant to shell out a lot of cash for a new implement (chisel plow or disc harrow) that is only going to get used occasionally. The disc I may break down and buy at some point but I can't swing it now.
I can however pick up a TSC County Line (yellow grade) middle buster or a subsoiler to help breakup the soil and incorporate this initial liming and fertilizer. I also have Land Pride Box blade with scarifiers but they only get down a couple of inches and a York Rake I will use for trash cleanup and final seedbed prep. I'll cultipack with my tractor tires, or the york rake flipped around backwards, or the box blade with the toplink lengthened all the way so it doesn't dig in.
Would you guys go with the Middle Buster or the Subsoiler? Both? The ground is very high in OM and not compacted so there should not be a layer of hardpan but there are roots and rocks. I know the middle buster will do a better job incorporating the lime and fertilizer but don't know if it will have problems with the roots on the initial pass. I can also mix in some forage radishes as well if I need some additional "deep tillage". Thanks for the help as I need to buy one of these things tomorrow!
I've got an excavator and a 12" chipper reserved next week to clear 1 acre of woods for a new food plot.
Per the soils test, I've got 2.5 tons of pelletized lime lime and 250lbs of 19-19-19 stored in the barn.
Fall planting will be winter rye as it is cold hardy and pH tolerant while the lime does its thing followed up probably by buckwheat next summer also as a soil conditioner. I hope to rotate into perennial clover with a winter rye nurse crop the following fall once the soil gets into better shape. I will be no-till/throw and growing so I am reluctant to shell out a lot of cash for a new implement (chisel plow or disc harrow) that is only going to get used occasionally. The disc I may break down and buy at some point but I can't swing it now.
I can however pick up a TSC County Line (yellow grade) middle buster or a subsoiler to help breakup the soil and incorporate this initial liming and fertilizer. I also have Land Pride Box blade with scarifiers but they only get down a couple of inches and a York Rake I will use for trash cleanup and final seedbed prep. I'll cultipack with my tractor tires, or the york rake flipped around backwards, or the box blade with the toplink lengthened all the way so it doesn't dig in.
Would you guys go with the Middle Buster or the Subsoiler? Both? The ground is very high in OM and not compacted so there should not be a layer of hardpan but there are roots and rocks. I know the middle buster will do a better job incorporating the lime and fertilizer but don't know if it will have problems with the roots on the initial pass. I can also mix in some forage radishes as well if I need some additional "deep tillage". Thanks for the help as I need to buy one of these things tomorrow!
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