Tiller on food plot

   / Tiller on food plot #11  
Still new to owning a tractor. Tons of rocks, I dig one out to find 5 more....


A Disc Plow, which is two or three pans from an Offset Disc, may be what you need for plowing that rocky ground. Disc Plows roll over rocks which would stop or trigger Draft Control when pulling a moldboard plow. Short learning curve relative to moldboard plows.

Monroe Tufline is the sole manufacturer of new Disc Plows for compact tractors I am aware of. Monroe Tufline implements are top quality.

There are a lot of acceptably heavy old Ford Dearborn Disc Plows out there.

 
Last edited:
   / Tiller on food plot #12  
Cheapo tiller won't take rocks but a GOOD one will...

Good ones are expensive, so most don't buy them.

SR
 
   / Tiller on food plot #13  
I don't have exceptionally rocky ground. Just enough to be a PITA. First with my moldboard plow then my small disk.
 
   / Tiller on food plot #14  
I'm in upstate NY and trying to get some small areas worked up. Some were ok, but the rest have been quite rocky. The tiller is good until it isn't and a rock is wedged or massive root. I also was told/"sold" a reverse tine tiller by my dealer, but for an unbroken plot area with rocks I would have gone with a forward tine now that I know the difference. I feel like that guy screwed me on that one and probably had it sitting around or something. It works GREAT on previously tilled areas however.

I ended up getting a field cultivator by Fred Cain (9 point) and work the ground with that to bring the rocks up. I then rake off the huge tiller killing stuff and go from there.
 
   / Tiller on food plot #15  
Generally speaking - reverse tillers work better and will dig deeper in harder ground. If you have lots of rocks - you may need a different implement. In rocky soil this will help. Start with a very shallow pass - make multiple passes going a little deeper each time. Forward motion - as slow as possible.
 
   / Tiller on food plot #16  
Raise the flap / door up so the tines will kick the rocks up and out. Worst scenario is if a rock gets jammed in the teeth and won't pass under the cross shaft and bends it. Straighten it with a fence post when you remove the killer rock.
 
   / Tiller on food plot #17  
why not get one of these rock rakes or what ever they are called
and get all the rocks out then try tilling. You drag it behind you with
your tractor and and it gathers all the rocks it has fingers for this

willy
 
   / Tiller on food plot #18  
I am in Northern NY;rock capital of the world.It is impossible to remove "all" the rocks.My farm has been in use for at least 150 years and we have miles of rock fences and plenty of piles.
My Bush-Hog branded tiller finally broke a chain after 16 years of hard work.It has a slip clutch(serviced every year).Leave the discharge flap fully open and have at it.I work about ten acres a year for foot plots.
 
   / Tiller on food plot #19  
if you got piles you better see a doctor

willy
 

Tractor & Equipment Auctions

FUEL TANK (A50854)
FUEL TANK (A50854)
2025 LandHonor LHR-GAC40Y 2-Stage Air Compressor (A50860)
2025 LandHonor...
2024 Icon LT-A617.4+2G Electric Golf Cart (A48082)
2024 Icon...
2012 MACK CHU613 (A50854)
2012 MACK CHU613...
Diamond (A50860)
Diamond (A50860)
Hay Fork (A50860)
Hay Fork (A50860)
 
Top