Tilling frozen ground?

   / Tilling frozen ground? #1  

Lucky_Ducky

Member
Joined
Jul 30, 2023
Messages
46
Tractor
MX6000 w/ cab
I need to expand a driveway before spring. My plan is to till the ground, remove the organic layer for later use, and have base material tailgated over the length while I smooth everything with a land plane.

Can I use my 3pt tiller on frozen ground? Would I need to take multiple shallow passes? Or will I break something that should not be broken?
 
   / Tilling frozen ground? #2  
How deep is the frost? My Amish neighbors often plow frozen ground, if the frost is only a few inches deep. I'd think anything over an inch or so would be bad for the tiller.
 
   / Tilling frozen ground? #3  
Is there a reason that you want to till before stripping? I don't know how deep your organics go, but I would think you can paint the edge, and strip 2 or 3" maybe 4", and have all the top soil stripped with the loader, and stockpile it for later use. I dont know much about soils freezing, but I would think if the soil is so frozen you can't dig it out with the loader, then it's probably too frozen for a 3 point tiller.

If your thought it to mix up the grass and organics with the top soil, and bucket it out, the grasses will break down pretty quickly in the stockpile
 
   / Tilling frozen ground? #4  
I need to expand a driveway before spring. My plan is to till the ground, remove the organic layer for later use, and have base material tailgated over the length while I smooth everything with a land plane.

Can I use my 3pt tiller on frozen ground? Would I need to take multiple shallow passes? Or will I break something that should not be broken?
Exactly what do you mean by “till” ?
My opinion using a 3pt tiller on frozen ground would be just asking for some very expensive trouble.
 
   / Tilling frozen ground? #5  
When our ground here gets frozen more than a couple inches I can't get through it with my 11k lb trackloader and bucket teeth. I can't imagine a tiller is going to break it up and if it does you are going to be basically tilling rocks. Give it a shot but I think its just going to be bouncing on top of the frozen ground.
 
   / Tilling frozen ground? #6  
Don't know where you're at or how cold it is . . . Wouldn't try to till frozen ground. Just going to beat your tiller and tractor to death for no reason. Why not try to cut it / scrape it out with your loader and a box blade? If it's too frozen for those, you might be better off getting someone to come in with a skid-steer for a few hours.

Also not sure about a land-plane smoothing "base material". Mine will bring #2 rock up to the surface if I'm not careful, but that's never my intent. I'm guessing you mean to use the land-plane on smaller gravel spread on top of the base material -- right?
 
   / Tilling frozen ground? #7  
I need to expand a driveway before spring. My plan is to till the ground, remove the organic layer for later use, and have base material tailgated over the length while I smooth everything with a land plane.

Can I use my 3pt tiller on frozen ground? Would I need to take multiple shallow passes? Or will I break something that should not be broken?
Our temps have gotten down to single digits. This past Friday we had a weird 53F as the high. The only thing to break the ground were the rippers late in the afternoon, and that was after several passes.

You got to have BEEFY shanks, else the cheap ones will snap apart.
- 1st pass 1-inch deep, don't let them sink, else you will have trouble getting un-stuck.
- 2nd pass might be the same.
- 3rd pass, you might be able to go a little deeper.
- 4th ....
- 5th .......

1737217269558.jpeg
 
Last edited:
   / Tilling frozen ground?
  • Thread Starter
#8  
Is there a reason that you want to till before stripping? I don't know how deep your organics go, but I would think you can paint the edge, and strip 2 or 3" maybe 4", and have all the top soil stripped with the loader, and stockpile it for later use. I dont know much about soils freezing, but I would think if the soil is so frozen you can't dig it out with the loader, then it's probably too frozen for a 3 point tiller.

If your thought it to mix up the grass and organics with the top soil, and bucket it out, the grasses will break down pretty quickly in the stockpile

My organics go around 8-9” deep. I want to till it before scrapping so I can use the soil without the sod clumps for garden beds and leveling the yard.
 
   / Tilling frozen ground? #9  
My organics go around 8-9” deep. I want to till it before scrapping so I can use the soil without the sod clumps for garden beds and leveling the yard.
Organics hold more moisture, if it's frozen it will be harder than soil.
 
   / Tilling frozen ground? #10  
Frozen ground isn't going to "till" up into fine topsoil that you can simply spread into the garden and yard. IF you're able to break it up, it's going to be in big frozen dirt clods. The tiller is meant to be used on very dry ground.

You could still scrape it up and then run the tiller over it / through it this spring after it's dried out adequately.
 

Tractor & Equipment Auctions

2014 Toro Z Master 5000 72In. Zero Turn Commercial Mower (A46684)
2014 Toro Z Master...
2016 BMW 750i xDrive AWD Sedan (A48082)
2016 BMW 750i...
2005 Ford F-250 4x4 Crew Cab Pickup (A46684)
2005 Ford F-250...
2019 Chevrolet Malibu LT Sedan (A48082)
2019 Chevrolet...
2005 Cadillac STS Sedan (A48082)
2005 Cadillac STS...
2016 Ford F-450 Knapheide Service Truck (A48081)
2016 Ford F-450...
 
Top