A garden is only as good as the ground that it's planted in. Discussion forum for the many ways to improve the soil where we plant our gardens.
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February 11, 2007 | #31 |
Tomatovillian™
Join Date: Jan 2006
Location: Home=Napa Valley/ Garden=Solano County
Posts: 245
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I would at least get it on video. It may be worth 10,000 dollars from Americas funniest videos. Cause somethings gonna bust and it might not be dirt clods.(thinking teeth, foot, arms, wrists or back and my bet is on teeth.) and its too bad cause I enjoy your posts
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February 12, 2007 | #32 |
Tomatovillian™
Join Date: Jun 2006
Location: NY
Posts: 2,618
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Another safety feature:
The cotter pin that connects the auger to the shaft is soft copper. If the bit hits any root of large rock it will break loose first. dcarch
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February 12, 2007 | #33 |
Tomatovillian™
Join Date: Feb 2006
Location: Den of Drunken Fools
Posts: 38,539
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I’m not worried about you getting hurt with that little motor, what kind of soil do you have?
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February 12, 2007 | #34 | |
Tomatovillian™
Join Date: Jun 2006
Location: NY
Posts: 2,618
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Quote:
dcarch
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February 12, 2007 | #35 |
Tomatovillian™
Join Date: Feb 2006
Location: Warm Springs, GA
Posts: 1,421
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Dcarch, I admire your do it yourself figure it out attitude. Very cool!!! (the tomato pollinator was very funny) but usable!!!
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February 12, 2007 | #36 | |
Tomatovillian™
Join Date: Jun 2006
Location: NY
Posts: 2,618
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Quote:
The electric pollinator is still working very nicely. I have been using it all winter for all my indoor tomatoes. Interesting that the micro motor uses very little power, It still has the original AA battery. dcarch
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February 12, 2007 | #37 |
Tomatovillian™
Join Date: Feb 2006
Location: Left Coasty
Posts: 964
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DC,
Another word of caution, way back when, I once worked for a living. We regularly used power augers for digging holes for posts and plants. Yes, the handles can give you extra leverage, but, let that auger hook up on a rock and the leverage goes the opposite way as well. I had plenty of bruised ribs back in those days. Go slow, let the auger work, don't push down and do not use your body to brace the handle, if you need that much force, something is wrong down deep.
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Lets see...$10 for Worth and $5 for Fusion, man. Tomatoes are expensive! Bob |
February 12, 2007 | #38 | |
Tomatovillian™
Join Date: Jun 2006
Location: NY
Posts: 2,618
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Quote:
It is my fault for not stressing the importance of safety in working with machinery. I think this is becasue I have quite a bit of experience in working with all sorts of tools, and I have taken for granted that everyone would know to be careful. Bob, I have a long heavy steel pointed bar which I use to go deep down to test if there is any obstructions first before I dig, I also use a metal detector to make sure if there is any underground utilities. dcarch
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February 12, 2007 | #39 | |
Tomatovillian™
Join Date: Jan 2006
Location: NY z5
Posts: 1,205
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Quote:
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February 12, 2007 | #40 |
Tomatovillian™
Join Date: Feb 2006
Location: Left Coasty
Posts: 964
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DC, i have a sense that you are familiar with equipment, but a warning unsaid is worthless after someone in hurt. Actually, I would rather hit the plastic pipe with a digging bar than with an auger. I once saw a guy roll up a bunch of pvc conduit onto an auger. Set our job back a couple of weeks.
I hate that plastic gas line, it cuts so easily and is hard to find in the ground with anything but a tractor. I had a job where the operator cut through a 6" high pressure gas line. Had to evacuate a 6 block radius, including an elementary school and a nursing home. Yup, good times.
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Lets see...$10 for Worth and $5 for Fusion, man. Tomatoes are expensive! Bob |
February 13, 2007 | #41 |
Tomatovillian™
Join Date: Jan 2007
Location: PNW
Posts: 4,743
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One other thing: looking at that last picture
of the till-auger, shouldn't the auger bit be on the other side, based on which way the tiller is going to rotate if the bit hangs up in the soil? (Look at where the fuel tank and engine are if the tiller frame starts to spin. If you have a brace sunk into the soil beside it, you don't want a spinning tiller to mash the engine and fuel tank into the brace.) Edit: If the auger bit is on the other side, the only way to rotate it so that it digs into the soil is to run the driveshaft in reverse (does it even have a reverse?), and the engine and fuel tank would still be "on top" or "in front" if the bit hangs and starts to rotate the tiller body. If you can possibly bring yourself to do without several feet of tomato bed each year, you could plant an alfalfa crop there that grows over the summer, and a winter cover crop in September. The alfalfa will root down deep into your subsoil and leave organic matter behind when the alfalfa dies, and worms will pull some of the alfalfa top growth down in the fall and some of the mowed cover crop down the next spring and summer. Then the next year move the fallow section down the bed and do the same thing for another part of it. (I know this is asking a lot, leaving a space that could have a tomato plant in it empty for a summer. Maybe you could grow some each year in containers on top of small stands that allow the alfalfa to grow underneath them, until you have rotated around through the whole tomato bed.)
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February 13, 2007 | #42 | |
Tomatovillian™
Join Date: Jun 2006
Location: NY
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Quote:
No. unfortunately I don't have the space to grow a cover crop. I wish I did. BTW, the title for this thread "Dig I must" is a take-off of the NY utility company Con Edison's slogan. They are constantly digging up the streets here. I suppose no one from other areas will know this slogan. dcarch
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February 13, 2007 | #43 |
Tomatovillian™
Join Date: Feb 2006
Location: cincinnati, oh
Posts: 492
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no space for a cover crop? poppycock!
I do admit weve got a nice mild winter for the most part here, but get some kale, mustard greens, or rye seeds and SOW HEAVILY! a big sack of annual rye at sprawl*mart is like $3-4 Were moving beds so we have some bare soil now, but weve started growing something all winter (may die in your climate, but will at least get a few inches if planted after summer clean up) |
February 15, 2007 | #44 | |
Tomatovillian™
Join Date: Jan 2007
Location: PNW
Posts: 4,743
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Quote:
this geometry of auger bit and tiller body? Oh well. It simply would have meant staking the other side and using a chain or old seat belt for a restraint if you wanted to brace the thing against unwanted rotation of the tiller body (for just the second or so it takes you to let go of the throttle). If you think about it, the alfalfa rotation is simply scaling down what farmers do when they leave a field fallow for a season to the scale of a backyard garden: "grow alfalfa in it, feed the worms and other beneficial soil organisms, replenish organic matter in the soil, and break up compacted soil at the bottom of the root zone." If one adds the "containers on stands above the alfalfa" strategy (could be burlap sacks full of horse manure that one simply pushes off the stands and adds to the mulch at the end of the season), that is going them one better by using the available sun exposure of that "fallow" section, something that farmers normally write off as just part of the cost of leaving a field fallow for a season. If I were doing that and had a shallow depth of fertile soil above relatively infertile subsoil (the usual situation in the Pacific Northwest, where soil typically starts out with a few inches of humus above a foot or less of topsoil above heavy clay with varying amounts of sand and gravel in it), I would loop back to the first section again after rotating through the whole garden and repeat the alfalfa soil improvement process for as long as I gardened there. One can grow a winter cover crop over a whole garden bed, not only the "fallow" section. Winter cover crops are planted at various times depending on climate, later in warmer areas with longer growing seasons, earlier in colder areas. I would guess middle-of-August to first-week-of-September for NY, for example. That allows it put on some growth before the snows come in earnest, and yet that is late enough to not pose much competition for crops that have not yet been harvested. Some people till cover crop top growth into their beds in spring, others simply mow/weed-eat it and leave it there for mulch. (What the worms don't eat becomes humus.) Alfalfa really roots deep, well beyond the deepest rooting tomato plants. I don't know how deep winter cover crops like winter rye, hairy vetch, etc send down roots. (Clover caveat: white clover is alleged to be a heavy competitor for water in the summer, so I'd avoid that one in a vegetable garden, especially where it might winter over. I would stick to winter annual or perennial cover crops that go completely dormant in summer, even in cool, rainy summers.) HTH,
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February 19, 2007 | #45 |
Tomatovillian™
Join Date: Feb 2006
Location: MS
Posts: 1,523
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In my opinion, and experience, a planting hole over 24" deep is just not worth it. However, I shared your enthusiasm for depth once. I brought a tractor in, put on an big auger, and bored down. Only problem is I hit a deep water line the first try and busted the deep sewer line the next hole. Every time I over-do it something messes up.
Before I'd do all that elaborate stuff, I'd just get a discarded 15-30 gallon nursery container, stick it in the ground, and fill it with nothing but good compost or the stuff you can buy such as peat, potting soil, top soil, etc. It's really very simple if you let it be. At least I keep telling myself that. :wink: Next time you pull up a tomato plant at the end of the season you will be surprised at how small the root ball really is. Good luck, but be careful with the heavy machinery! Don
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