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#1 02/07/2010 1:56 pm

obsessed
Deeply Rooted
From: Slidell, LA
Registered: 08/24/2008
Posts: 1283

Tillin' by hand stinks!

So I just prepped 3 out of my 5 raised beds.  I dug in about 6" (or maybe 3) applied  my fertilizer and then cover with the soil and my horse poop compost that has been cooking since Oct.  But dang I am tired.  Tilling stinks when all you got is a pitch fork! 

I will be ready for spring though.  I think I will wait a few weeks before I put in my tomatoes.  And I have some broccoli starts that I planted in early Dec that should go in asap but I think I will wait till next week.  I may also start some lettuce next week but I am past the time for peas (which I am totally bummed about because it was the hands stupid fault).

My tomatoes and pepper seedlings are doing good and looking overall really healthy.  They love that mini greenhouse I got for x-mass.

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#2 02/07/2010 3:36 pm

vfem
Garden Addicted
From: Fuquay, NC
Registered: 08/10/2008
Posts: 4345
Website
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Re: Tillin' by hand stinks!

Oh great! I've been planning on doing mine... and like you, I have to do it all by hand! sad

Its ok though, our produce tastes sweeter don't it?! wink


Zone 7b and growing from seed! http://fromseed.blogspot.com
Currently have Silkie Hatching Eggs for Sale. PM me for pricing on eggs! Thanks!

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#3 02/07/2010 4:27 pm

obsessed
Deeply Rooted
From: Slidell, LA
Registered: 08/24/2008
Posts: 1283

Re: Tillin' by hand stinks!

I don't know, right now I am freakin exhausted and my two toddlers are not.

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#4 02/07/2010 4:47 pm

lesa
Deeply Rooted
From: ZONE 4 UPSTATE NY
Registered: 11/10/2008
Posts: 1447
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Re: Tillin' by hand stinks!

You lucky dogs!!! It was 0 degrees last night.  Gardening is a dream to me right now- not going to happen for 4 months!!!!  Enjoy your time digging in the dirt!

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#5 02/07/2010 6:26 pm

curly_kate
Garden Ornament
From: Aurora, IN - zone 6A
Registered: 07/17/2008
Posts: 624

Re: Tillin' by hand stinks!

Like lesa, I'm totally jealous!  I've got some lovely little tomato & pepper starts, but we also have about 4" of snow outside w/6 more on its way.  But I did hear that it is much better for your soil structure to till things by hand, so that might make you feel a little better, too.  smile


Despite the gardener's best intentions, Nature will improvise.  ~Michael P. Garafalo

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#6 02/07/2010 6:43 pm

boggybranch
Garden Ornament
From: Ashford, AL Zone 8b
Registered: 12/22/2009
Posts: 916
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Re: Tillin' by hand stinks!

I do ALL "tilling" in my garden, including the first 'clearing', using only a "Garden Claw"(Gold edition....handles much more comfortable to use) and the two hands on the ends of my arms. Love diggin' in the dirt.


"Then definition of insanity is doing the same thing over and over again and expecting different results"....... Albert Einstien

"I can show you how to make a bomb out of a roll of toilet paper and a stick of dynamite".........Dale talking to Hank on "King of the Hill"

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#7 02/07/2010 8:12 pm

LVVCHAP
Leafing Out
From: SW / PA 5B
Registered: 08/23/2009
Posts: 69
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Re: Tillin' by hand stinks!

I think I am going to plant tomorrow, as soon as I shovel the 2 ft of snow out of my garden.  smile

The pic is a little blurry but my arms were tired from shoveling.

http://www.theeasygarden.com/forum/uploads/6475_100_0069.jpg


When all else fails, stop using all else.

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#8 02/07/2010 8:26 pm

digitS'
Deeply Rooted
From: Id Wa! border, Z5
Registered: 12/13/2007
Posts: 2143
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Re: Tillin' by hand stinks!

Where'd all dat snow come from??

obsessed wrote:

. . .  Tilling stinks when all you got is a pitch fork! 

. . .

Is it really a "pitch" fork, Obsessed?? I would have trouble doing 10 square feet it that's the tool.

My tiller hasn't seen this ground once since I started here in 1996. It is 36' by 38' and all in 4' beds cultivated to the depth of the tines of a spading fork. That 11" depth of soft soil is way deeper than I could get with my tillers.

Unless you are very short, forget the D-handled spading forks. Use one with a long handle, stand up very straight, step on the fork to drive it as deep as you can into the ground, step back and pull the handle back with you, pull the handle all the way to the ground if you want to, but do NOT bother to lift the soil. Pushing the handle all the way back to the vertical, pull it out of the soil and begin again. Work backwards . . .

I know that clay would be more difficult to work than my gravel. Still it takes about 3 years to get it "cake flour soft" all the way down thru the rocks. I've got about 3 times this amount of land cultivated exactly the same way. Unfortunately, it takes days to do it and there are still more square feet out there that I need the tiller to get thru. I do the best that I can with the time I've got. Then punt . . .

If I can do it with a wretched back . . . anyone should be able to do it. Remember, do not lift the soil.

http://www.theeasygarden.com/forum/uploads/4989_spring_oh8_029.jpg


A garden may be a complex of variable elements and factors to be considered from every angle and possibility.

But, I’d still need to count everything on my fingers and toes.

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#9 02/07/2010 8:59 pm

Amigatec
New Seed
From: Haskell OK
Registered: 02/07/2010
Posts: 6
Website

Re: Tillin' by hand stinks!

I almost hate to post these, Troy-bilt Horse 8 HP with electric start.big_smile

http://i14.photobucket.com/albums/a318/amigatec/Tilling/till-01-lg.jpg

http://s14.photobucket.com/albums/a318/ … p;newest=1

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#10 02/08/2010 8:14 am

patandchickens
Deeply Rooted
From: Ontario, Canada
Registered: 11/23/2007
Posts: 2295

Re: Tillin' by hand stinks!

Totally agree with Steve if this is already-well-prepared soil being discussed.

OTOH, if these are new (or new-ish) beds, and your soil is still heavy and keeps glumping back together over the winter, then indeed it is a bit of work to dig over by hand.

You *can* rent a tiller for, usually, like $20-30 for a half day; or what I find to be somewhat labor saving is to spread the amendments then do what Steve describes, but with a pointy shovel, so that you are just turning over clods of dirt "in place" not actually lifting or moving them to any meaningful degree. Much of the amendment ends up underneath and amongst the shovel-clods of dirt. Then you leave it that way, all lumpy, for a few dry days until the clods are dry enough that when you whack them hard with a bow rake or shovel they fragment apart pretty well; then whack the remaining clods with a bow rake, use the rake to rake it all flat, and call it good. The amendment will not be 100% totally homogenized into the soil, but you don't NEED to do that with typical amendments, worms etc will do it for you, honest.

Like Lesa, though, I am totally jealous that you CAN get all tired working in the garden. I can't usually touch ANY of my soil til early April, and that's *with* pre-warming it under a sheet of plastic once the snow melts! tongue

Good luck, have fun,

Pat


Canadian zone 5b (=USDA zone 4)... or a bit colder. And in a swamp. With lots of wind.

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