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Post by terrifictom on Apr 17, 2018 17:23:10 GMT -6
This would work well on my rocky food plots.
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Post by Tooln on Apr 17, 2018 21:35:14 GMT -6
Cool.
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Post by benmnwi on Apr 18, 2018 13:06:30 GMT -6
I'm glad that I'm not the only one impressed with this kind of stuff. I really like watching videos of different rock picking type implements, mulchers and heavy equipment but my wife thinks that's odd.
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Post by terrifictom on Apr 18, 2018 13:30:06 GMT -6
I'm glad that I'm not the only one impressed with this kind of stuff. I really like watching videos of different rock picking type implements, mulchers and heavy equipment but my wife thinks that's odd. I can't tell for sure if this is just burying the rocks or grinding them. What ever it is doing, it sure makes a great seed bed.
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Post by wklman on Apr 18, 2018 13:39:05 GMT -6
It just buries them.
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Post by benmnwi on Apr 18, 2018 13:53:50 GMT -6
The attachment doesn't seem to be moving around quite as much as the implements that grind up the rocks, so I'm guessing it buries the rocks. Either way that's pretty cool. I would think those implements would get bounced around and pounded so hard that they would break all the time.
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Post by sd51555 on Apr 18, 2018 14:27:51 GMT -6
When I grew up, we used to pick all the rocks, including carrying 5 gallon buckets when doing bean ground. Then as kids became more prone to death and triggering by work like that, we just picked the big ones. After all the kids were gone, my uncle would just go pick up rocks with the skid loader and then just press the rest back into the soil with a roller after he planted beans.
That's much easier when you're deep ripping and have fluffy soil to do so.
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Post by wildfire123 on Apr 19, 2018 11:49:27 GMT -6
The family that rents our farm, uses 60' to press down the rocks, when harvesting beans, does not have to worry about picking up rocks with the combine.
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