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I purchased a 100 acre block of ground over 12 months ago now that I have been clearing the scrub off ready to farm.
So my question is I was mostly going to zero till farm most of the more hilly stuff and plough the flatter stuff or is there a better was to work ground on the side of a hill without putting in contour banks to avoid it washing away with heavy rain
My family in Canada used a Glencoe soil saver instead of a plough. It chisels lumps of clay to the top to break the flow of fine topsoil particles, but it does bury the trash somewhat.
Next to that, there are plenty of other methods to solve soil compaction without burying all residue that holds the plants together.
I would at least rip it. Breaks the soil by pushing it up, without disturbing topsoil too much...
All over America no till farmers start to get problems with hard compacted no-till soil that needs repair by a ripper.
Dont know how much i drank last friday (national holiday) but i mixed up some words... i suppose you get it anyways
The lumps of clay pulled to the top stop the fine soil particles from washing downhill, but it does keep some trash on top because it holds soil too. Nonetheless it does loosen compacted soil, which it really needs after some years. He soilsaved every 3 or 4 years, after grain he sowed soybeans no-till, then after a shallow cultivation he seeded corn, then again corn, then he soilsaved to mix some trash from the corn stubble and solve some compaction at the same time, if i recall right... it was 9 years i visited him.