Your videos are brilliant. It’s been my first year ploughing at home and I’ve watched all your how to plough videos several times to see how you do them and then put it in to practice. This is another brilliant video to a problem I’ve come across. I will watch and hopefully get to put into practice in the spring. Thankyou for doing these videos.
First time I saw the in's and out's ploughed the wrong way for the first pass was one of Deano's videos some years ago. Who ever came up with it was a genius.
Just starting my farming career after my father. ploghing never been my favorite job so gonna try this tricks when he´s not there and telling me how its done :)
Another clever trick all ploughing so far this year has been tough going with the dry hard conditions with the plough riding out it goes from dry and hard to very wet when I plough for winter wheat after the maize harvest
Your experience showing through Geoff. Could you share your opinion on what are the important considerations when deciding which make/brand of plough to buy?
I think that's just personal preference from one person to another. Maybe price, or dealer location for back up and spares. The price of the wearing parts is also a consideration which can vary greatly from one brand to another. For me personally I would always go for kverneland I find they do a good job in all soil conditions
@@GEOFFKV6080 Geoff, one thing concerns me with ploughing is the potential excess fluffiness/softness of our loamy-sand soil. We'd harvest and possibly want the option of replanting another crop into the same field within a couple months. Do you have any thoughts as to how we might consolidate the soil post-ploughing, without re-forming compaction zones?
I don't no that reversible ploughing has ever happened in the USA they seemed to have got as far as conventional then gave up like some third world country