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- Path: sparky!uunet!pipex!warwick!uknet!bradford.ac.uk!N.W.R.Ayres
- From: N.W.R.Ayres@bradford.ac.uk (NWR AYRES)
- Newsgroups: rec.gardens
- Subject: Re: Troy-Bilt vs. Mantis
- Message-ID: <1992Nov19.135132.9284@bradford.ac.uk>
- Date: 19 Nov 92 13:51:32 GMT
- References: <1992Nov16.134439.3507@infonode.ingr.com>
- Organization: University of Bradford, UK
- Lines: 34
- Originator: x10189@muser
- Nntp-Posting-Host: muser
- X-Newsreader: TIN [version 1.1 PL6]
-
- Rusty DeShazo (rdeshazo@b23b.ingr.com) wrote:
- : Does any one have any experience with the Troy-Bilt Tuffy? The bottom of the
- : line 3-hp tiller.
- :
- : My garden consists of five hand dug 4' X 20' raised beds, which will be
- : expanded to twice that size this winter. Basically, I am looking for a
- : tiller that can turn my beds once or twice a year.
- :
- : My questions are:
- :
- : 1. Could the Mantis tiller handle the job? It is about $170 cheaper than
- : the Troy-Bilt.
- :
- : 2. Would I do as well to keep turning the beds by hand and put my money in
- : the bank?
- :
- :
- : --
- Given that you have raised beds, you shouldn't need to turn your soil. It may
- be a waste of money buying a tiller. Have you considered no-dig cultivation
- where you put your compost into the top few inches of your bed every year and
- let the worms do the rest. Deep digging just keeps the weed seeds coming, very
- good if you want to preserve wild plants but otherwise a pain in the neck. It
- also destroys worm holes which are good for drainage. I would recommend the
- very high tech solution of a hoe. Its good exercise, non-noise polluting, and
- preserves the soil structure better. It is also better given limited amounts
- of compost. Spreading compost thinly reduces its effectiveness. Concentrating
- it in the top few inches improves the soil no end. _perfection comes not when
- you can't add any more, but when you cannot take away any more_.
-
- All the best
-
- Nick:
-