View Single Post
  #2   Report Post  
Old 23-06-2009, 01:03 AM posted to alt.home.lawn.garden
EXT EXT is offline
external usenet poster
 
First recorded activity by GardenBanter: May 2008
Posts: 33
Default Smoothing my bumpy land.

Joe Shmoe wrote:
Hi.

I brought a house with a large garden that had not been tended in 20
years. After two years hard work, I have successfully cleared it of
the large weeds, and now I have the basics of a large lawn that I'm
keeping under control with a flymo. The problem is, where I have
dug-out all the old bramble roots and dead trees, I now have quite a
bumpy surface.

As the lawn is in pretty poor condition, I was wondering about
rotovating the entire lot and raking it smooth, before laying new
seed.

What I'm unsure of is, how fine does the rotovator chop up the earth ?
I don't want to be stuck with great lumps of earth that I cant rake
flat, and as my solid turns to mushy clay approx 6inches down, I only
want to skim-off the top few inches so I can rake it flat?


Would a rotovator do this, or would a tiller be better…… I have no
experience with either ?

Would I need to skim off all the top layer of grass anyway, or could I
just churn all the existing stuff up into the soil ?


Thanks.
joe


Don't know what a rotovator is nor how large it is. In North America we use
Roto Tillers which may be the same thing. They come in all sizes from light
duty models made to cultivate small gardens to large heavy machines that can
chop through grass roots and compacted soil.

It sounds like you need a heavy duty model, one with rear tilling tines not
one with tines in front. It will weigh 250 to 500 pounds. That may sound a
lot but when hacking through turf and shrub roots even that will jump around
as it hits objects that it cannot cut through. They all can be set to cut
from 1 inch to about 6 inches and can go deeper with multiple runs. Even so,
with your description, it will take a lot to pulverize your soil. One word
of advice, with clay soils DO NOT TRY when it is wet, the tiller will
compact the clay into hunks and throw them around. Dry clay soils will take
a lot of work to turn into fine rakable soil. It can be done as I have done
it in the past with an 8 horsepower Troy-Bilt rear tine tiller that weighs
about 300 pounds. Even it took off, pulling me along when the tines caught
some heavy roots.