So, we got a big goal accomplished Tuesday: we broke ground on our back flower field. It's a big one, 60x250 feet. One of the big challanges we're facing as we create our farm is that all of our land has been in grass for so long, we're going from established lawn to new field in one season. I'm sure there are some people who would cringe at the idea of tilling a lovely spread of fescu (or whatever) under to plant a vast, and probably unruly, field of flowers and veggies, but we're exited about it.
Research online indicates that the best way to break new ground would be to plow or disc in the fall, spread some compost, let everything mellow over the winter, and rototill in the spring. We, unfortunately, have such a crazy schedule that we have had to do it all in one step. So, we made 4 passes over the field with a 4-foot rototiller behind a small tractor, and that seemed to do a pretty good job. Not as fine or as deep as we would like, but definitely workable.
We've used 4 different methods to break or new fields so far: we tilled our leek an tulip beds with our small tiller last fall, tilled our greens and herbs bed with our tiller this spring, used a Dingo for our small veggie bed, and used a tractor for the big flower bed. We decided that the Dingo did the best job, breaking things up the finest and going the deepest, but it also left an awfully uneven surface. The tractor was the fastest, but the tiller we pulled with it just didn't go as deep as the Dingo's. I guess every method has its tradeoffs.
Anyway, with new ground broken, we are excited to get more stuff in the ground. We also discoverd a set of peony plants we had forgotten about, and the were ready to bloom! Should be great at the next market. Lots of work ahead, but enjoying it all!