You toot it with a tun.
2007-06-20 03:39:56
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answer #1
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answered by Bobtastic 3
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You can rent a hand held motorized tiller if you have a medium sized job. With this kind of tiller you walk behind it and the tiller does the job of turning the soil.
For really large jobs (like my summer garden) we have a man with a tractor come and disc the soil for us.
For small jobs like my flower beds, I use a manual cultivator (aka potato rake). It is on a wooden pole and looks like a hoe made out of spikes instead of smooth blade.This tool just requires a lot of effort and stamina.
You can also just use the old hand held variety but that requires working on your knees and that can get really tiresome.
I posted an interesting link that explains some methods of tilling and the purpose it serves .
2007-06-20 03:46:38
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answer #2
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answered by Anonymous
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You can turn it over the hard way using a garden fork or spade or use a gas power tiller which turns the ground over in no time and produces an excellent result.
2007-06-26 12:03:08
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answer #3
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answered by content2stitch 2
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I use a roto tiller. I go length ways twice, then cross ways twice, then diagonally one way then the opposite way. Its a lot of work but I get really good mix up that way. I'm also tilling under a lot of stuff from the previous season.
2007-06-24 10:04:45
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answer #4
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answered by GRUMPY 4
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I find that for the cost of renting a tiller and for the time you use it it is more cost effective to have someone come over and do it for you (costs me $30.00) I have a garden that's about 20X60 and to rent one it would cost about that amount and to buy one and have it sit after one use is not too feasible in my opinion. I do this every spring. So go to a small engine repair shop and they may be able to guide you to someone that goes around and does that in your area. Or look in the classifieds.
Good luck and good gardening.
Mickey
2007-06-20 03:49:16
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answer #5
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answered by mickkooz 4
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if you have a roto tiller you simply start it up and guide it over the area you want to till . . but if you don't then you'll need to use the double dig technique where you dig a scoop and flip it over on itself twice in each spot . .if I didn't have a roto tiller I'd rent one cause double digging is a lot of work
2007-06-20 03:41:13
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answer #6
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answered by Rainy 5
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Is basically to break the ground with a hoe, spade, fork, etc etc. To turn the ground over.
2007-06-20 03:40:45
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answer #7
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answered by Sal*UK 7
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go to your local hardware store or rental place, and rent a tiller, the place should instruct you on how to safely use it and where not to put hands and feet while running it
2007-06-20 04:43:02
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answer #8
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answered by rich2481 7
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with a tiller or grub hoe
tiller is motorized like a mixer... takes a bit of strength to handle it.
a grub hoe is like a pick... pick and drag your earth...
2007-06-20 03:41:30
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answer #9
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answered by Mark 4
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go rent a tiller. or get a back hoe and let he games begin! Back breaking work but is worth it.
2007-06-20 03:40:24
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answer #10
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answered by Anonymous
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