Turning the tider around, Tilling in the garden, Avoid making footprints – Troy-Bilt 12065 User Manual

Page 18: Turning the tiller around

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Turning the Tider Around

Practice turning your tiller in an

open, level area until you feel
comfortable with the procedure.

1.

As you near the end of a row,

lift the handlebars so the tines clear
the ground. Refer to Photo 4-4.

2. As you come out of a row,

swing the handlebars to the side,

pivoting the tiller 180°, so you can
line up with the next row. See
Photo 4-5.

3. As the tiller enters the next row,
lower the handlebars slowly until
the tines start to till.

Tilling in the Garden

The following pages provide

many ideas about using the tiller in
the garden. You can often design
your garden layout to obtain the
most beneficial use from your
tiller.

‘J'.-v;.

Photo 4-4: Exiting a row in the garden.

Photo 4-5: Lining up the tiller to enter the next row.

Seedbed Preparation

Prior to planting, be sure the soil

is as loose and finely textured as
possible due to proper tilling.
About two or three weeks before
planting, till the garden two or
three times. Then, till once more
before planting. This final tilling
helps plants get a head start on fu­

ture weed growth.

When preparing the soil, go

over the same path twice in the
first row. Then overlap one-half
the tilling width on each succeed­
ing pass. See Figure 4-6. After

going up and down the rows in one
direction, make a second pass at a
right angle across your earlier
rows. See Figure 4-7. Again,
overlap each pass to really pulver­
ize the soil. (In very hard ground,

three or four passes may be
needed.)

If your garden isn’t long enough

to till lengthwise and then cross­
wise, first overlap each pass by

c

Figure 4-6: Initial tilling pattern.

one-half a tilling width, followed
by successive passes of one-quar­
ter a tilling width. See Figure 4-8.

Don't till when the soil is too wet.
This produces
large clumps
which later dry
out and become
hard. If the soil
compresses eas­
ily into a ball, it

is still too wet to
be tilled.

Avoid Making

Footprints

When tilling, al­
ways try to walk

alongside the
tiller on the side
that is yet to be
tilled. This pre­
vents replanting

weed seeds and
leaves a nice ap­
pearance.

Figure 4-8:

Tilling narrow

strips.

18

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