John Deere 9470R Tractor pulling a Deere 2410 Chisel Plow
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- Опубликовано: 1 янв 2025
- John Deere 9470R Tractor pulling a Deere 2410 Chisel Plow
In this video you will see a farm near Hazelton Kansas chisel plowing up a harvested wheat field. I was in a nearby field videoing Paplow Harvesting custom harvesting wheat for this farm and was able to get some footage as this tractor was running the next field over.
This video was recorded and edited by me for my RUclips channel with permission from the farm and is not to be copied and reused.
Here in Aus we’d definitely call that a chisel plough. Chisel ploughs used a lot here in the past. Regards from Down Under.
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You know ,why do people find they need to correct every one. I'd call it a disk if I wanted. Your knowledge of equipment is so great and people call things different in other areas. Thank you Mike for all of you work to keep us entertained.😊
Great chiseling setup😉👍
Thanks Mike, another great video ! Happy New Year to all here ! ✨🎉🎊 ------ Here in Kansas we consider Harrows and Field Cultivators "surface scratchers" as they only scratch the top of the soil to maybe 1 or 2 inches in the surface of the soil and either one can be used for prepping a seed bed for planting. These Chisel Plows like in this video go deeper (almost 1 foot) in depth.
Thank you mike for this short video of chisel plowing
I have been pulling a deere field cultivater for bout 6 years now and that implement is a 2210
HNY Mike!!
Great video brother from the imperial county ca 🚜🇺🇲
That's a big equipement tractor and chisel how many acres or hectares european an hour cover?
this is a great vidéo mike
Thanks, I never thought to ask, This farm watches my channel and hopefully they see your comment and can give you an answer
Ok good Thanks
That’s huge! Impressive the tractor doesn’t even seem to flinch pulling it.
I hope you might just ignore the comments made by small children. I've seen a blade plow cultivator, aka a sweep plow cultivator, called a dozen different things in my lifetime, depending on which part of northern America a person is from, even though the blade plow (or blade, here, for short) was invented by Charles Noble right here in southern Alberta, near my own family farm/ranch est. 1912, not all that far from Welker's, 80 miles north of the Alberta border north of Welker's farm which was also est. 1912
Excellent video, as always. Thank you for sharing these, I love being a longtime subscriber of both yours and Welker's.
Happy new year and warmest regards to you and yours.
Happy new year
Is the GPS following the contour?
Or is the operator eyeing it?
When farmers winter graze cattle on the stubble that has been planted with winter wheat,
1) do cattle ever eat any of the wheat sprouts or are they more focussed on eating weed grasses?
2) does the planted stubble need any much rolling in the following spring once cattle are taken off?
Just curious as this practice of wintering cattle on sown stubble as its not done in Ireland for obvious weather reasons.
The cows eat the green wheat and I don't think they really get down into the roots or sprouts. I'm not aware they roll the fields after the cattle are taken off. This is only done in the USA in Texas, Oklahoma and parts of Kansas as far as I know. Places where it doesn't get too cold over the winter and the wheat doesn't go dormant for the most part. At least the areas mentioned is where I see this practice.
@farmhandmike thanks for reply. Great video
Generally you wait over a month after wheat first emerges (5 to 6 weeks is best and the wheat plants should be 6" to 12" tall) before you allow cattle to go into the winter wheat field so the roots are well established and the cows don't damage or pull up the wheat plants. (Plant in Sept and Graze in Nov) is an old saying on grazing winter wheat. Mike is right that you don't allow the cattle to go in there too early after emergence to where they damage the wheat plant or pull the wheat plants up out of the ground.
Don't care with its pulling,,, Just as long as the Johnny keeps pulling cuz she sounds GREAT.
That’s a big chisel. How many acres an hour can he cover? This fall we ran all 4 of our chisels, with 4 of them running we can cover 25 acres an hour. Great video Mike 👍👍
Yeah for sure hines this is a great setup big equipement
@noehueber6602 oh yeah 👍👍
I never thought to ask, This farm watches my channel and hopefully they see your comment and can give you an answer.
@ ok good deal 👍
I thought chisel plows had a row of straight disks in the front
Not necessarily. That’s called a coulter chisel. The first chisel plows just had shanks. This is what is known as a wheatland chisel plow or deep tiller
Good video.
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