I actually just received my valley oak wheel how last Wednesday. Awesome quality and well thought out. I've already pushed mine about a mile. The simplicity is where it saves me so much time. No bolts to loose when changing attachments. I will eventually order the hiller for next springs potato and sweet corn.
When I was a young man we called it a push plow. I was a athlete in my teenage years. I could make some rows that could match a garden tractor. Would run a string line to make perfectly straight rows. My dad would expect nothing less. Had a very healthy lifestyle back then. It would take a garden to replace the calories I burned. Thank God we had Beef.
They are still called push plows in parts of America. Those kind we mostly used are called high wheel hoes but man this wheel hoe is WAYYYY better than the flimsy ones we broke so many times in the old days and this thing works and does everything better too.
@@inharmonywithearth9982 And wayyyy better than hoeing up a row. Yes the push plow I used had a high steel wheel . One day I may get one as a keep sale from a flee market. I could even make one if forced to. Despite four years of college , I learned the most as a child back home gardening and raising cattle. We were very self self-sufficient with carpentry and metal working skills. Necessity is truly the mother of invention.
Looks good for dry loose soil. If it was me , I would be hammering, weld ing and cutting on that hiller blade. Needs to be shaped and angled a little more like a turning plow mold board.
I have those plows for my horses. Those are desgned to flip soil completely upside down. This is not for that. This quickly pushes soil against rows of corn and covers furrows. It works excellent. I have one of these valley oak hillers I use a lot.
@@inharmonywithearth9982 I get your point . It would be very difficult for human power to push or pull a turning plow to turn top soil upside-down especially your more difficult clay soils. As a child back in the early 60s I'd watch my dad plow 21/2 acres with a horse and row up to grow corn. The horse died later and was replaced with an old steel wheeled Case tractor with fly wheel and hand clutch. My family was 50 to a 100 years behind in farming technology. Going from a horse to a gasoline powered tractor, we missed the steam powered tractor days.
The green tank is a Mantis composter. I had one just like it but I gave it away. It's rotating track cracked while I was turning it frozen at 12 below zero Fahrenheit. It never turned good enough after that so I gave it to someone who didn't mind. It cost nearly 500 if I remember. I just made a circle of free standing wire and throw weeds in there and the wild earthworms turn it instead of me.
I bought one of your wheeled cultivators. It is more manageable than any aggravated mini tiller. It is both user and plant friendly as I use it between the rows. I don't really see anything better when it comes to weeding a garden.
The hand hoe puts too much pressure on lower back. I don't know about this tool. If it needs the upper body, I should be ok.. This video is all action and just enough explanation. I love what you do for us. THANKS
It is like the commercials for laundry detergents - everything ideal, prepared to show the perfect result. But the reality in the field is never that ideal. I can only wonder how that would work for hilling potatoes with regular compact soil full of roots and weeds.
I plan to buy it tomorrow so I will tell you how I hill my potatoes with it but I don't plan to let my gardens ever get compacted soil and full of weeds and roots. That's what you and this tool prevents!
Well it's been about five months Ive owned it. I like it. Actually makes it fun to weed and clear paths because it does it all in minutes what used to take me hours. It's a great tool and thanks for the luck. Oh yeah, I forgot to tell you I grubbed out the weeds first with the scratcher before I hill the corn furrows up and potatoes and such. That thing loosens up the weeds and soil in one good pass and allows the hiller to push all the loose dirt up around the corn stalks. You need to use the scratcher or you can use the blade first if it has weeds. You must adjust the handle for your personal height and you can do dozens of long rows with ease. It's a lot of fun believe it or not.
Has any design been made where the hiller or tiller is pulled rather than being pushed? I liked the concept of adjustable handle, adjustable tilling, adjustable hilling or unhilling as needed. Would a slightly bigger diameter wheel be easier to use? or would a double wheel draw more straight lines? Are some questions which come to mind.
There are lots of designs that pull instead. However when you are pulling backwards you often step on your garden plants because we don't have eyes in the back of our heads. If you really like the backwards concept then you need somebody steering looking forward. I have big horses that pull and I steer them. I have retired them and I want one of these now because it is the best one.
I actually just received my valley oak wheel how last Wednesday. Awesome quality and well thought out. I've already pushed mine about a mile. The simplicity is where it saves me so much time. No bolts to loose when changing attachments. I will eventually order the hiller for next springs potato and sweet corn.
ایده ای متفاوت و عالی .
لذت بردم خیلی کاربردی بود .برای حزارع کوچک و خانه باغ ها بسیار بکار می آید.❤
When I was a young man we called it a push plow. I was a athlete in my teenage years. I could make some rows that could match a garden tractor. Would run a string line to make perfectly straight rows. My dad would expect nothing less. Had a very healthy lifestyle back then. It would take a garden to replace the calories I burned. Thank God we had Beef.
They are still called push plows in parts of America. Those kind we mostly used are called high wheel hoes but man this wheel hoe is WAYYYY better than the flimsy ones we broke so many times in the old days and this thing works and does everything better too.
@@inharmonywithearth9982 And wayyyy better than hoeing up a row. Yes the push plow I used had a high steel wheel . One day I may get one as a keep sale from a flee market. I could even make one if forced to.
Despite four years of college , I learned the most as a child back home gardening and raising cattle. We were very self self-sufficient with carpentry and metal working skills. Necessity is truly the mother of invention.
@@jaybailleaux630 🤝 agreed
Looks good for dry loose soil. If it was me , I would be hammering, weld ing and cutting on that hiller blade. Needs to be shaped and angled a little more like a turning plow mold board.
I have those plows for my horses. Those are desgned to flip soil completely upside down. This is not for that. This quickly pushes soil against rows of corn and covers furrows. It works excellent. I have one of these valley oak hillers I use a lot.
@@inharmonywithearth9982 I get your point . It would be very difficult for human power to push or pull a turning plow to turn top soil upside-down especially your more difficult clay soils. As a child back in the early 60s I'd watch my dad plow 21/2 acres with a horse and row up to grow corn. The horse died later and was replaced with an old steel wheeled Case tractor with fly wheel and hand clutch. My family was 50 to a 100 years behind in farming technology. Going from a horse to a gasoline powered tractor, we missed the steam powered tractor days.
Great tool. Definitely would buy.
What is the green tank in the background? For gravity watering (I don't know if I made that up or if that's what it's called - ha!)?
The green tank is a Mantis composter. I had one just like it but I gave it away. It's rotating track cracked while I was turning it frozen at 12 below zero Fahrenheit. It never turned good enough after that so I gave it to someone who didn't mind. It cost nearly 500 if I remember. I just made a circle of free standing wire and throw weeds in there and the wild earthworms turn it instead of me.
I bought one of your wheeled cultivators. It is more manageable than any aggravated mini tiller. It is both user and plant friendly as I use it between the rows. I don't really see anything better when it comes to weeding a garden.
The hand hoe puts too much pressure on lower back. I don't know about this tool. If it needs the upper body, I should be ok.. This video is all action and just enough explanation. I love what you do for us. THANKS
muchas gracias desde cuba
Please upload a video on how to make these devices your own.
very nice my friend
👍
How to buy this prudoct ,its very useful
Хорошие приспособления! И хорошо что есть желание самим выращивать овощи! Молодцы!
Jk l"l"plkkwWii OMFG
very useful and help to me this video.. sir
Sarveswaran Jesus how do I get this tools for use?
Sarveswaran Jesus I'm John Gandayeni and I am interested in farming how will I get this farming tools to use?
Excelente arado.
Молодец, умница. Сколько хороших идей! Удачи.
0:30 상세 영상 시작
2:33 ~ 2:37 스크린샷
4:35 쟁기날 상세 영상
7:30 써레로 평탄작업 시연
Now i wanna see a vid on that bed rake
Esa herramienta me parece muy útil usted lo fabrica?
fantastic
very good sir I would like to purchase those things because I'm small farmer please
Shivaraj MS photo
ⁿⁿ0ⁿppppppp0pñ 0 00
I like the farm toll how can I get it?
What a dust bowl. How does earth get that dry
Hou many charges
Worms?
Короткий путь стать,молодым и горбатым!
Good manual,,,❤...
Very good sir
❤
Dónde la venden?
Chico, California. Sold at Valley Oak Wheel Hoes.
Como lo puedo comprar . o me lo puedo mandar a fabricar pero necesito las medidas
It is like the commercials for laundry detergents - everything ideal, prepared to show the perfect result. But the reality in the field is never that ideal. I can only wonder how that would work for hilling potatoes with regular compact soil full of roots and weeds.
I plan to buy it tomorrow so I will tell you how I hill my potatoes with it but I don't plan to let my gardens ever get compacted soil and full of weeds and roots. That's what you and this tool prevents!
@@inharmonywithearth9982 I can only wish you good luck with this decision.
Well it's been about five months Ive owned it. I like it. Actually makes it fun to weed and clear paths because it does it all in minutes what used to take me hours. It's a great tool and thanks for the luck. Oh yeah, I forgot to tell you I grubbed out the weeds first with the scratcher before I hill the corn furrows up and potatoes and such. That thing loosens up the weeds and soil in one good pass and allows the hiller to push all the loose dirt up around the corn stalks. You need to use the scratcher or you can use the blade first if it has weeds. You must adjust the handle for your personal height and you can do dozens of long rows with ease. It's a lot of fun believe it or not.
Hello i am ABDELHAK .s from Morocco l want like these . Would you mind buying me it and sending to Morocco.?
Price
very nice
Can i use this equipment for mad lands such as paddy field
Human power won't work in deep muddy rice paddies. You need a strong water buffalo or a big loud engine to assist you.
The reason it works so well is because your soil has been well tilled and is very dry. Just like a sandy beech...
Yes you have to keep after a garden a little every day. If you let the garden become neglected it will sure get away from you.
Has any design been made where the hiller or tiller is pulled rather than being pushed? I liked the concept of adjustable handle, adjustable tilling, adjustable hilling or unhilling as needed. Would a slightly bigger diameter wheel be easier to use? or would a double wheel draw more straight lines? Are some questions which come to mind.
There are lots of designs that pull instead. However when you are pulling backwards you often step on your garden plants because we don't have eyes in the back of our heads. If you really like the backwards concept then you need somebody steering looking forward. I have big horses that pull and I steer them. I have retired them and I want one of these now because it is the best one.
I want to purchase these eguipment
Help me
@@kumarasamyp8179 our tools are sold here: www.valleyoaktool.com/
Valley Oak Tool Companyp
these demos are always done in perfect conditions and the soil rototilled to powder, i dont think you can plow BY HAND, in normal conditions
Like most things in life, it all depends
कहा से बनवाय
@@NitinYadav-ml2rt punjab se mil jaye gee
Bien
Nececito su su tradicion en españo
N
Thnk u sir
Good
three letters come to mind; B, F, D.
nice gadgets, how much ?
La fabrication de ces machine
you have to go through
with a motocoltivator, before .
after with this item.!
I need 1 can II have phone please
Yu can
esta terra ja estava toda fofo, arada. mentirada
Very harder then easy
Отличный инструмент. Ручной труд всегда ценится.
Rs kitani
Кандай ясайди
bahut acha
If excellent equipment was available in Bangladesh, I would definitely buy it.
Si a los dos metros no puede respirar😰
инструмент хороший .но его тянуть надо а не толкать.тянуть удобней )
กูฟังบ่ออก
Ok
Isso poderia ser puxado por cavalo ou até um ser humano .. um vai puxando e outra vai atrás dirigindo . Ou até mesmo um bode ... Kkkkk
щю
I hear a lot of huffin and puffin...for the price of that thing it better have an engine
John s maybe huffin and puffin is good for you and i
It's a very hot summer and a very dusty drought. You'd be huffing and puffing behind a loud smokey motor too believe me.
@@inharmonywithearth9982 not with my HONDA 13hp sitting on top of a BCS tractor...no sir no way
Изготовители г. Камень на Оби. Мастерская. Кузница. 1500 рублей.
чертежи покажи !
Да! Чертежи покажи те!
7yy
Вот на 2,52минуте ты сделал правильно😁закинь его в реку Амазонку ,чтоб никто этот плуг не нашел!иначе человек превратится в горилу😁
❤
Hello i am ABDELHAK .s from Morocco l want like these . Would you mind buying me it and sending to Morocco.?
Good