I've used one of those soup cultivators twice. The first time it worked well. I was preparing a hillside that was full of wash outs and little rivulets. It helped prepare the soil for me seed and straw except for one deep wash out. The second time, it was in heavy, wet clay and it didn't work as well. I'm not sure if it was the attachment or the machine it was attached to (a Wacker neuson on round 2 vs. the ditch witch sk1050 on the first usage). Either way, I think that if you live in an area without heavy clay soil, this attachment is with it's weight in gold
I've used one of those soup cultivators twice. The first time it worked well. I was preparing a hillside that was full of wash outs and little rivulets. It helped prepare the soil for me seed and straw except for one deep wash out.
The second time, it was in heavy, wet clay and it didn't work as well. I'm not sure if it was the attachment or the machine it was attached to (a Wacker neuson on round 2 vs. the ditch witch sk1050 on the first usage).
Either way, I think that if you live in an area without heavy clay soil, this attachment is with it's weight in gold
Is it able to rip out thicker vertical growth grass?
@@TalesFromTheCreep define tall and thick? Over six inches? No, not really.
like St. Augustine sod it’s usually around 3.5 inches plus thatch. Just wanted to stop cutting out sod and hauling it off when I prep for new sod.
@@TalesFromTheCreep yeah, a few passes with it should work just fine