Bedder-Hiller source

Poohbear

Active member

Equipment
L3301 HST, LA525, LP shredder, BB1566 box blade, QH10, Worksaver pallet fork
Jul 6, 2018
501
153
43
Gilmer,Tx,United States
I am wanting a bedder-hiller for our ever expanding garden . Any more robust brands anyone would recommend
 

UpNorthMI

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Lifetime Member

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L3200, L3901, MX5800, SVL75-2, KX040
May 12, 2020
850
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Up North, MI
Take a look at Heavy Hitch, not 3pt, you can configure the attachment as needed. A lot depends on garden size and what you do for prep work on the ground.

Everything Attachments has some nice heavy 3pt versions.


 
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Tim Horton

Active member
Mar 22, 2018
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Lake Superior
I had a hiller set up that was all homemade.. It worked well for what I needed at the time..

Of the two shown in the post.. I like the GB 50 attachment.. Yes.. It is more money, but it is quite adjustable and 3pt ready.. I can see more uses for that attachment with some homemade accessories..
 

Poohbear

Active member

Equipment
L3301 HST, LA525, LP shredder, BB1566 box blade, QH10, Worksaver pallet fork
Jul 6, 2018
501
153
43
Gilmer,Tx,United States
I had a hiller set up that was all homemade.. It worked well for what I needed at the time..

Of the two shown in the post.. I like the GB 50 attachment.. Yes.. It is more money, but it is quite adjustable and 3pt ready.. I can see more uses for that attachment with some homemade accessories..
GB50 does look good. By the time you buy the HeavyHitch brand then buy or build the 3-point receiver hitch your probably back to about same price.
I can get a pretty light one sort a locally but I can destroy a ball peen hammer head so want a swell built one.
I may just fab a bar to go across the cultivator I got today and order the discs to mount . I am thinking that one thru as it's owned by my Wife's mothers estate so it will get " shared " occasionally. Not often But you never know relatives sometimes. I am the only one with a working tractor tho
 

Poohbear

Active member

Equipment
L3301 HST, LA525, LP shredder, BB1566 box blade, QH10, Worksaver pallet fork
Jul 6, 2018
501
153
43
Gilmer,Tx,United States
I am wanting a bedder-hiller for our ever expanding garden . Any more robust brands anyone would recommend
Well I bought one today from a local (25 miles) equipment supply. Yes it's a no name from who knows where. I did get hungry for Chinese food when I was handling it but it was only 310. It actually does what I wanted and I really don't have my ground ready but will this weekend . It's time here for taters, sugar snaps, greens, & cabbages.
 

Poohbear

Active member

Equipment
L3301 HST, LA525, LP shredder, BB1566 box blade, QH10, Worksaver pallet fork
Jul 6, 2018
501
153
43
Gilmer,Tx,United States
Ok, now that I have made some raised rows I have a question for all you knowledgeable folks. To maintain, do I just keep throwing dirt on the rows ( not onions ) or just cultivate between rows as usual with cultivator/tiller ?
 
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Creature Meadow

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2012 L4600, Disk, Brush Hog, GB60 Garden Bedder, GSS72 Grading Scraper
Sep 19, 2016
1,063
135
63
53
Central North Carolina
I have the EA GB60 and I have enjoyed it now for about 7 or 8 years.

I put a 2 inch piece of pipe across the spring tines to help level my rows as I make them works great. Just take ty wraps put it at height I want and go. Run my rows then take off.

I like to hoe between my plants first then until they start hitting tractor I use the bedder to clean up sides of hills. I use to make them high but now may 8 to 10 inches so I can drive tractor over longer.

Taters I plant them at bottom of hill so about 8 to 10 deep. Lay taters down, then drive over with bedder to cover. I then take my 4-heeler and drive over hill 2 times back and forth to ensure ground is packed good. As the plants grow I'll side dress with fertilizer then using bedder throw dirt on them couple times before digging.
 

SidecarFlip

Banned

Equipment
M9000HDCC3, M9000HD, Kubota GS850 Sidekick
Oct 28, 2018
7,197
554
83
USA
Ok, now that I have made some raised rows I have a question for all you knowledgeable folks. To maintain, do I just keep throwing dirt on the rows ( not onions ) or just cultivate between rows as usual with cultivator/tiller ?
I use an ASC (Agri-Supply) hiller furrower for the initial pass (it's hard with my large tractors but doable (after I till the garden) and then keep the hills (for the spuds) improved by tilling between the rows with the rear tine and hoeing the loose soil up into the established hill.

Kind of getting away from hilling at all as Last year I tried planting spuds in straw bales with excellent results because the spuds are free to grown and not hindered at all by soil so they get quite large and very vigorous, plus the harvesting is super easy by breaking the bales apart and getting them out and it's also super easy to remove 'new potatoes' from the bale by digging in and grabbing them. I'll do that again this spring.

I tried carrots and beets with mixed results but the tomato plants did excellent as did the cukes, but I plant them both from established plants. I might try cabbage this year as well. On the fence with that because I get all the cabbage I ever need for free. Probably try zucchini as well.

Nice thing about straw bale gardens is, you can compost the straw bales into the soil when spring rolls around.