DAPNET Forums Archive › Forums › Draft Animal Power › Horses › cultivating
- This topic has 10 replies, 7 voices, and was last updated 11 years ago by daniel grover.
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- June 23, 2013 at 4:40 pm #80022AnonymousInactive
We used our new to us Melotte cultivator or tool carrier from Germany today. It is a walk behind one horse cultivator that you can steer. It enables you to get really close to your crops and you can put on any kind of knife/shoe/hoe that you want. The tool carrier part lifts up for transport and at the end of the field for turning around. The ground was a bit hard after all the rain and being our first time out we had many adjustments to make. Fortunately our horse was patient even in the heat. Photos attached of cultivating snap beans and the field after two cultivations.
June 24, 2013 at 5:03 am #80032Donn HewesKeymasterHi Jody, That is a nice looking set up! What is the row spacing on those peas? Was that machine made for horses or converted?
June 24, 2013 at 8:26 am #80039daniel groverKeymasterLooks great– How did you find this cultivator? Sure would be fun to do twice the work with half the horse.
June 29, 2013 at 9:22 am #80127wally bParticipantI like the set up. Who makes it and what was the price and contact info? Where did you get the tine weeders and what is their make?
wally
June 30, 2013 at 1:08 pm #80139Stephen LeslieParticipantReally exciting to see you getting off to such a successful start. I hope to see this cultivator in action some time—thanks for posting!
October 6, 2013 at 10:00 am #81310daniel groverKeymasterAfter seeing these cultivators and meeting Jelmer Albada (who found and imported them from Europe), I am really excited about the potential of this or a similar tool to enable higher density planting for draft-cultivated vegetable/row crop farms.
I’m curious if anyone here has seen any examples of similar cultivators from around the world.
I found a couple of US patents that are for somewhat similar cultivators. However, it is hard to tell how well engineered they are from the drawings.
Here they are:
Getting a shop/company here in the states to fabricate something similar could help to enable farmers to transition to using more draft power on their farms.
The most impressive thing about the Melotte cultivator and the other one which Jelmer brought to the DAPFDs this year was how thoughtfully designed they were. Tool bars could be removed and replaced with ease (in some cases without additional tools), needed tools were mounted on the machine itself. They are just well designed pieces of equipment.
Getting a shop/company here in the states to fabricate something similar could help to enable farmers to transition to using more draft power on their farms.
Especially impressive in what they are doing at Roxbury, is that with these tools, they are able to use their current tractor-based bed making, seeding, planting, etc. systems and do the cultivation with horses. It seems to me that one of the biggest obstacles to shifting to draft cultivation is the idea that you have to completely change your cropping system to fit the available tools. The McCormick, JD, etc cultivators are all set up for single row use which works great for what they were designed for (row cropping) and also works great for a bioextensive system such as the Nordells. But there are a lot of good reasons that a farmer would want to plant more biointenstively–land limitation, need for higher yield, etc.
October 6, 2013 at 1:03 pm #81314irishParticipantI think this is a steerable one not sure
October 6, 2013 at 1:37 pm #81315JeroenParticipantI saw two models of the steerable one horse multiple row cultivator on a horsedrawn equipment day yesterday: an old one and one that has just been developed:
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October 11, 2013 at 9:43 am #81337wally bParticipantHi
I would like source/contact info on the Melotte cultivator and the other one that daniel grover mentions that was displayed at the DAPFD.
Thanks
Wally b
OregonOctober 11, 2013 at 12:42 pm #81338daniel groverKeymasterHi Wally b,
These cultivators were manufactured in Europe in the fifties and are not readily / easily available.
The best recommendation that I can make it to contact Roxbury Farm about this importation process.
Best,
Daniel
October 18, 2013 at 12:56 pm #81380daniel groverKeymasterTillers International have been working on a cultivator with a similar concept behind it’s design. The new steering that they put on it looks pretty slick.
Here’s the link: Tiller’s Cultivator
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