Try wide-row planting, Special troy-bilt gardening technique – Troy-Bilt 8 HP User Manual
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SPECIAL TROY-BILT GARDENING TECHNIQUE
Try wide-row planting
Wide-row planting is a highly
productive gardening technique
that is worth trying. As the name
implies, it involves broadcasting
seed in bands anywhere from 10
inches to 2 or more feet wide,
rather than in traditional single-
file rows.
The greatest advantage to this
gardening method is that you have
more plants per area in your gar
den, which results in much higher
yields from the same amount of
space (see Photo 4-10). Typically,
you can grow anywhere from 3 to
4 (or more) times produce in the
same space normally set aside for
a single row.
In addition, when you plant crops
in wide rows, you automatically
shade the ground. Shading pre
vents most weeds from growing
and also holds moisture in the
ground. Wide rows also protect
the soil from temperature fluctua
tions and makes harvesting easy,
since you can sit and pick so much
produce from one spot.
It’s simple to plant and grow
wide-row crops. First prepare a
loose, smooth, fertile seedbed and
mark off your row with strings-
Photo 4-11. Hand broadcast the
seeds over the raked area as if
you were seeding a lawn (remem
ber to plant vegetable seeds a little
thinner than grass seed). Cover
them with soil from outside the row,
tamping it down firmly with a hoe.
If you’re planting larger seeds such
as peas or lima beans in wide
rows, you can run your tiller over
them, planting about 2 or 3 inches
deep. If you use your tiller for plant
ing, sow your seeds a little thicker
as some of them won’t get deep
enough to germinate. After tilling,
firm the soil.
Plant the larger-seeded crops,
such as beans or peas, with a little
care so you won’t have to thin later
on. For small-seeded crops, such
as lettuce and carrots, you can
easily thin as soon as they come
up by lightly dragging a steel
garden rake across the row about
V4-inch deep. You will also disturb
and kill many tiny weed seeds
that have begun to sprout near the
soil surface.
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4-10: Wide-row planting on the right compared to sin
gle row on the left.
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4-11:
After preparing seedbed, mark off row area as
wide as you want, even up to 4-feet across.
4-12: Wide-row planting really works, as evidenced by this lush growth of peas.
HERE’S ANOTHER SPACE SAVING METHOD:
Planting in double (or even triple) rows is
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another space saving idea that many Troy-Bilt Tiller owners use. Beans, for example, can be planted in
two rows spaced 6 to 8 inches apart. On either side of the double row, leave enough room for
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sidegrowth and later cultivating with your tiller. It is still necessary to thin seedlings according to the
seed company’s directions on the packet.
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