@Mini Horses I just use a disc. I am going toward a no-till garden. I have a lot of pine shavings from a local horse event center piled in the garden. I had pigs in it all winter and they rooted big holes, so I dragged the disc around and around to smooth it out. I will just keep adding more mulch and compost on top. Over several years, the soil gets so deep and loose that you don't need to till. Save your money. LOL
I just use a garden rake to make my rows, pretty much flat. Those big piled up rows just shed water, it all runs off and the plants stay dry.
I planted my tomatoes into cardboard. I set up cow panels 18" apart and planted tomatoes in between. I laid down cardboard to keep the weeds down. I used to garden in beds at our old house and I opened up paper feed sacks, weighed them down with bricks, cut holes in the paper and inserted the plants.
Yep -- saving my $$$. those darn tillers are $1500-2000 generally. Found one at Agri Supply $1100. But my disc does a great job, especially since the soil is pretty good already. This was a P-nut farm before I bought it. My pigs & ckns have been working this garden area. Plus I do have a lot of mulch, barn stall cleanings, etc. Not hard dirt at all and lots of amenities. If I need any "small till" area, I'll use my pull tiller or the walk behind....can we say "too many" tillers.
Also noticed that my little, rarely used disc costs $875+ now. So my $250 buy from a guy was a great deal! Been few years but, in great shape. Probably not more than 20-25 hrs on that rascal and in great soil. Discs will cut you if you aren't careful.
Crows pulled up every single corn sprout and ate the kernel off. Needless to say, all the corn died. I replanted and my husband helped me make heavy wire hoops. I placed them over the corn rows and covered with bird netting, held on place by clothes pins. The Painted Mountain corn is about 5" tall now. It is a meal corn, I really want a big batch of cornbread. In a few weeks, I will plant Anasazi Sweet Corn, so they don't cross pollinate.
I have yellow crook neck squash putting on 2nd and 3rd leaves. I have yellow patty pan squash and zucchini coming up. I planted calico peas and pink eye purple hulls, they are starting to come up. I planted melons, watermelons, green cotton, banana peppers and beets.
I spread compost, laid out cardboard and pounded in T-posts. My husband helped me set cow panels 18" apart and clipped them to the T-posts. I cut holes in the cardboard and planted tomatoes.
I hope I have better success with this year's garden. Starting from raw land is a lot of work! I have 55 baby chicks right now in a brooder. I am saving the papers from the poop trays, going to compost them with horse manure. I'll let it cook all summer, it ought to be ready for the fall garden.
And goats ate the tops of my corn....ugh! Thankfully, with a little TLC, they seem to be surviving - can't say thriving - just surviving. That seems to be a common theme in my garden this year.
I want to get mine planted! But it looks like it's finally going to be warmer and dryer this weekend, so I should finally be able to get out there and do something.