«Previous    Next»
Old Plow Makes Slick Berry Planter
Bob Fredrickson took the backache out of planting berry bushes with his modified IH plow. With an acre of blueberries, half an acre of blackberries and about 4 acres of raspberries, it has had plenty of use. He first tills the ground and then comes in with his one row planter.
  “This past spring, I used it to plant 1,000 asparagus roots,” says Fredrickson. “I dropped them in as fast as I could, and they came up about 6 in. to 1 ft. apart.”
  Fredrickson says the planter was easy to put together and used old equipment headed for scrap. It consists of the front end of a 1940’s vintage, one-bottom plow. He removed the plowshare, trimmed the shank and mounted a shovel plow to it. He chopped the plow frame behind the shank and replaced it with an angle-iron frame. The frame mounts to the backside of the plow shank. At its rear, two packer wheels from an old horse drawn planter provide support and pack the dirt to either side of the freshly planted rootstock.
  “I put a shaft through the two packer wheels and mounted it to the frame with a couple of pillow-box bearings,” says Fredrickson.
  He mounted a plank for a seat just ahead of the packer wheels. An open top box mounts over the plow shank. The rear side is beveled to provide the rider with ready access to rootstock. The box was recycled from clothes lockers once used by iron mine workers in the area.
  Two steel panels mounted at angles to the frame gather dirt from behind the shovel plow and pull it back in around the planted stem where it’s packed by the rear wheels.
  “The plants are easy to grab and drop in the furrow behind the shovel plow, and the planter does the rest,” says Fredrickson. “The hand levers on each front wheel make it easy to set the planting depth.”
  The plow even lets Fredrickson know how often to drop plants needing spacing. He mounts a spring clip to one of the packing wheel rungs. As the wheel revolves, the clip strikes a stopper on the frame.
  “If I want more space, the clip is mounted farther out on the rung,” explains Fredrickson. “I just move it toward the center for shorter spacings.”
  Contact: FARM SHOW Followup, Bob Fredrickson, E313 Lake Rd., Ironwood, Mich. 49938 (ph 906 932-4060; fredbob3@up.net).


  Click here to download page story appeared in.



  Click here to read entire issue




To read the rest of this story, download this issue below or click here to register with your account number.
Order the Issue Containing This Story
2012 - Volume #36, Issue #5