HOW TO SMOOTH AND LEVEL A BUMPY FIELD OR LAWN

How do you smooth and level a bumpy field or lawn? We get asked this questions a lot: I have a really rough section of my yard that I'd like to turn a level lawn. What do I do? Today we'll tell you our strategy and show you some of the work to get there.
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Пікірлер: 87

  • @GoodWorksTractors
    @GoodWorksTractors6 ай бұрын

    Shop for your tractor tools here and don't forget we ship Nationwide! www.tractortools.com

  • @mkeating5111
    @mkeating51117 күн бұрын

    What an amazing video. I am just starting out with rural life and this project is exactly what my wife wants me to do on our acreage. I would have been one of those people trying it with a box blade.

  • @aaronburford5701
    @aaronburford57013 ай бұрын

    I enjoy your commentary! You have the voice and the presentation! Love the tiller and how the ground looks like!

  • @1of7
    @1of76 ай бұрын

    Thank you or this video. You addressed a lot of questions I have about areas of my property and given me some good ideas about dealing with them.

  • @danlichtenberger6462
    @danlichtenberger64626 ай бұрын

    Courtney, Another great video. Good job keeping the people informed. I’ve had a JD 550 tiller on a JD 955 since 1993. As one person also said earlier, I would not trade it for anything. It pretty much stays on my tractor year round. The oddest use I ever had for it was once we had an ice glazing and then snow over that. I needed to push the snow off my driveway and since I use the tiller as ballast in the off season, I put the PTO to mid PTO which allowed the PTO tines to roll when I put the tiller down m. It then rolled over the gravel and broke up the ice glaze and it kept my tractor tracking straight on the glazed part I was driving very slowly over. Nothing was ideal in this scenario I might add. It really was such an odd usage, but when ya have one for almost 30 years you get creative. I’ve also left the PTO in rear PTO mode and the tines then don’t move and I use tiller as almost like a box blade and tillers drag flap on back smooths out piled up dirt and dirt flows through the tines rather well. I would HIGHLY recommend a tiller to anyone. I like it so much I bought a 681 when I bought my JD 4066R this spring. It is an absolute beast of a tiller too.

  • @aaronburford5701
    @aaronburford57012 ай бұрын

    Rewatched! Excellent video, great step by step comtemt! Love the attachments, great end result at rhe end of the video! Looks amazing!

  • @danholmblad9925
    @danholmblad99256 ай бұрын

    Morning sir. You are right in that method. I have been doing that for 30 years. So keep up the good work. Have a great day.

  • @GoodWorksTractors

    @GoodWorksTractors

    6 ай бұрын

    Appreciate it, have a good one!

  • @johngersna3263
    @johngersna32636 ай бұрын

    Courtney, I have a 20'×30' garden. And a 2007 John Deere 2305. I bought a tiller 2 years ago and I can tell you that i wouldn't sell it for 3 times what I paid for it. This was a great video. God bless and have a wonderful day. 👍👍🙂

  • @GoodWorksTractors

    @GoodWorksTractors

    6 ай бұрын

    Sweet, glad to hear it John!

  • @johnpyle8027
    @johnpyle8027Ай бұрын

    Two years ago I bought a TYM T 264, same as a T 25 minus the air ride seat. It had a FEL on it and I bought a 60" woods tiller. I take care of about 4 acres and we built in 1991 so over the years after disturbing the land there were places the water found and reshaped things and about 600' of ditch line. Plus I needed to fill in almost 12" around my foundation. I ran the tiller across the top of the ditch with one side over and the other on the flat side and went back and forth what seemed like a hundred times then pushed the dirt into the ditch lessening the slope and smothing everything out. I barely slow down now on my zero turn. I needed a LOT of dirt around the house and I had a place they put the soil that cam out of my lagoon that was about a foot higher than the rest of the lawn. I tilled and tilled that spot and created about 10 yards of dirt which I put all around the foundation. It was just as soft as it could be. I went nuts with the grass seed, may have used 3 times what I needed and covered it with straw. I got it just in time! It rained for a few days and in about 4 or five days I had really thick grass. I honestly believe the tractor paid for itself in that one job vs if I hired someone to do the work. When I was done the tractor was right at the 50 hour service mark. The other thing I never knew I needed was pallet forks! I never pick up anything manually now! My sisters make fun of me and say things like, if you were wall papering a room you would figure out a way to use the tractor! lol

  • @dthomas2047
    @dthomas20476 ай бұрын

    Great channel, really enjoying your advice.

  • @brookeepps1080
    @brookeepps1080Ай бұрын

    Darn! I wish I would have watched this BEFORE I got the box blade. Everything you said about box blades troubles is exactly what I have experienced

  • @KPVFarmer

    @KPVFarmer

    6 күн бұрын

    Box blades definitely have their place too.

  • @kenwaller676
    @kenwaller6766 ай бұрын

    Courtney I am sure this worked, I would like to share how I did a larger area. Use a turning plow then a set of discs and then the tiller.

  • @jamesyates5191
    @jamesyates51916 ай бұрын

    Thanks for a great video. Now I need yet another implement 😀

  • @PurpleNovember
    @PurpleNovember6 ай бұрын

    I’ve put good sized rollers on the back of tillers and they work great!!! The best rollers are the machined ones and they are also the most expensive but the landscapers loved them. Plan on spending as much as the tiller cost if not more. I’ll take out clumps and high spots with a heavy duty flail mower with hammers. Keep working in different directions until it’s smooth.

  • @aaronburford5701
    @aaronburford57014 ай бұрын

    This was great commentary and excellent commentary! You have a great voice for recording , easy to listen to! Liked , Viewed, Subscribed,n

  • @daved8551
    @daved85515 ай бұрын

    I did essentially this same process for a 20x20 flower bed i removed to return to grass yard. However, no matter what implement i used i just couldnt get it smooth. SO i went on Marketplace and bought an older Mauldin double roller vibratory compactor (the kind you drive)... 1 ton with empty drums, 2 tons with them filled with water. It was $2000 but man, what an addition to the arsenal. The ground was smooth and flat like an iceskating rink. I seeded over it and in 2 weeks i had green peach fuzz. Currently its the ONLY portion of my yard that is smooth and flat. Hahaha. After our NY winter ends, while the ground is wet in the spring, im going to roll the entire yard.

  • @wingman8447
    @wingman84476 ай бұрын

    I have that CMP rake. One of the most versatile attachments I own

  • @GoodWorksTractors

    @GoodWorksTractors

    6 ай бұрын

    Glad to hear it!

  • @forceon959
    @forceon9596 ай бұрын

    We used to do this method and it does work. Tiller, rake. But then when we had a few acres to level out rented a power rake. It did so well we wound up buying one to have and use. 90' landplane but they do make them smaller. I know they are expensive so if somebody has a small job to do they can look locally for somebody to rent one for a weekend. Usually just a few hundred dollars. Or you can even rent a skid steer and one and do the job pretty fast. Not sure if you sell power rakes so may not help your sales but nothing like a good power rake to fine tune and level land out. Even with sod on it.

  • @vinsonhelton7141
    @vinsonhelton71416 ай бұрын

    Excellent video Enjoyed it

  • @tommybounds3220
    @tommybounds32206 ай бұрын

    Thank you for the video.

  • @AdamLProductions
    @AdamLProductionsАй бұрын

    If you have a small-ish lawn and don't want to rip everything all up, apply a generous amount of soil to the areas you want to smooth out and hit it with a landscape rake. The rake will distribute the soil evenly and level the areas. This technique works great for low spots. A bit more work for high spots since you'll need to distribute over a large area to level things out. Thought I'd share so people don't think they have to destroy their lawns to get them level.

  • @sonsofliberty3081

    @sonsofliberty3081

    28 күн бұрын

    I'm not sure you've actually tried this. When you go over a bump, the rake follows. You never get it level.

  • @jonhmallari3772

    @jonhmallari3772

    11 күн бұрын

    I have a small-ish lawn and I’m trying to level it out since it’s very much uneven due to poor drainage, I’m thinking about leveling it first and then doing a French drain, what’s y’all’s opinion on that?

  • @KevinJD2030
    @KevinJD20306 ай бұрын

    To level a piece of land out i would first determine how much roots there will be in the ground. If it's not much or much thick ones I would just till it with a rotary tiller and till it up really fine. And than just flatten out with a boxblade. If there are much roots I would firstly pul a shank ripper trough it and trie to pul out as much as possible. Collect the big roots rotor till it and then boxbalde it. The ripping will take a lot of time but it's the only way to save te blades on the rotary tiller from the thick roots.

  • @andrewkirch5920
    @andrewkirch59206 ай бұрын

    Summit's back!!!!! WOOOT!

  • @user-nd1ku1uy7m
    @user-nd1ku1uy7m4 күн бұрын

    You should try using the DeThatcher with the Heavy Hitch weight Brackets & 6 41 lb weights. It's almost better than an Aireator. Even clearing my trail cleanup was a million times easier. The extra weight allows it to dig in as well as drag more material (when I was raking my trails) without the DeThatcher going over the material.

  • @mleachx1
    @mleachx1Ай бұрын

    I had about 2.5 acre area that was used for hay that had huge ruts when I built my house and made mowing with a rider hurt your back or get you stuck. This was the solution I used as well. Local guy on facebook tilled it for me with an old tractor. I used my friend's atv to drag a large frame I made from lumber that I'd wrapped with old chain link fence. That area is now more smooth than where the builder used their bobcat to grade around the house. I also didnt spray or scrape the topsoil and just tilled it all, and I didnt even need to seed it, the field grass came back on its own.

  • @p51mustang31

    @p51mustang31

    Күн бұрын

    We built our home on a field that was used for haying and I have several very rough areas I mow that are so rough that I want to do something about it, and hopefully avoid tearing out the sod and bringing in new topsoil. So do you reccomend scalping the lawn first to get it as short as possible, then tilling it several times? The chain link fence frame you dragged around was just to collect small bits of sod/debris or is that what you used to level/smooth the area?

  • @mleachx1

    @mleachx1

    Күн бұрын

    ​@@p51mustang31i mowed the 1 acre area with my riding mower as low as i could but not it's lowest setting or i would've hit ruts in the dirt and got stuck. There were still areas i couldn't get cut due to large ruts. I then had a guy with a tiller attachment on his tractor go over the whole area for me. I didn't spray and kill the grass like was suggested to me. The tilling left large clumps and spongy ground. It was also dry from not getting any rain for quite a while. I them built a fairly large frame from dimensional lumber nearly 8 feet wide and 4 feet front to back. I initially used that to drag with a 4 wheeler. It didn't knock down and bust up the clumps as well as i wanted it to. I then wrapped chain link around the drag and added more weight with dimensional lumber. This helped more but the biggest help was learning i needed to drive as fast as i could while pulling the drag. After that i just left it and the tilled up grass grew back after a couple months but it's smooth for mowing now.

  • @p51mustang31

    @p51mustang31

    Күн бұрын

    @@mleachx1 thanks so much for your insight! I'm hoping if I can make several passes over the same area with the tiller and that will help break up the sod clumps fiber and finer on each pass, and possible detach it also. Now I just need the utility tractor I have been trying to convince my wife that we need! Thanks again!

  • @shitloveaduck
    @shitloveaduck6 ай бұрын

    All true!! 😊😊 I have tried this with both a tractor and small gas powered tillers steered by myself. - Front tine tillers are an adventure,,,, 😂😂. They will beat you UP in areas other than already tilled soil. They are challenging to use to break up sod, but you can go really deep if you want ir need to. Definitely just small areas. - rear tine self propelled tillers, still steered by hand are much easier to use. A challenge to turn with (unless to spend big, big dollars on one with brakes for each wheel. Those are really nice. You could,, just could,,,, use one for an area like we saw in this video. It’s gonna take you a LOT of time and walking to get this large of an area done, but the rear tine, self propelled tillers are definitely easier for breaking sod. - tractor mounted tillers,,,,, there’s no comparison!!! 😂😂. You drive the tractor,,,,,. Your neck will hurt from turning to see what’s being done all the time, the uneven terrain can leave you a bit sore depending on how in shape, or used to running on rough ground you are, but NOTHING like the aches & pains you will have from the smaller gas powered tillers! Nothing like those at all!! 😂😂. They work the soil more, break it up into smaller pieces. If you sprayed or scalped the area for the sun to burn the grass etc to nothing, then you will get the best results and with enough passes will almost have powder for dirt (depending on how dry or wet it is. I like the dethatching rake used here to pick up what just isn’t worth tilling in 4 more times etc. it worked really slick. We would use our harrows and go in circles over the area and if they clogged up, would drag them to the side to clean them out (this can be hard work. We just disconnected ours, grabbed one side with a chain (both sides had draw bars) and roll it over top of itself. Everything tend to let go a the flipping it the other way moves it away from the debris (kind of). Then more circles. You can get almost perfectly level soil this way, but it’s more work, way more work, than is apparently the case with the dethatcher!!!! I wish I had seen this video about 55 years ago! Where were you then Courtney??? 😂😂😂.

  • @p51mustang31

    @p51mustang31

    Күн бұрын

    @shitloveaduck We built our house on a field and definitely have some large areas that are extremely bumpy to mow over that I have to slow down to avoid getting bounced off my zero turn mower! I really wanted to avoid removing all the sod and then bring in separate topsoil to smooth the areas out and it sounds like with your method I can avoid that. I have access to a 4x4 compact utility tractor and could rent a PTO driven tiller on the 3 pt. hitch. So would you recommend doing the following things in this order: 1. Scalp cut lawn down to 1 - 1.5 inches tall. 2. Till the lawn (several times I assume?) 3. Dethatch the area with dethatching rake. 4. Reseed lawn as needed. Did I get this right, and how do you know when you have tilled the area up enough? Appreciate your feedback!

  • @shitloveaduck

    @shitloveaduck

    Күн бұрын

    @@p51mustang31 - hey!! Glad I could help. You have it figured out. You should get a good idea after tilling one way then 90 degrees to that if the soil is ready. Helps smooth things out as well. It’s very likely you are done after two passes. The soil won’t be perfect like potting soil, but, especially if you are putting grass back in, you won’t need it as a powder either. It would take a long time before you could even walk on it without sinking to where the tines didn’t reach if you make it too fluffy!! Haha. If the tiller is working well, you may be able to skip the dethatching if you like. Also, if perfectly flat like a billiard table isn’t important, you don’t have to go crazy on the harrows. It’s hard to say exactly what you want to do because soils are so different from one area to another. Sandy soil needs less work than gumbo type of soils. We have sandy to black topsoil, but it breaks up easily. You may be able to do less work depending on the end use. We did some riding arenas on the ranch so those were worked up to near perfection. The lawns, not so much. I hope I have given you a range. I think you will get to a point where you can just tell it’s about perfect. Try the first two passes and if it’s still pretty lumpy let it dry a day or so then work it one or two more times. I doubt you would ever need more than 4 passes. Your tractor will likely just sink in the loose soil after 4 passes. Good luck! You may want to leave some for a garden as well at this point! Take care, Eh!

  • @tacticalsnoopy
    @tacticalsnoopy6 ай бұрын

    Great video

  • @GoodWorksTractors

    @GoodWorksTractors

    6 ай бұрын

    Glad you enjoyed it!

  • @SlackerU
    @SlackerU6 ай бұрын

    My Land Pride RTR would have broken something hitting those roots 5:30 thought at the top tilling-hight it is ideal for leveling if the feet are sliding on fairly level paths, I like how it leaves little rows of rooted-grass where I can notch out the peak of a hill every few months, or pull a few slivers of soil out of a ditch.

  • @GoodWorksTractors

    @GoodWorksTractors

    6 ай бұрын

    Neah, tillers are tough! Including your Land Pride. They are designed to work in extremely rough conditions. Worst case, you break the bolts off a tine. Get some new bolts and back in business. That's what they're made for :)

  • @rcclassiccrawlers4368
    @rcclassiccrawlers43685 ай бұрын

    In my experience doing an area the size of yours 40x80 I would rent a gas powered sod cutter and cut the whole area. Then roll up the first 3 - 4'. Then take a loader bucket, put it in float and gently scoop up the cut sod. Granted you'll have to get rid of it, but in my opinion it's worth it. Then go back remove stumps, level or whatever you need to do.

  • @ryanscott1989
    @ryanscott19895 ай бұрын

    This makes me want to buy the Summit tx25h more.

  • @WasHereAlone
    @WasHereAloneАй бұрын

    Great video, how deep do you have your tiller set?

  • @kurtloftfield4537
    @kurtloftfield45376 ай бұрын

    Thanks for the lesson, i will be doing a bunch of this next spring! How wide of a dethatcher/rake will a 1025R comfortably pull? I assume for level appearance the wider the better right?

  • @GoodWorksTractors

    @GoodWorksTractors

    6 ай бұрын

    You're welcome. The dethatcher only comes in 60" and the 1025r handles it just fine. It only weighs 50 lbs.

  • @kurtloftfield4537

    @kurtloftfield4537

    6 ай бұрын

    @@GoodWorksTractors thanks!

  • @MIoffGridAdventures
    @MIoffGridAdventures3 ай бұрын

    Exactly what I needed right now. How did you know? :)

  • @driverjamescopeland
    @driverjamescopelandАй бұрын

    Just the tiller and a good chain drag would've been sufficient. My favorite drag leveler, is the springs from an old mattress or box springs. I can't believe no one has offered that as a legitimate product... as they're the most effective drag leveler I've ever used. They level, smooth contours, drag away plant material, and kick larger rocks up.

  • @capewj8807
    @capewj880719 күн бұрын

    When you’re back blading with the bucket, or just going over with the bucket to level are you floating it?

  • @haraldmoeller-cp6nj
    @haraldmoeller-cp6nj4 ай бұрын

    Hi guys , so my question is whether the summit box plane was any good? Thanks for the vids. Always a great way to destress.😎

  • @GoodWorksTractors

    @GoodWorksTractors

    4 ай бұрын

    Yeah, really cool design and practical as well. Only downside is it's getting close to the price of buying a stand alone box blade and land plane.

  • @russbowman6801
    @russbowman68012 ай бұрын

    How about using disc harrows to level the ground?

  • @angkeats3685
    @angkeats368510 күн бұрын

    “Enough to make this video” 😊

  • @Iceman-Iceman
    @Iceman-Iceman5 ай бұрын

    After you tilled this plot of land, why didn't you use a pulverizer vs the dethatcher rake?

  • @richardbritton5280
    @richardbritton52806 ай бұрын

    Great vid Courtney ty 👏👍💪🏆🏆👴🐕🤔🦌🤠😎🙏💙☕️

  • @cussinirishdesigns3977
    @cussinirishdesigns397717 күн бұрын

    I am getting a tow behind tiller bc I can’t get a tractor yet but I have grass but it’s like bumps of grass and does pull out easily but is there something like the tiller but finer to chop the clumps up?

  • @haraldmoeller-cp6nj
    @haraldmoeller-cp6nj4 ай бұрын

    Courtney we live in the NE and we grow rocks. Great video but rocks will be rocks. Box plane?

  • @GoodWorksTractors

    @GoodWorksTractors

    4 ай бұрын

    Some places aren't meant to have smooth lawns and fields :) I don't sell the box plane, that is available through Summit

  • @raymondjoseph7177
    @raymondjoseph7177Ай бұрын

    Box blade is just like you said. If you don't have a tilt and turn rear, it's a big mess. I keep looking for a tiller. Ill find one dam it. Lol

  • @ghostridergale
    @ghostridergale5 ай бұрын

    Now after you get your ground all nice and smooth, then you have to figure out how to keep the moles/voles out of your property that’s going to dig up your nice yard and before long your nice yard will look as bad as it did before you started the project! Especially when you have neighbors on all sides of your property that do nothing to control the moles /voles in their yard. Only a matter of time till those pest find their way to your property!

  • @fuzzywigglebutt
    @fuzzywigglebutt6 ай бұрын

    Problem I have is if I use a tiller, our soil contains a lot of rocks that are mostly fist size. It would be impossible to pick them all up even with a rock bucket. Where the builder put the septic system, I did manage to remove some of the larger rocks in the drain field with a landscape rack. When the soil is wet, I mashed the rocks into the soil with a roller so mower doesn't constantly hit them. I have some areas I would like to level, but I am afraid if I use a tiller I would be starting over with rock collection / rolling again. 😞

  • @GoodWorksTractors

    @GoodWorksTractors

    6 ай бұрын

    Yeah, some areas just aren't well suited for lawns. Depending on other factors, perhaps you could bring in screened top soil.

  • @PurpleNovember

    @PurpleNovember

    6 ай бұрын

    That sucks! I know what that’s like Screened soil or bring in a soil screener. With a lot of rocks in the soil you’ll probably have to go down a good foot or more. Lots and lots of work!

  • @elained9591

    @elained9591

    2 ай бұрын

    We have an abundance of those aggravating small rocks. I’m sure we’d be in the billionaire category if I had a penny for each of them🤣. My work around is now to throw them in the bucket when I’m mowing and picking up sticks from all the trees. I dump them in the burn pile After it’s burned down, I just put them to the outside of the burn area since I really don’t know what else to do with them. But it beats what I did last year which was throw them under the nearest tree so the guy we hired would quit hitting them with his mower blades and then fuss about it. I also mow high as the 1025R allows

  • @kenalford5380
    @kenalford53805 ай бұрын

    How long does it take you to till an acre?

  • @about12acres
    @about12acres6 ай бұрын

    *Side eyes box blade with disdain* I wish I would have seen this a few months ago 😅

  • @GoodWorksTractors

    @GoodWorksTractors

    6 ай бұрын

    Haha, I saw that box blade in action :)

  • @thomasmiles9585
    @thomasmiles9585Ай бұрын

    $30k for equipment and you have a nice yard

  • @huskyhooligans999
    @huskyhooligans9996 ай бұрын

    Stone burier is the best tool for this job bar none, imho!

  • @GoodWorksTractors

    @GoodWorksTractors

    6 ай бұрын

    Not a good use of money for the average compact tractor owner. Tiller works well and much more versatile.

  • @justanotherviewer52
    @justanotherviewer526 ай бұрын

    Pretty sure a mini-grader would come in handy somewhere during the process.

  • @GoodWorksTractors

    @GoodWorksTractors

    6 ай бұрын

    Maybe, but I don't think it's necessary.

  • @justanotherviewer52

    @justanotherviewer52

    6 ай бұрын

    I agree, but I just think a mini-grader would be so cool. Besides, nobody makes one anyway, 🙂 @@GoodWorksTractors

  • @GoodWorksTractors

    @GoodWorksTractors

    6 ай бұрын

    Haha, totally get that!!

  • @tdiguru8461
    @tdiguru84615 ай бұрын

    Harley Rake is the only correct answer to this problem.

  • @juleswinnfield826
    @juleswinnfield8266 ай бұрын

    👍

  • @GoodWorksTractors

    @GoodWorksTractors

    6 ай бұрын

    Thanks Jules

  • @ra3975
    @ra397512 сағат бұрын

    Killed our area with a massive silage tarp. No spray. 3 weeks with daytime temps over 100 deg. killed all vegetation.

  • @davidsmith3623
    @davidsmith36236 ай бұрын

    Ever hear of a harley rake? An old timer says they work well to level the lawn..

  • @GoodWorksTractors

    @GoodWorksTractors

    6 ай бұрын

    Way too expensive for 99% of home owners. Good tool though.

  • @rharrell1
    @rharrell16 ай бұрын

    The easiest way to do this is to use a surface seed planter, zip seeder, or even a small corn planter. You can level a spot by just adding compost instead of fertilizer. Just is easier and will cost less money and time playing with machinery. It takes years for the soil to recover from tillage soil aggregation which is how healthy living soil absorbs water is pretty much destroyed when this is done plus you are creating all kinds of weed issues with tillage.

  • @GoodWorksTractors

    @GoodWorksTractors

    6 ай бұрын

    All well and good, but you forgot about the entire point of this process which is leveling out a bumpy field. Your idea works for overseeding only on an undisturbed plot.

  • @elained9591

    @elained9591

    2 ай бұрын

    I think Mr Courtney is spot on with this video. It’s also a great time to add the fertilizer (and lime) as needed to get those seeds started

  • @jeffsmith7840
    @jeffsmith78406 ай бұрын

    Didn’t even watch the video yet. But harely rake hands down. No time to watch

  • @GoodWorksTractors

    @GoodWorksTractors

    6 ай бұрын

    Great tool for commercial use, but not for 99% of home owners. Way too expensive and a tiller is much more versatile. You can take your family on a nice Hawaiian vacation for the price of a harley rake.

  • @forceon959

    @forceon959

    6 ай бұрын

    @GoodWorksTractors Many places you can rent one for the weekend for a few hundred dollars. But yes too much money - ours was $18,000 for a homeowner to use one. Still nothing like a power rake. Renting is a good option ​@GoodWorksTractors