How to Prepare Your Soil for Planting (2024)

Garden

Learn about tillage methods on the small farm

By

Lauren Arcuri

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  • Swarthmore College

Lauren Arcuri is a freelance writer and an experienced small farmer based in rural Vermont.

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Updated August 3, 2022

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Betsy Petrick

Fact checked byBetsy Petrick

  • Ohio Wesleyan University
  • Brandeis University
  • Northeastern University

Betsy Petrick is an experienced researcher, writer, and producer.

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Once you've tested and amended your soil, it's time to get it ready for planting. With many different methods of tillage, or working the soil, how can you know which one is right for your needs and raw materials?

One general rule is to use the least intensive method of tillage you can. Disturb the soil as little as needed to yield an aerated, fine seedbed for your crops. This will help minimize theimpact on the land, as well as erosion of the soil due to wind or water. If it's a brand new garden, however, you will want to loosen the soil to a depth of at least 8-12 inches, so that roots can burrow down.

A good approach is to add organic matter to soil in the fall, ahead of spring planting. Spread a layer of compost no more than four inches on top of any garden beds and let the worms do the rest of the work. They'll incorporate the compost into the soil and aerate it. An exception would be if the soil is truly bad; in that case, working in the compost can kickstart the remediation process.

Come spring, you can warm the soil more quickly by placing plastic, cardboard, or old windows on top of it for a kind of greenhouse effect, then pull out any weeds that come to the surface. Resist digging, as this can bring up more weeds.

The goal is for about one-quarter of the soil to be organic matter; too much will boost microorganism activity and use up other nutrients that your plants require, like nitrogen. When preparing soil, you can enhance it with various types of organic matter, including compost, aged manure, wood ash, and coconut coir. These amendments should be added at least two weeks before planting.

Hand Tilling

If you're ahomesteader seeking to plant a veggie garden to feed your family, you might not need a tractor or heavier tillage methods of any sort if the space isn't overly large. Instead, hand tilling your soil via double digging or another method might serve you best.

Double digging is an effective method of preparing soil in a garden with a spade and a lot of hard work. To double-dig, you begin by spreading compost over the soil. Then, dig a trench 10 inches deep and the width of your spade, depositing the shovelfuls of soil onto the ground next to the ditch. Dig a second ditch alongside the first, moving the shovelfuls of soil into the first ditch. Continue in this manner until the entire area has been hand-dug.

Other options include raised beds or sheet mulching methods such as lasagna gardening. With these methods, you don't have to work your soil at all—you simply build on top of it.

Rototilling

A rotary tiller, commonly known as a rototiller, is a motorized cultivator with tines or blades that rotate through the soil, pulverizing it and breaking up clumps into a finer texture.

Rototillers can be walk-behind, where you literally walk behind it as it pushes through the soil, or ride-on, such as those found as an attachment to a lawn or compact tractor.

If you are starting with sod, you may need to hire someone to plow up the sod before you rototill it. If you do this, consider simply hiring the farmer to rototill the plot for you. It will be a lot easier, and you can rototill next year once you have an established plot. Alternatively, double dig.

No-Till Methods

No-till is a newer method of tillage that doesn't disturb the soil like conventional methods. Its advantages include decreased erosion, lower need for equipment, and no cultivation of the soil. No-till farmers must still purchase a no-till drill for planting crops, and no-till methods can involve a lot of trial and error.

There are two types of no-till: conventional and organic. In conventional no-till, herbicides are used to kill weeds and any crop residue before planting. For organic no-till, a cover crop is used to smother weeds, then is mowed or rolled down, and crops are planted directly into the soil between the remains of the cover crop.

Shallow or Reduced Tillage

Somewhere between conventional tillage and no-till are various methods of shallowly cultivating the soil in preparation for planting of crops. Farmers' methods of shallow tillage may vary depending on their geography, equipment, and particular soils. What is shared is the goal: to minimize disturbance of the soil while still preventing weed seeds from surfacing. Reducing use of fossil fuels and minimizing the amount of equipment needed are other goals of shallow tillage.

One such method that is popular on the small farm is the use of a chisel plow, also called a spring harrow. The chisel plow is a three-point-hitch implement with springy steel tines with sharp tips that loosen and aerate the soil before planting. We have a 24-hp Ford 1720 tractor that we attached a chisel plow to and dragged through our rocky, heavy clay soil. We found that it worked very well to break up the clumps of soil without catching on the large and small rocks in our mountainous soil. We'd then stop and dig those out with the front bucket. After using the chisel plow, we went over the plot with a 48" rototiller attachment for our Simplicity ride-on lawn tractor.

If you plan to have, or already own, draft horses on your small farm, using horse-drawn equipment to cultivate the soil is another possibility. However, you must be dedicated to everything involved with raising, training, and feeding draft horses, so think carefully before jumping into horse-drawn farming. But for those who really want to reduce or eliminate the use of fossil fuels, this may be the way to go.

Conventional Tillage

Traditionally, farmers working in larger fields begin with the moldboard plow (a curved iron plate that turns the soil). After plowing, the soil is worked with disks, a series of round plates attached to one axle that rotates and breaks up the soil more finely. Depending on your soil, you may be able to skip the moldboard plow and go right to the disks. Alternatively, try a chisel plow and then a disking.

Several passes with the disks may be required to get the seedbed fine enough for planting crops. One of the concerns with conventional tillage is that the disturbance of the deeper soil layers that occurs is not good for soil-dwelling organisms like earthworms. Plus, erosion of newly disturbed soil by water and wind is a concern.

Only you can determine which tillage method matches your soil, geography, climate, available resources, and scale of production. Any of these methods or a combinationmay be the best choice for your small farm or homestead.

How to Prepare Your Soil for Planting (2024)

FAQs

How to Prepare Your Soil for Planting? ›

Add Nutrients and Beneficial Microbes to Old Soil

Add a handful of a slow release fertilizer like manure. Mix in one part compost for every three or four parts of the old potting mix. Apply a liquid fertilizer like compost tea every two weeks.

How do you prepare used soil for planting? ›

Add Nutrients and Beneficial Microbes to Old Soil

Add a handful of a slow release fertilizer like manure. Mix in one part compost for every three or four parts of the old potting mix. Apply a liquid fertilizer like compost tea every two weeks.

What is the answer to the preparation of soil? ›

Preparation of soil: Preparation of the soil involves loosening and turning the soil. This process is known as ploughing, is done by using a wooden or iron plough which pulls the soil. The pulled soil is then levelled by using a wooden or iron leveller.

How to prepare plants for planting? ›

Using a clean and sharp knife, cut the roots apart in several places. This does damage the roots but it also provides them with a new opportunity to form new root growth into the soil once planted. Cut away any excessive root matting from the base of the soil/plant ball as well.

Should I soak soil before planting? ›

Soak the hole.

This step is especially important during periods of hot, dry weather when the surrounding soil moisture is going to be low. Once you've thoroughly saturated the surrounding soil, place your pre-soaked plant into the planting hole.

What is soil answers? ›

Soil is the loose surface material that covers most land. It consists of inorganic particles and organic matter. Soil provides the structural support for plants used in agriculture and is also their source of water and nutrients. Soils vary greatly in their chemical and physical properties.

How is soil made step by step? ›

Soil minerals form the basis of soil. They are produced from rocks (parent material) through the processes of weathering and natural erosion. Water, wind, temperature change, gravity, chemical interaction, living organisms and pressure differences all help break down parent material.

How is the soil prepared briefly? ›

The soil is prepared before sowing the seeds. The soil is loosened to increase the absorption of water and manures. Loosening of soil particles adds humus and nutrients to the soil that increases crop yields. Tilling or loosening the soil is done by ploughs which are pulled by a pair of bulls.

What is the first thing you should do before planting? ›

Prepare the Soil

Once the frost has lifted and the soil is workable, start preparing your garden beds. In winter, soil tends to become compacted, so the first thing you want to do is loosen it back up by tilling or turning it. Using a tiller or a sharp spade, work the soil to a depth of 12 to 14 inches to loosen it up.

How to fertilize soil before planting? ›

You can broadcast dry fertilizer (1 pound for each 100 square feet of garden or 100 feet of row) over the entire garden plot before planting. Then after planting, side-dress along the plant rows. The fertilizer should be applied 2–3 inches to the side of, and 1–2 inches below, the seed level or plant row.

How do you clean soil before planting? ›

Steaming: Steaming is considered one of the best ways to sterilize potting soil and should be done for at least 30 minutes or until the temperature reaches 180 degrees F (82 C). Steaming can be done with or without a pressure cooker.

How do you make your own soil for planting? ›

Place equal parts of top soil, peat moss, perlite, and compost in the bucket. Add in a half a cup of garden lime, and a good handful of bone meal. Use a hand shovel to thoroughly mix all the ingredients until they are incorporated. Sift the mixture in a sieve with a 1/2-inch mesh to remove any large pieces of debris.

What does the Bible say about preparing the soil? ›

To prepare the soil in our hearts and plant seeds of righteousness so that we can produce a vast harvest of fruit, which is love, joy, peace, patience, gentleness, goodness, faithfulness and self-control (Galatians 5:22-23).

What do farmers do to soil before planting? ›

Today tillage is the most common way that farms prepare their soil, but more and more farmers are seeing the benefits of no-till or low-till techniques that use minimal or shallow tillage, by using a disc harrow.

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