Published Jan 28, 2024
Long ago, farmers used a wooden plough with an iron point attached to animals. It made V-shaped furrows in the soil without turning it around.
Soil-turning ploughs, attached to tractors, are mainly made of iron. They have a shape resembling a frog's body and are used in soil preparation.
This tool is mostly used for the first round of soil work in places with a lot of water where many weeds grow. Its curved iron plate lifts the soil, burying all the weeds and leftover plants underneath.
The disc plough is great for different soil types – hard, dry, stony, and with debris. It has two types: Standard and Vertical disc plough. It comes with features like reversible shovels, hitch, frame, and more.
This tool is good for ploughing cultivated land for green manure fields. It can be connected to the soil and move on both sides during the process.
A subsoil plough is made to break tough layers underground without bringing them up. It's shaped like a wedge and is narrow, with a broad part to break the hardpan and create a slot on the top layers.