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Steel in the Field: A Farmer’s Guide to Weed Management Tools
Horticultural Crops
Brush Weeder
Overview: Vertical brush weeders use rotating
nylon bristles to pull weeds and aerate soil about 1" deep. Rapidly
spinning bristles turn in the direction of travel and run between
the rows. The bristles penetrate the soil crust as they pull and
shred weeds. The flexible bristles don’t create compaction, but
leave worked soil as a fluffy mulch that helps to regulate soil
moisture. Usable in any soil moisture level where a tractor can
be reasonably driven; less effective in hard, dry soil conditions.
Design Features: Metal crop shields (2" to almost
5" wide) protect crops from moving soil. Brushes 20" or 30" in diameter
and at least 4.75" wide are custom built to till a specific width
of inter-row area. The smaller version can be belly mounted or rear-mounted,
while the larger diameter hoe must be rear-mounted. Brushes resemble
a section of a street sweeper brush and are PTO-powered. Parallel
linkage on each brush maintains consistent depth on uneven terrain.
Rear mounting requires a second person (who sits behind the brushes)
for precision steering.
Note: Horizontally rotating brush hoes use pairs
of much smaller brushes on either side of a row. They use hydraulic,
battery-electric or PTO power. The brushes resemble a household vacuum
cleaner’s circular brush attachment. They can be tractor-mounted or
horse-drawn to cultivate up to five rows, or set on manually pushed
tool carts for single-row application. Tubular steel carts use off-road
bicycle wheels. Useful in moist soil. (Horizontal hoe sources, both
Scandanavian: 30, 94)
Model for comparison: 72" toolbar, 6 vertical brushes
(20" diameter) for 5 rows Rec. PTO HP: 30
Speed: 1 to 3 mph
List price: $8,000
Only 72" toolbar; brush/shield configuration made to order. Sources:6 Farmers: Brush weeders are currently used more widely
in Europe due to stringent herbicide restrictions there. Relatively
few are used in North America outside of forestry nurseries. Robin
Bellinder at Cornell University (see “Contacts”)
recorded several years’ experience with a vertical brush hoe and other
leading European tools in vegetable systems.