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This is the oldest technique of all. Tilling is done several times a year, which totally eliminates weeds. Tilling is more or less deep, depending on the time of year, to improve infiltration and diminish evaporation from the soil. Tilled land is actually a kind of cover, because there are no active roots in it and it insulates the layer underneath where the roots are.
This system makes normal activities in the grove, such as moving machinery around, very difficult.
Only the very soluble nutrients applied as fertilizers (above all nitric nitrogen) are easily absorbed by the roots, while the ones that attach to the colloids remain in the tilled soil that has no roots.
Tilling can be done at different depths depending on if it is done close to or farther away from the trunk. Tilling can be done less between fall and the beginning of spring, to allow for plant coverage to develop in winter, which improves infiltration and helps support the organic matter when tilling starts up again in the spring.
In the grove, the area under the crown of the tree is left untilled, while the rest is cleaned of weeds through herbicides, physical removal or pasture.
This is currently the most typical soil system used in Spanish olive groves, mostly in areas with good rainfall or in fields with irrigation.
Plant coverage greatly improves infiltration and reduces runoff and erosion, as well as providing a constant supply of organic matter for the soil.
If the plant coverage is not duly controlled, it becomes a serious competitor with the olive tree.
In Spain there was a rapid shift from total tilling to no tilling with bare ground. In the majority of farms, the fact that the roots colonized the horizontal surface brought about large increases in production and a significant reduction in costs for fuel and machinery.
However, most of the soil was compacted down by the machinery passing through and loss of organic matter, and so infiltration was drastically reduced, and there was less water available for the trees. In addition, runoff increases and with that comes laminar erosion, which produces severe and permanent loss of soil:
In this type of soil management, all the water and mineral resources of the soil are entirely available to the olive tree because there is no competition from weeds.
And it continues to be a good soil management system for soils that do not have infiltration or erosion problems, and that are shallow, in sub-humid to humid climates.
It is an inexpensive system, but very often in the medium and long term, herbicide-resistant weeds develop and it becomes expensive to keep them under control.