I've used various rotovators (did the GYO product test a couple of months back!) and I think there is a time and a place for them.
If your plot is uncultivated and completely infested with weeds, then rotovating won't do much to spread those weeds (they're probably already everywhere they can possibly be!). On heavy (ie clay-rich) ground however, rotovating will utterly devastate soil structure, leaving an impermeable pan of smeared clay that will prevent water from draining and roots from growing beyond a few cm deep.
As it's virgin ground, my top tip would be this: If your soil isn't too heavy, and there's really no other way to get it into shape, rent the biggest, meanest rotovator you can find. One that needs two people to lift. Nothing else will do a better job or be easier to use than a spade and a fork.
When the ground is in production you could use a lighter version like a Mantis to break up the topsoil each year, but I still prefer a fork.
If your plot is uncultivated and completely infested with weeds, then rotovating won't do much to spread those weeds (they're probably already everywhere they can possibly be!). On heavy (ie clay-rich) ground however, rotovating will utterly devastate soil structure, leaving an impermeable pan of smeared clay that will prevent water from draining and roots from growing beyond a few cm deep.
As it's virgin ground, my top tip would be this: If your soil isn't too heavy, and there's really no other way to get it into shape, rent the biggest, meanest rotovator you can find. One that needs two people to lift. Nothing else will do a better job or be easier to use than a spade and a fork.
When the ground is in production you could use a lighter version like a Mantis to break up the topsoil each year, but I still prefer a fork.
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