Willy
,,,Our vege garden is on our drain field. We live in a similar situation to yours.The only available flat space for our vegetable garden was our drain field.We do alternative
gardening here in
straw bale which basically is raised beds in a sense.I am not sure if I am understanding this correctly but you want to start to put in rows. If you do these in a
raised bed fashion it is not a problem..However if you are talking about breaking out the tiller and doing a conventional garden row, it gets more complicated. It is not just what goes down the drain but the drain field itself is designed in certain ways to handle it. Not sure what type of drain field you have but with ours there is a limit to how much soil can be placed upon it, how much
water can be passed through it for drainage with out causing soft spots and over flows , etc..Mine is also in a clay and stone base that does not allow extra water to pass through easily.So the raised beds on it give us more control to not keep it from the saturation point that can become a problem with the septic itself.We also graded a very slight slope into our drain field area to carry extra water off it through our stone
fence and down to our grapes and a
nettle garden.
I would check with those who install the drain fields in your area who are familiar with the your type of system to find out the specs they had had to install the system to for the sanitation department..They may be able to tell you more about whether you can disturb the layering and topsoil of the drain field..