bigbull338
Elite Member
yeah baling after the dew falls is best of alalfa because it keeps the leaves from shattering off the stem so bad because they are damp.
You may end up sleeping in the field anyway. The best baling is in the late evening and early morning when there's a little dew on the ground. I remember my dad baling until about midnight when the dew got too heavy. He'd sleep under the tractor for a few hours and then start baling again at first light.
I looked at the list of threads you have started in an attempt to see perhaps what this metal shed structure looked like but 88 threads would be a bit too time consuming to find it.
yeah baling after the dew falls is best of alalfa because it keeps the leaves from shattering off the stem so bad because they are damp.
Ron,
Only 88... I'm slacking off...
My "temporary pasture" thread covers most of the area where the horses are now, and the "Monster Mulcher" thread covers the part about the over all 5 acres I am turning into pasture over time and howI mulched it after logging it. But you are right, the metal shed is in neither of those...
1 & 2 - My metal shed is a large 20 x 50 (approx) metal framed, corregated galv sheet sides and roof, no insulation at all. This shed is near the house, in my back yard (I will take pics tomorrow I hope). The horse pasture is up the hill infront of the house (up by my main gate) and quite a distance from the house. It has minimal venting I fear (Need to look again). There is a large roller door, but not tall enough for the ROPS and Canopy on my tractor to fit. Currently except where the ducks spill water, it is dry as a bone, and it is always dry year round. In fact there is so much dust from the dirt that it slowly coats everything badly with ruddy red dirt. was thinking I needed to avoid the dirt on my hay. Currently all the ducks, chickens and guineas are lodged inside at night, the free range during daylight.
3 - I have not left over hay yet. Everything I have is still good. I might try to buy some of the Hay Bales from my supplier that were the ones stored on the ground that the rest sat upon, maybe I can get those cheaper... Maybe not...
Skids = wooden Pallets, right?
Airflow. I will remove the roller door and cut the opening up higher to allow the ROPS/Canopy in and I will NOT put any kind of door on it. I figured the tractor and attachments will be better under a roof than outside in the rain.
4 - Stacked on end? Is the "end" the cut end side? The sides with twine are "sides", right? I just want to make sure I follow directions properly...
5 - No barbed wire, agreed. No metal in horse sheds, agreed. Horses are always looking for something to cut themselves with because they LOVE to bankrupt their owners and they alo LOVE the Vet...
I have not even started a run-in shed project yet. I need a shed for my 4Harley's first...
David
David -
Any updates on equipment purchase?
Frank
Frank,
I had a long phone call with Bucktaker and he sent me email pictures. It looks pretty good, I am certain it is a smoking good deal.
Right now I am debating mostly how quickly can I get up to speed, find some fields to lease and so on... I am trying to estimate what my costs will be for food/fuel for the pickup run.
My buddy SLHawkins will get back in a couple weeks an I plan to have a long talk (mostly him educating me) with him about haying and possibly running some cows on a place he knows, etc.
It boils down to finances and time. What can I get done, that I can afford, and do I do it now or later.
I have a couple questions I will PM you about.
How is K-stan?
David
Anyway, after fuel, expenses and parts we made a little over $1K selling bales fro $8(NO LABOR figured in.
This year our price goes to $10, and we already have over 200 bales sold....the pressure is ON:laughing:
Are you serious ... $8 a bale and this year $10 a bale ??? You did say 4x4 rounds?? Isn't that awfull cheap?
Yep, we were scrambling to build a haybarn. If they sat out you can't give 'em away. Also, last year was a banner year here for hay...everybody had it and we did not want to sit on it. There are 6 rolls left in the barn(part of what I held back for my animals), so I think we did ok:cool2: "stick and move"
The evil master plan is to complete the barn, fill it with 500ish rolls. Then have a customer base that take what we roll right off the feld. When another drought hits bump the price but keep it lower than anyone else. Last drought, 4x4's were bringing about $40, so we would sell in the high $20's. We do want to be fair and make a little money at the same time.
Yep, we were scrambling to build a haybarn. If they sat out you can't give 'em away. Also, last year was a banner year here for hay...everybody had it and we did not want to sit on it. There are 6 rolls left in the barn(part of what I held back for my animals), so I think we did ok:cool2: "stick and move"
The evil master plan is to complete the barn, fill it with 500ish rolls. Then have a customer base that take what we roll right off the feld. When another drought hits bump the price but keep it lower than anyone else. Last drought, 4x4's were bringing about $40, so we would sell in the high $20's. We do want to be fair and make a little money at the same time.
If you are making good horse hay you might get more for it selling to a transporter that takes hay south and west.
Coastal Bermuda Hay available down there causes impaction and colic problems with many horses so a lot of folks with expensive horses pay high prices for northern hay.
David,
There's two potential customers/markets right there...I say go for it!!
Hawk
David,
There's two potential customers/markets right there...I say go for it!!
Hawk
I also heard somewhere that MANY folks trucked last season's hay to TX due to their drought and fires. But that is a one time situation, they will not be able to truck to those same places this year.
Shawn,
You open up an interesting thought.
I heard a number of anecdotes along this line earlier this winter when I first went looking for hay.
The local feed store trucks his square bales in from Penn and sells them for almost $8 last I heard back in Feb I think. They also stated loudly "You will not find ANY Spotsylvania (nearby county) hay of equal quality. The first time I bought hay there, first week of Jan, they were like $6 and I believe the price increase was 100% due to rising fuel costs.
I also heard somewhere that MANY folks trucked last season's hay to TX due to their drought and fires. But that is a one time situation, they will not be able to truck to those same places this year.
Clearly Fuel costs will dictate how far away you can haul profitably, and there is the other question about how "good" is hay from Mid-Atlantic (Upper South) Caroline County VA gonna be compared to true Northern Yankee hay from further north?
Maybe you and I should just become hay brokers/truckers and connect our TBN hay making buddies in the North with our TBN hay consumers in the South? Hmmm...
It is a tempting idea still...
I had dinner with a friend last night and his assessment of my Haying question was simple...
Today my horses are consuming $28/week (7 bales @ $4 today) in hay, they will eat a little less in the heat of summer so this will go down a little, but let's take $25 / week as average, that is 100 weeks to pay for the equipment ($2500) 20 weeks to pay transportation ($500) and 36 weeks ($900) to cover tractor fuel and maint of the equipment & tractor. That means in 3 years it is fully paid off and all I meen to produce is 325 bales per year (assume 2 cuttings per year here, only 163 bales each time)
Anything beyond 325 bales per year = PROFIT, and if I get more horses or a cow etc. that only accelerates the ROI.
How much land do I need to get 200 square bales per cutting? Hmmm...