Mark Page said:Any one have any idea what a big round hay bale weighs, just roughly.
A farm just to the south of us is owned by an aging farmer who refuses to quit and retire. I hunt his property along with his son. His wife called and asked if I could help get some hay into his hay barn at the other end of their property. He had mown it and done a very poor job, his son had raked and baled it but ran out of time to finish.
Without thinking I said sure.
According to Massey's specs I have 2,900 lbs of lifting capacity at 10 feet, the tractor weighs in at 4,800 lbs. and the rears are ballasted with 850 lbs of ethanol. I've used his hay barn as blind, and it's plenty roomy. He stacks them 3 bales high. I can pick up a bale spike today at TSC and be ready to go tomorrow AM. I was planning on buying one of the double spike models. I figure if I'm not comfortable stacking them 3 high he'll have to be satisfied with 2 high.
My loader skills are somewhat limited as I have only owned one for 6 months. I ran over there yesterday afternoon and counted 32 bales.
Any advise would be appreciated. Should I stack the remnants from previous mowings together before stacking this last cutting?
Thanks Ed Great advise. I assume you want the spear to pierce the bale as close to center as possible.
why are you not using his tractors and equipment vs going out and buying stuff for your tractor? if he can stack them 3 high, surely he has the tractor and implements to do things. and just need some manual labor of driving one of there tractors.
be extra careful when dealing with round bails on the FEL. and only raise FEL high. when you have your tractor positioned in perfect spot. to were you can just raise FEL and drive forward a few feet and drop bail. if you have bail up high on a raised FEL and try to turn, you risk tipping entire tractor over on its side fairly quickly.
why are you not using his tractors and equipment vs going out and buying stuff for your tractor? if he can stack them 3 high, surely he has the tractor and implements to do things. and just need some manual labor of driving one of there tractors.
be extra careful when dealing with round bails on the FEL. and only raise FEL high. when you have your tractor positioned in perfect spot. to were you can just raise FEL and drive forward a few feet and drop bail. if you have bail up high on a raised FEL and try to turn, you risk tipping entire tractor over on its side fairly quickly.
4x5 800-1100 lbs
5x6 1500-2000 lbs.
Tight bales of dry hay.