Hay Making on a Different Scale

   / Hay Making on a Different Scale #441  
If I rake night before, or early while some dew is still present, then bale about 10-11 the dew moisture is mostly gone, but it makes the hay incredibly soft and palatable.

I've had good success with this when hay gets too dry in droughts
 
   / Hay Making on a Different Scale
  • Thread Starter
#442  
If I rake night before, or early while some dew is still present, then bale about 10-11 the dew moisture is mostly gone, but it makes the hay incredibly soft and palatable.

I've had good success with this when hay gets too dry in droughts
Ours was still running about 15%
 
   / Hay Making on a Different Scale
  • Thread Starter
#443  
Poured on the urea on 16 acres using up what I had left.

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   / Hay Making on a Different Scale #444  
Ours was still running about 15%
Wow you’re 15% even with the drought? You must have damp ground?
I baled yesterday with drought and without teddering and I was only 12%.
 
   / Hay Making on a Different Scale
  • Thread Starter
#445  
Very interesting day yesterday. Turns out a tree fell on the power line tweaking the post in our fields. The crew were extremely grateful that, one, I had a hard road that could use to get to the pole, and two, I gave them permission to use it. I don't know how many times I was thanked over the course of the time I spent with them. Probably never see this again. Surprising how much stress the poles can take. Pole was 6+ feet from where it was supposed to be and pictures just don't show what it was really like in person.

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   / Hay Making on a Different Scale #446  
The power company in my area does a lot of tree work near our steel structure power lines to try to keep that from happening.


I’d really like to have one of those 6x6 chassis with a flatbed for a hay hauler and to sit a V-box fertilizer spreader on, but they are hard to find with a long wheelbase.
 
   / Hay Making on a Different Scale #447  
Very interesting day yesterday. Turns out a tree fell on the power line tweaking the post in our fields. The crew were extremely grateful that, one, I had a hard road that could use to get to the pull, and two, I gave them permission to use it. I don't know how many times I was thanked over the course of the time I spent with them. Probably never see this again. Surprising how much stress the poles can take. Pole was 6+ feet from where it was supposed to be and pictures just don't show what it was really like in person.

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It's very rare for a tree to fall into a transmission line, usually the ROW's are required to be wide enough to allow for such things without any disturbance to the grid, in many cases that kind of event can cause cascading effects and take out other grids, usually a narrower ROW is an older line that is within 69-138 KV. I am sure that they appreciated the fact that you had and let them access the line to get the equipment in to make the repairs go quicker, else wise break out the climbing gear and do it the old fashioned way, and I can tell you from first hand experience that sometimes in emergency situations that's just how it plays out, you made it easy for them, hard to beat salt of the earth farm people.
 
   / Hay Making on a Different Scale
  • Thread Starter
#448  
The power company in my area does a lot of tree work near our steel structure power lines to try to keep that from happening.


I’d really like to have one of those 6x6 chassis with a flatbed for a hay hauler and to sit a V-box fertilizer spreader on, but they are hard to find with a long wheelbase.
It was within last 5-7 years they used a helicopter to trim out the ROW. 3 years ago or so they sprayed the vegetation. You can see the ROW in the straight on shot of the truck. They said very rare trees get to them but it does happen.
It's very rare for a tree to fall into a transmission line, usually the ROW's are required to be wide enough to allow for such things without any disturbance to the grid, in many cases that kind of event can cause cascading effects and take out other grids, usually a narrower ROW is an older line that is within 69-138 KV. I am sure that they appreciated the fact that you had and let them access the line to get the equipment in to make the repairs go quicker, else wise break out the climbing gear and do it the old fashioned way, and I can tell you from first hand experience that sometimes in emergency situations that's just how it plays out, you made it easy for them, hard to beat salt of the earth farm people.
I told them I didn't think I had a choice. Their line and needed to fix. Asked what happens if they are refused. Next is their boss tries to convince landowner. next is to figure out how to get equipment to the area. sluice pipes and pads which they commented would be a lot for where this one is located. Lawyers sometimes involved after the fact if repair is emergency enough that they proceed regardless of landowners lack of cooperation. If all else fails they do the work from the air. Poles and all whatever needs done.


The tree

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   / Hay Making on a Different Scale #449  
Yeah no doubt that they have the right to access or be on the ROW to do the maintenance and make repairs, it's just sometimes there will be sections of ROW that are wet or row cropped, etc and a private road outside of the ROW is an absolute godsend, matting in to a pole can be very time consuming and often times just a no-go for emergency repairs, as very few company's have enough matting on hand without renting it from a specialized company. We have drug equipment in with skidders and bull dozers but it makes a mess.
 

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