BryanM said:
I am not a farmer or in the hay buissness, but have a few questions about the hay buisness. Too help my questions a little info will probably be usful. I live in northwest ohio , I am interestied in haying 10 acres all flatground no trash or stones.
1 ? On an average year how many bales of hay do you get from 1 acre?
2 ? What kind of mixture fo grasses do most hay farmers sell if they want good quantity and quality?
3 ? how many square bales are in a round bale? or are their different sizes of round?
I think that is all the questions I have right now. I did a search on the subject found lots of hay questions but never found the answer to these. Thanks for your time.
Same here. I'm not a hay farmer, but hope to become one. Got 10 acres of flat pasture of which 7 acres are now native grasses (aka weeds). Got tired of just mowing this area with the brush hog. So I've been getting stuff together to go haying.
Tractors:
New 2005 Kubota B7510HST (17 hp pto) with LA302 FEL ($12,600, 10% down, 0% for 36 months)--my general purpose utility tractor. Will probably use this one for seeding, fertilizing, raking, tedding and moving single hay bales with a custom hay clamp I'm going to build this winter.
1964 MF-135 diesel (38 hp pto, $3600) -- plowing, discing, mowing, baling. A fun machine to play around with also. Tractor has been rewired, new gauges installed, horizontal exhaust removed and replaced by vertical system, repainted, serviced. Runs fine. A few minor leaks. Have put about $500 worth of new parts in it. Need to reinstall the sheet metal one of these days.
6'ft offset disc (gratis from neighbor) -- heavy duty tilling. Got five 18" dia replacement blades last week. Needs a good cleaning and lube job.
6'ft pull type sicklebar mower ($150) -- picked this up last week from an ad in the local supermarket classifieds.
Plan to look at a used wheel rake next week and see if I can make a deal on it. I would really like to find one of those rake-tedder combos, used.
Looking for a 2-14 plow for the 135, an 8-ft grain drill and a baler.
Once I get my hands on all this stuff, I'll be in good shape to go haying.
I know that I'm just piddling around here. But it's relatively inexpensive fun. Don't expect to make money on this deal, just enjoying the challenge. I'll be happy if I can get 30-40 bales per acre.