Jchonline
Elite Member
- Joined
- Feb 19, 2018
- Messages
- 2,843
- Location
- Red Feather Lakes, CO
- Tractor
- Kubota L6060, KX040-4, M7060, X1100C, M62(S)
Your original post brought a few questions to mind.
1. What do you plan on doing with the hay?
2. What machine is your farmer friend using today to bale it, what type of bales, what is he/she doing with said bales.
10 acres isnt much, and really if you think a profit of any sort can be made baling 10 acres you are sorely mistaken. Equipment cost, upkeep will far, far outstrip the income from such a small operation. You need to cut, rake, maybe ted, bale, stack, and transport. If you have money to burn by all means go for it...but it is a cost center at that size for sure.
If I had a hobby farm I would do something else with it...grow special crops/organics and sell. Livestock of any sort and haying just isnt worth it on 10 acres. Not if you care about balancing the books.
Ill give you a parallel for my forest ag stuff. Cutting trees and selling normal firewood is a loss. Selling bundled wood with no bark and calling it premium, or better yet selling some special byproduct I can produce is much better financially. The obvious stuff just doesnt make money in these small operations.
1. What do you plan on doing with the hay?
2. What machine is your farmer friend using today to bale it, what type of bales, what is he/she doing with said bales.
10 acres isnt much, and really if you think a profit of any sort can be made baling 10 acres you are sorely mistaken. Equipment cost, upkeep will far, far outstrip the income from such a small operation. You need to cut, rake, maybe ted, bale, stack, and transport. If you have money to burn by all means go for it...but it is a cost center at that size for sure.
If I had a hobby farm I would do something else with it...grow special crops/organics and sell. Livestock of any sort and haying just isnt worth it on 10 acres. Not if you care about balancing the books.
Ill give you a parallel for my forest ag stuff. Cutting trees and selling normal firewood is a loss. Selling bundled wood with no bark and calling it premium, or better yet selling some special byproduct I can produce is much better financially. The obvious stuff just doesnt make money in these small operations.