I never had to do loose hay, fortunately. We were feeding 40-60 milking cows when I started, it was small squares with 90% picked off the ground and stacked on a wagon then unloaded and stacked in a mow to be feed out during the winter. That was useing a WD Allis Chalmers on a semi-mounted cyclebar mower, then our first conditioner was a steel rollered Meyers, after the first year that mower was converted with a pto extension and a rear hitch so we could pull the conditioner right behind the mower. Thinking back on those days I would say that many days 4-5 acres was a full days work between milkings. The baling was done by a Farmall 400 starting in 1956, When we finished mowing and were going to bale the WD would get unhooked from the mower to haul hay wagons. As time went on and the Farmall 560 got added to the farms fleet it became the baling tractor and baler got a bale thrower added to it. Then the first haybine arrived (cycle bar and intergrated with one steel and one rubber roller) which could be worked with the 400 but the 560 was much nicer on. The little AC was still being often used to haul wagons, along with the new IH 656 Hydro (mid 60's). Still using a kicker baler and hand stacking in the mowes. A 1000 bale day was a lot of work especially when it was done from after 10AM and before 5PM (finished milking and barn chores and before starting milking). More tractors and equipment got added on as the years went by along with more cows we were milking a 100 head by 1968. Late 1968 saw the addition of the Ford 8000 tractor. After that will considerable equipment and ground aqusistion the milking herd grow to 120 cows and lots of tractors and equipment. By this time much of the hay was done as haylage, a lot less labor/higher quality feed. The digestiblity and protein was much higher because of the earlier season harvesting (not having to get it dry, just well wilted)... The last square baling for milk cows was around 2012, they still do some square bales but most everything is round bales now days for beef cows (100+ brood cows).
doing some haylage, neighbors barn and silos in the background (3rd or 4th cutting)
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Square baling a few years ago.
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