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Ready For This One? :)

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Allan in NE

10-07-2004 17:57:54




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Okay,

I can understand the horsey people wanting to bunch up a little of that old road ditch brome grass to help get ol' Snort thru the winter; it's no good for anything else anyway, might as well use the goofy stuff.

I mean, these types of fellers like that sort of thing. You know, playin' cowboy and farmer all at the same time, the way they like to do.

But other than that,

Why would anyone in their right mind want to put up hay by using small square bales?

No offense boys, but I think this borders on being just a little bit wacky in the noodle. One of our steering tires with a definite slow leak, so to speak.

Heck, I'd even rather stack the stuff by hand while using a three-tined pitchfork and a loader sweep; it is one whale of a lot less work and aggravation all the way around.

Secondly, where is it chiseled in stone that we gotta put this darned stuff inside a good, useable barn anyway? Are we tryin’ to keep the fire marshals loaded with something to do, or what? (oh, that’s right…..higher nutritional value, better color and all that…Sure, now I remember.) :>)

Okay, somebody return the serve,

Allan

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slim

10-08-2004 08:11:12




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 Re: Ready For This One? :) in reply to Allan in NE, 10-07-2004 17:57:54  
I'll bite! Cause my wife wants the small bales so she can have me stack them in the front yard with her pumpkins, mums, and corn stalks. Why else would I want them?

LOL, your turn.

later

slim



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Dave 2N

10-08-2004 04:57:22




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 Re: Ready For This One? :) in reply to Allan in NE, 10-07-2004 17:57:54  
There you go Allen, stirring up trouble with an OT post about hay!!!! But I sure did enjoy your post. Have a good weekend.



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Allan in NE

10-08-2004 05:03:13




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 Re: Ready For This One? :) in reply to Dave 2N, 10-08-2004 04:57:22  
Hi Dave,

You bet! I was going to use the subject of Ford tractors to see if I could get a rise out of you fellows, but thought the subject of hay would be more a little more flammable. :>)

At least, we got 'em going!

Allan



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Indydirtfarmer

10-08-2004 03:57:11




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 Now we know the TRUTH! in reply to Allan in NE, 10-07-2004 17:57:54  
Allan, you really ARE theREALron aren't you? Got your pointy stick REAL sharp before you posted this one didn't you?

When you get right down to it, no farm commodity (sp) is easily grown, handled, or stored. Look at all the work involved in raising corn...

Hay is a "staple" of farm income. Back in the day, MOST of the hay produced was used as "fuel" for a farmers "equipment". 3/4ths of the hay produced was used as feed for the horses that were his "tractor". With the advent of modern farm equipment, that NEED diminished somewhat. More "cash crops" were planted. Hay remained essential as a cattle feed, but when horses weren't so common as work animals, there was no longer so much demand for hay too feed them.

Enter the modern "Yuppie"

Today there are THOUSANDS of horse owners that just ride for pleasure. They buy MOST of their hay from farmers that need the extra income. (Like ME!) They want SMALL square bales. (I'm getting hundreds of request's for what is known as "craft-sized" bales--about half the size of a normal small square) When the market speaks, good business people respond with an "I'll sell you that"!

In addition, there are still plenty of people that buy 1 or 2 cows a year to "raise their own meat". They buy plenty of hay too.

Finally, there are lots of smaller operations that 1.)don't have the money for investing in a GOOD round baler, 2.) Don't have a big enough tractor to handle a round baler, 3.) Just don't want to change from "what they know".

Also consider that even BIG cattle operations benifit from the convenience of small squares.

On the "barn thing"...MOST of these big spacious barns were built with the sole purpose of storing hay. They wouldn't even be there if it wasn't for hay storage....

It has already been well documented the need for protecting hay from the elements...(Rain, sun, ect) With the high cost of producing hay these days, you can afford to loose even a small percentage of it to the weather. Even a large percentage of round baled hay is stored "indoors".

This year has been a bad one, as far as my hay "profitability". Wet weather all spring and summer made a HUGE dent in the ammount we have to sell. In a NORMAL year, such as 2003, hay sales ammounts to around $18,000 net profit for me. While not a "stand-alone living", it is a goodly portion of my YEARLY profit. For that, I'll toss a few bales....

Now ALLAN...GO PICK ON SOMEONE ELSE....Us dumb ol' hay-balin' hicks gotta make a buck somehow, so we can live in this yuppie world....John

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Allan in NE

10-08-2004 04:12:04




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 Re: Now we know the TRUTH! in reply to Indydirtfarmer, 10-08-2004 03:57:11  
Hi ya John,

Ouch!!! Just a minute while I go wipe the blood from my nose and pick the gravel outta my hair! One eye is swollen shut to the point that I can't even see anymore! Geeze, ya knocked me down right out here in the middle of the darned driveway! :>)

Where the heck ya been anyway? And don't give me that old, lame excuse about how you're having to be out running the combine or some such silly nonsense.... :>)

Later

Allan

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Ludwig

10-08-2004 10:55:07




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 Re: Now we know the TRUTH! in reply to Allan in NE, 10-08-2004 04:12:04  
Geez John took my answer...



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Indydirtfarmer

10-08-2004 04:56:10




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 Re: Now we know the TRUTH! in reply to Allan in NE, 10-08-2004 04:12:04  
You can handle the abuse....In fact, you seem to be actively searching it out! Here's my "schedule" for the last couple days.
1.) Actually WORK at work for the past few days
2.) Combine about 180 acres of corn. (With WAY better than expected yields!)
3.) Haul several loads of soybeans in to the elevator.
4.) Shoot paint on a set of plows I'm restoring.
5.) Disc and seed a "filter strip" we're working on. That's about all the tillage we do on this poor excuse of a farm. 6.) Load a semi trailer with equipment I'm sending through an auction this weekend.
7.) UN-load that same semi of the equipment I bought at LAST weekends auction
8.) Sleep about 15 minutes
9.) "Visit" with the wife...She's been about as busy as I have been. 10.) Answer several "irritating" post's, degrading no-till farming, square baling of hay, and politics.....
11.) Mostly nothing at all..... ....
So what have you been up to? John

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Nolan

10-08-2004 03:43:09




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 Re: Ready For This One? :) in reply to Allan in NE, 10-07-2004 17:57:54  
Guess the notion of using the right tool for the right job confuses you.

Large bales for large operations, small bales for small operations.



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RusselAZ

10-07-2004 22:19:04




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 Re: Ready For This One? :) in reply to Allan in NE, 10-07-2004 17:57:54  
If we had more of those little square bales to handle we may have less people in prison doing nothing.

Bales and milk cows can go a long way to helping children become adults.



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Allan in NE

10-08-2004 04:27:10




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 Re: Ready For This One? :) in reply to RusselAZ, 10-07-2004 22:19:04  
Hi Russel,

I thought those problems were caused by the lack of having to pull weeds from the beet and bean fields.

Also, if these young kids had to grind ear corn by hand using a potato fork into an old table grinder, they would appreciate the value of hard work.

I don't ever remember seeing a 7 or 8-year-old kid that weighed 150 lbs either.

Yep, she's a goin' to he!! in a hand basket, that's for sure.

Allan

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JRB IN MAINE

10-07-2004 20:13:22




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 Re: Ready For This One? :) in reply to Allan in NE, 10-07-2004 17:57:54  
Hi Allan thanks for the back up . on our farm we bring in 17000 bales of hay a year . we also bring in 100 round bales and make sylage bales for cows outside. for people that want them. we feed our cows with what we bring in and sell the rest to pay taxes and fix tractors over the year .
square bales sell here and i know it"s hard work and it takes us away from our familys because it is so time consumeing but you go with what the consumer wants. thanks JRB

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Rayp(MI)

10-07-2004 18:52:34




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 Re: Ready For This One? :) in reply to Allan in NE, 10-07-2004 17:57:54  
Very simple my customers want a bale of hay the kids or the little woman can move. (Come to think of it, some of my customers are "little women.") They're feeding a couple bales a day to a horse or two, or a few sheep, or goats, or even a bunch of rabbits. They don't want several hundreds of pounds of stuff they can't begin to drag around. So, into the barn it goes, stacked nice and neat, and they pick it up by the pickup load, store it in a small corner of the horse shelter, and feed it as needed. Yes it is appropriate to keep the hay inside to prevent spoilage, freezing down to the ground, etc. Had a load of hay I didn't want to put in the barn, because it got wet while on the ground before baling - stacked it on the ground, and covered it with plastic. Took a bale off the bottom to feed sheep today, and after only a few weeks on the ground, the twine had rotted, and bale was half spoiled.

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RN

10-07-2004 18:39:18




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 Re: Ready For This One? :) in reply to Allan in NE, 10-07-2004 17:57:54  
People with horses for hobby should consider getting a horse drawn mower to do the cutting. Saves fuel , gives horse training and a bit of workout for man and horse. Take another lesson from Amish and get a horse drawn manure spreader. Green county Wisconsin Amish have some other practices to save fuel- Give the Arab oil people some nervous fits. Home farm still has mower like I used to use with team of horses to mow ditch, only 1 small pet horse there now, brother needs to fix buggy. RN

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Hugh MacKay

10-07-2004 18:31:10




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 Re: Ready For This One? :) in reply to Allan in NE, 10-07-2004 17:57:54  
Allan: Have to agree with you on one item, that being the small squares. All the 4 years my dad had the IH 45 baler, he kept telling the IH dealer the old hayloader was faster. It wasn't until the NH Super 69 with thrower we saw any increase in productivity, but that just increased workload at barn.

On the outside storage of hay, fine for you guys in Nebraska. You think about the 40" to 50" of rainfall we get in the east. It will go right through a stack or round bale. It's called manure without the cow.

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Leland

10-07-2004 18:14:23




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 Re: Ready For This One? :) in reply to Allan in NE, 10-07-2004 17:57:54  
Here in my neck of the woods you can't do with out small bales everybody has 5-15 acres and horses. right now in little trader paper 3rd alfala 3.00 bale grass red clover mix 1.75. and you think small bales are not worth the trouble.



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kyhayman

10-07-2004 18:09:21




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 Re: Ready For This One? :) in reply to Allan in NE, 10-07-2004 17:57:54  
I'll return :-).

Course I'm with you right up to the pitch fork comment. COurse about the barns, with 60" of rainfall barn storage (or something under cover) is essential here.

Most of my customers of squares stall house 24/7 except for training their horses. Most are feeding some mid dollar ($10-100K) stock (I cant break the high $ horse market).

As for putting it up, its all about what I can sell. I'm wrapping more hay this year in the roll b/c some of the dairy farms are buying it over squares. Couple of the dairies still want them. Like to give them 20-30 bales a day in the tie stalls after milking. I cant give you the logic, if I had to feed them (small squares), I'd quit.

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Allan in NE

10-07-2004 18:14:11




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 Re: Ready For This One? :) in reply to kyhayman, 10-07-2004 18:09:21  
KY,

Any of the dairies back there grind their hay? We found this by far, to be way more efficient.

Allan



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kyhayman

10-07-2004 18:22:55




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 Re: Ready For This One? :) in reply to Allan in NE, 10-07-2004 18:14:11  
Seems to be everyone here used to grind hay either in a TMR for the milk cows or like me as a substitute to soybean meal with alfalfa. I always thought the TMR would be the way to go but the only guys left milking are feeding purchased complete feed in the parlor (pellets) with corn silage and alfalfa round bale silage (or small squares of alfalfa)after milking. Most of them are using a challenge feeding program in the parlor.

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Willy-N Small??

10-07-2004 18:08:03




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 Re: Ready For This One? :) in reply to Allan in NE, 10-07-2004 17:57:54  
third party image

Heck mine weigh around 1,800 lbs put one out a week for the cows in a feeder. The little ones are for the horses in the other barn. The Cows like it when they here the tractor start up!! That is about all my lift I built will carry but it works on the 2,500.00 Massey 135 Tractor. Mark H.

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Allan in NE

10-07-2004 18:10:40




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 Re: Ready For This One? :) in reply to Willy-N Small??, 10-07-2004 18:08:03  
Lookin' good there Pard!

Nice herd of horns too. How many of those beasts you runnin'?

Allan



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Willy-N

10-07-2004 18:20:17




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 Re: Ready For This One? :) in reply to Allan in NE, 10-07-2004 18:10:40  
third party image

There my Daughters she has 18 or more of them. She has a mix of Scotish Highlands, Longhorns and Angus Cross. This is one of her Highland Bulls called Jake. I put a ring in his nose when he was little and he lost it but never forgot who did it! Mark H.

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Willy-N Jake

10-07-2004 20:10:19




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 Re: Ready For This One? :) in reply to Willy-N, 10-07-2004 18:20:17  
third party image

This was Jake when we got him sporting his new Nose Ring he lost. There hai grows much longer in the winter and the other picture is a summer coat. He gets a 4-6 inch coat. If the butcher gets him this year we ar tanning the coat but will wait till January to do it. He is for sale but may go in the freezer for the Dogs food if he is not sold. Can't use him for breeding anymore do to his off/spring is now in the herd. Mark H.

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Allan in NE

10-07-2004 18:52:37




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 Re: Ready For This One? :) in reply to Willy-N, 10-07-2004 18:20:17  
WOW!!!!! !!!!! !!!!

I gotta tell ya, "I am impressed!!!!" Where are you? Sell breeding stock?

Oooops. Now, my wife is paying more attention to you than she is to me.....Darned you Mark!!!!!@!$#@ :>)

Allan



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Willy-N Better Yet!

10-07-2004 19:52:20




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 Re: Ready For This One? :) in reply to Allan in NE, 10-07-2004 18:52:37  
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Don't let your wife see this one! The mom is forsale right now if you did want one. They are realy cute when they are young!! We live in Eastern Washington. She is building up a herd of them and sells some for meat each year to pay for there feed bill. Mark H.

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RJ-AZ

10-07-2004 18:41:27




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 Re: Ready For This One? :) in reply to Willy-N, 10-07-2004 18:20:17  
Scottish Highlanders are the Pit Bull of the bovine species. I had a friend that had some and what a chore to try and brand those calves.



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steveormary

10-07-2004 21:08:01




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 Re: Ready For This One? :) in reply to RJ-AZ, 10-07-2004 18:41:27  
On hay and cows.

Put 4th cutting alfalfa up in small sqs. and sold in the field. Buyer picked them up.

And cows have long memories so be careful how you treat them. And you gotta watch the Red Angus.

steveormary



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Willy-N

10-07-2004 19:57:57




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 Re: Ready For This One? :) in reply to RJ-AZ, 10-07-2004 18:41:27  
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You don't mess with there calves for a while!! They are a wild breed but can be tamed with a lot of handleing. Never heard them called the Pit Bull of the Cows but you are right. Just get between a mad one and her Calf and I think I weould brather deal with a pit bull! This is Forest the Bull pushing a 5 ft spread. Mark H.

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