I was putting 16 acres of hay for quite a while before my son started trying to make a go at getting in the hay business. What you were using as a kid still works today - if you can find decent machinery to use. Until 4 years ago I used a single Farmall 350, an International 1000 balanced head mower, a New Holland 56 rake, and an IH 47 wire tie baler. Along with a couple hay wagons and a fairly heavy duty 16' utility trailer. The 16 acres would produce anywhere from 850 to 1200 bales (depended on weather) usually right at 1000 bales.
I would mow it in patches of 300 or so bales - so I could load everything and not leave a bale in the field at night. Want to make it rain - leave 100 square bales standing in a field overnight. It would take a couple days to unload and sell what was on the wagons then do it again. I was extremely short on storage space and literally only had space for 200-250 bales under a roof. A good day was when I would discount a $1 a bale and people picked up their own from the field.
I delivered to one place that had horses and the guy pointed out his new little John Deere 3032 tractor that he used for mowing. I told him he had at least 3X more money wrapped up in that lawn mower than I had in all my equipment that I used for hay - and that included the 1964 F250 that pulled the trailer to his place.
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Today's Featured Article - Field Modifications (Sins of the Farmer) - by Staff. Picture a new Chevrolet driving down the street without it's grill, right fender and trunk lid. Imagine a crude hole made in the hood to accommodate a new taller air cleaner, the fender wells cut away to make way for larger tires, and half of a sliding glass door used to replace the windshield. Top that off with an old set of '36 Ford headlight shells bolted to the hood. Pretty unlikely for a car... but for a tractor, this is pretty normal. It seems that more often than not they a
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