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This is a neat site! Just found it today. There seems to be a lot of experience on here. I live in a typically drier part of the country. A lot of you are going to read this twice, I cut hay with a 25' draper head. I can get some country down! I use the hay head for the heavy hay though. Has anyone calculated it? Also, do you have the software to do so? I hand-calculated my gross profit (before fuel, payments, insurance, etc.) and was disappointed. Unless I did something wrong, I'm looking at about $220/acre/yr. (what I sold hay for per acre for the year). Majority of hay was. Hello everyone, new member here on the Hay forum. Question for those more knowable than I. In the spring of 2021 I drilled in orchard grass and medium red clover with some spring oats as a nurse crop. Oats and orchard grass mixed together and drilled at 40-45 lb/acre. Medium red clover was set. Here ryegrass can make very good hay But It's tricky to get dry. Round bales that are outside exceeding 165 degrees that he is garbage it would not even be good for mulch Things i learned this hay season… hay season is the most stressful thing i look forward to all year I’m really glad i clean out the baler after each use If a hydraulic line runs thru a hidden space (like the tongue of a baler), that’s where it will leak Modern tractors don’t run without. Looking to redo my hay field next year, so I picked up tillage and seeding equipment (plow, cultivator, disc, 6200 drill), but have a couple questions from info I've gotten. One farmer said I should plant a cover crop year (straight oats), cut it green at the end of the year, then the next year. Anyone have a chart or document that shows the average weight of a bale given a particular size? Ex 4x5 RB = 750lbs 3x4x7 = 1,000 lbs If so, can you please post it up? Thanks Okay, here is a question for some of you with a bit more experience than me at hauling hay in volume. I have a customer for some hay this spring that will be coming significant distance. They will be coming for 300 bales in one delivery. I know that a flatbed tractor trailer will do more. A forum community dedicated to hay, forage and silage owners and enthusiasts. Come join the discussion about tractors, machinery, harvesting, soils, pests, ranching, reviews, accessories, classifieds, and more! What is a typical percentage of yield per 1st, 2nd and 3rd you typically get when making small square bales? Example: Orchard grass: 1 acre were to give 150 bales total per year. From that, 70 bales 1st cut, 50 bales 2nd cut and 30 bales 3rd cut. I'm assuming a 50 lb bale, 14x18x36ish.