Posted by Zachary Hoyt on January 26, 2013 at 06:00:06 from (74.47.60.18):
In Reply to: Re: Summer time posted by gtractorfan on January 26, 2013 at 04:51:12:
I sell as much hay off the field as I can and let the customer pick it up. I have a chute so I can pull a wagon behind the baler and used to do it that way when all of our hay went to one place. They would send a guy over to drive the tractor and I would stack the wagon. Now that they aren't needing hay anymore I don't have anyone to help most of the time so I drop the bales on the ground, go around with the wagon by myself and load it and then take it to the shed and unload and stack it. This limits how much I can do in a day, the most I have done was around 300 bales baled and picked up and put away and that felt like a lot. Zach
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Today's Featured Article - Harvestin Corn in Southern Wisconsin: The Early Years - by Pat Browning. In this area of Wisconsin, most crops are raised to support livestock production or dairy herds in various forms. Corn products were harvested for grain, and for ensilage (we always just called it 'silage'). Silo Filling Time On dairy farms back in the 30's and into the first half of the 40's, making of corn silage was done with horses pulling a corn binder producing tied bundles of fresh, sweet-smelling corn plants, nice green leaves with ear; the
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