If you are selling hay then appearance is more important, so stacking on edge might be worth the extra labor.
We never sold hay, fed it all out. We stacked bales flat wether they are stored inside or outside. Outside the flat bales shed precipitation better and don't wick moisture up from the ground as much. It takes less labor to stack them flat and less labor to pick them up to remove them also. Fewer holes and cracks to step into. If the hay was not dry it never went in a barn or a stack anyway, so wicking was not a problem.
Nice picture, it brings back memories without the itch and the heat stroke, miss the smell of a barn full of fresh alfalfa.
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Today's Featured Article - The Day Mom Drove the 8N - by Brian Browning. My Dad was wanting to put in a garden but couldn't operate the 8N and handle the old horse drawn plow he had found and rigged up to use with the tractor. Well, he decided to go get Mom out of the house and have her drive the tractor while he walked behind the plow. You got to understand that while my Mom is a hard worker who will always help whenever she can... she had never operated farm machinery before that day. Dad got her out there, explained how the clutch was the same as in our o
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