Posted by hayfarmer on July 03, 2016 at 16:41:55 from (71.84.179.83):
In Reply to: Not the way Dad did it! posted by Bruce from Can. on July 03, 2016 at 13:01:09:
I am always amazed at how quickly you guys bale hay after it is cut. Out hee in Central Washington what they call 5 day hay (cut and baled within 5 days) is unusual unless we get really great curing weather, 7 day hay more common. Our crops are heavier I think. Guys usually cut a field and move to the next. Depending upon weather, 5 or 6 dys later they use a tedder to fluf the windrows and sometimes can bale later in the day or the next one. I read here about guys cutting one day and baleing the next we are never able to do that.
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Today's Featured Article - When Push Comes to Shove - by Dave Patterson. When I was a “kid” (still am to a deree) about two I guess, my parents couldn’t find me one day. They were horrified (we lived by the railroad), my mother thought the worst: "He’s been run over by a train, he’s gone forever!" Where did they find me? Perched up on the seat of the tractor. I’d probably plowed about 3000 acres (in my head anyway) by the time they found me. This is where my love for tractors started and has only gotten worse in my tender 50 yrs on this “green planet”. I’m par
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