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Non-Cattle Specific Topics
Coffee Shop
Where to Keep Tractor
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<blockquote data-quote="Katpau" data-source="post: 1808299" data-attributes="member: 9933"><p>You can buy a lot of hay for $80,000, and if you buy your hay, you won't have tractor maintenance or the need for a place to store the tractor. You would also save the hours spent planting, fertilizing, cutting, raking, baling and getting the hay in the barn. If you put a pencil to it, you will find it is much cheaper to purchase 250 bales of hay per year then it is to grow and bale it yourself. Unless you are putting up hundreds or thousands of acres of hay, the overhead will take any profit. Why not just let the sheep graze your land, and let someone else do all the work? We buy all our hay and I have never been sorry. If the weather is bad and hay gets put up in poor condition, it is not your problem. You can wait for another cutting or find a different supplier.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Katpau, post: 1808299, member: 9933"] You can buy a lot of hay for $80,000, and if you buy your hay, you won't have tractor maintenance or the need for a place to store the tractor. You would also save the hours spent planting, fertilizing, cutting, raking, baling and getting the hay in the barn. If you put a pencil to it, you will find it is much cheaper to purchase 250 bales of hay per year then it is to grow and bale it yourself. Unless you are putting up hundreds or thousands of acres of hay, the overhead will take any profit. Why not just let the sheep graze your land, and let someone else do all the work? We buy all our hay and I have never been sorry. If the weather is bad and hay gets put up in poor condition, it is not your problem. You can wait for another cutting or find a different supplier. [/QUOTE]
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