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<blockquote data-quote="DLD" data-source="post: 1591133" data-attributes="member: 19707"><p>For us, not needing a tractor to unload is a huge advantage of the dump trailer - but we don't stack our hay in the barn, either. We stack outside and rarely have to restack hay unloaded from a dump trailer. If your bales are pushed together tight on the trailer, they should come off in a solid row and stay that way if the ground's level. Mine's very often not, and we end up having to push a bale back in line once in awhile, but having to have a tractor to unload would defeat one of the biggest advantages of the dump trailer for us.</p><p></p><p>On the other hand we hardly ever feed more than 1 or 2 bales in a pasture at a time, so feeding with a dump trailer is something we would rarely do. We feed almost everything with a hydraulic bale spike on a truck, or occasionally with a tractor.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="DLD, post: 1591133, member: 19707"] For us, not needing a tractor to unload is a huge advantage of the dump trailer - but we don’t stack our hay in the barn, either. We stack outside and rarely have to restack hay unloaded from a dump trailer. If your bales are pushed together tight on the trailer, they should come off in a solid row and stay that way if the ground’s level. Mine’s very often not, and we end up having to push a bale back in line once in awhile, but having to have a tractor to unload would defeat one of the biggest advantages of the dump trailer for us. On the other hand we hardly ever feed more than 1 or 2 bales in a pasture at a time, so feeding with a dump trailer is something we would rarely do. We feed almost everything with a hydraulic bale spike on a truck, or occasionally with a tractor. [/QUOTE]
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