Last cutting of hay

Jogeephus

Well-known member
Joined
Jul 17, 2006
Messages
24,228
City & State/Province
South Georgia
Cut the last of the hay this week and with only a 20% chance of rain till Saturday I decided not to fluff the hay and just let it dry on its on. I bet you'll never guess what happened this afternoon after two days of drying?
 
Jogeephus":25w1r6wl said:
Cut the last of the hay this week and with only a 20% chance of rain till Saturday I decided not to fluff the hay and just let it dry on its on. I bet you'll never guess what happened this afternoon after two days of drying?

All those deer came out of the woods, and peed on it??
 
Pretty darn close but here is a hint.

sa1159.jpg


I'm thinking of changing my name to Shleprock. Just one rogue cloud that seems to follow me. Nowhere else in the county did they get any rain but .....
 
Wish it would rain here. Had 100 ton of litter spread the last 2 days. We're ready for some relief.
Should of waited a week, my mother in law is comming to visit.
 
Definitely need some rain. I just finished drilling 18 bags of oats and 16 bags of ryegrass. Looks like a good chance this weekend and first of next week.
 
We finally been gettin some rain here.. not much, but at least it will get my fall fescue, and rye going. Bermuda been hanging on by a thread, but this small amounts of rain will keep it going til cooler weather hits.
Jo.. glad u got another cuttin tho.
 
Next time was your truck and leave the windows rolled down when you're done, maybe have your wife wash the windows on the house and then wait a day or two... That should draw out any imediate unseen rain and free up a few days for haying.
 
CP - It seems I have a cloud that follows me.

Started baling. 20% chance of rain. One cloud in the sky sitting above my head. It started raining again after the fourth roll. Thankfully it wasn't much. Hay is not as dry as it could have been but its good enough so I finished the field. I'm done baling for the year. Now all I have to do is replace the front tire on a tractor. A clutch in another. Fix something with the fuel peddle linkage. Replace the bearings n the throat of the baler. Move the hay. Fix a broke fuel tank support. Fix the hydraulics on another tractor the won't lower the plow. Its all down hill now.
 
Jo,

I thought that those Imbalancers had inbred genetics that allowed them to thrive on wet and rotten hay? I think your last University Of Georgia study showed that their ADG jumped from .3oz to .4oz when fed hay that a goat wouldn't eat. :mrgreen:
 
sounds like your gonna be working on equipment all winter.was talking to my nephew in law an his cutter an rake swarmed on his last cutting.an he has a tractor that wont shift into reverse.
 

Latest posts

Back
Top