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Rained On Hay
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<blockquote data-quote="RainMan" data-source="post: 111175" data-attributes="member: 1655"><p>Thanks for the replies.</p><p></p><p>Dave: I'm in Skagit County. Over the last few weeks hay priced around $1.50-$4.00 a bale has been plentiful. Weather has been good for the last couple weeks. Just a good shower came through here on Monday and some of it was pretty heavy, depending on the area. I have a relative that hauls alfalfa from the Moses Lake area, but sounds to me like it's still around $130 a ton + the haul (Just what I'm told). They haul a considerable amount from there to here every year, so I don't have much else to go by. As far as the second cutting goes, a cattle rancher takes the first, lets the owner sell the second, then comes back in for a third. They fertilize it heavily with chicken _ _ _ _ between each cutting.</p><p></p><p>Not that excited about messing with the small bales that much anyway. But the cattle rancher mentioned above more or less is asking for a favor. CW</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="RainMan, post: 111175, member: 1655"] Thanks for the replies. Dave: I'm in Skagit County. Over the last few weeks hay priced around $1.50-$4.00 a bale has been plentiful. Weather has been good for the last couple weeks. Just a good shower came through here on Monday and some of it was pretty heavy, depending on the area. I have a relative that hauls alfalfa from the Moses Lake area, but sounds to me like it's still around $130 a ton + the haul (Just what I'm told). They haul a considerable amount from there to here every year, so I don't have much else to go by. As far as the second cutting goes, a cattle rancher takes the first, lets the owner sell the second, then comes back in for a third. They fertilize it heavily with chicken _ _ _ _ between each cutting. Not that excited about messing with the small bales that much anyway. But the cattle rancher mentioned above more or less is asking for a favor. CW [/QUOTE]
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