being a village lover i just loved your posts below too each of it has a lovely color of village life dear thank you for sharing it brought so many memories back in my heart ,god bless you and family
The stacks are covered with our Hay Caps, so apart from about an inch of staining on the ends the bales they are perfectly dry. We also stack our hay on plastic so no moisture comes up from the ground into the stacks. But the track getting to the stack... that is a different story!
Very messy. You have obviously had more rain that we have. That is quite a load too. How much does it weigh?
ReplyDeleteEach bale weighs about 600kgs and there is three bales on the loader.
DeleteMud... a necessary side effect.
ReplyDeletebeing a village lover i just loved your posts below too each of it has a lovely color of village life dear thank you for sharing it brought so many memories back in my heart ,god bless you and family
ReplyDeleteWooo weeee, you could build an adobe hut with all of that mud. Hope you've got your boots on!
ReplyDeleteSo long as the stacks are dry: you don't want rot.
ReplyDeleteThe stacks are covered with our Hay Caps, so apart from about an inch of staining on the ends the bales they are perfectly dry. We also stack our hay on plastic so no moisture comes up from the ground into the stacks. But the track getting to the stack... that is a different story!
DeleteLarge machinery make mix up more and more. Of. course you need rubber boots.
ReplyDeleteThe photo is very interesting.
Mud, as I remember well on our West Gippsland farm.
ReplyDeleteHope you haven't had too much rain and that the machines don't get bogged.
ReplyDelete