Check out this demo of a 20 horsee power Mahindra Tractor running a Tar River 870 Mini Round Baler. Devin shares all the details on these great machines. #hayingequipment #mahindratractors #minibaler
Fourth season with one of these bailers now. Took a bit to learn how but very happy with the results now. Total about 3500 bales so far. Best with the heavier hemp based twine but still good with the poly string too. MUST blow dust out regularly while baleing and MUST clean adjust and oil chains etc before winter storage. Found a lot of horse people and small acreage owners who prefer these small round bales over the square ones.
Making quality hay is far more complex, resource-intensive, and stressful than hobbyists imagine. When your equipment breaks down-- and eventually it will-- baling operations grind to a complete halt. A surprise rainstorm blows in and soaks your hay, and you lose it all and must then clean up and dispose of the mess. Mow your 10-acre yard with a zero-turn, continue to buy your hay from professionals, and save yourself the headaches.
@@justinsmith6118 On headlands, it won't hurt anything to leave it down on the 3 point, but if you were going to turn around and come back up a field row, you'll want to lift it.
Toy for wanna be farmers with too much money. Or more likely big dreams and equally big credit lines So if your cutting hay on 0.5-10 acres how long does it take to pay off $7k. Of course the mower, rake, fuel, parts and maintenance. Twine. Etc. Are on top of that. If you're buying because it's a fun toy then none of this matters. Bit if you're trying to justify it as a business expense,. Stop because you won't.
Thanks for your comment. Most of these are sold to hobby farmers that want to be able to process their own hay for their animals with a smaller tractor. Definitely not the most cost effective option for large operations. In our area, we're seeing more of smaller 10-15 acre farms than large operations and this set up works pretty well for them.
I’d consider it if I was going to be doing some custom bales for a person or client that has that smaller acreage. That way you could just roll the whole rig up onto your trailer and shoot to the next job.
Not really if you think about it with hay prices right now. Not everyone has equipment to move big round bales once delivered. I bet you could get good coin for one of those small round bales. You could fit them in the bed of a truck or even a large suv.
I think you missed the point... Small farms can't get any idy to do their field, it's about that simple.... We have six acre and nobody will touch it(about 4.5 field).... So we buy hay and the hay guy runs out, or charges more because supply is down and...... This would offer a great option for us to be independent of the volatile hay market(hay guys rule the world you know😂)