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  2. Hay - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hay

    Small square bales are often stacked mechanically or by hand in a crisscrossed fashion sometimes called a "haystack", "rick" or "hayrick". Rain tends to wash nutrition out of hay and can cause spoilage or mold; hay in small square bales is particularly susceptible. Small bales are, therefore, often stored in a haymow or hayshed.

  3. Baler - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Baler

    Bale Sledge: In Britain (if small square bales are still to be used), they are usually collected as they fall out of the baler in a bale sledge dragged behind the baler. This has four channels, controlled by automatic mechanical balances, catches, and springs, which sort each bale into its place in a square eight. When the sledge is full, a ...

  4. Tolkkinen: Small square hay bales are a thing of the past ...

    www.aol.com/news/tolkkinen-small-square-hay...

    Square balers have gone the way of the typewriter and the rotary dial phone, replaced by the big round bales that occupy Minnesota's shorn hay fields like an old master ...

  5. Hay buck - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hay_buck

    Hay hooks stuck into a haystack Two hay hooks and some baling twine. Hay bucking, or "bucking hay", is a type of manual labor where small square bales, ranging in weight from about 50 to 150 pounds (23 to 68 kg), are stacked by hand in a field, in a storage area such as a barn, or stacked on a vehicle for transportation, such as a flatbed trailer or semi truck for delivery to where the hay is ...

  6. Alfalfa - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Alfalfa

    Other bale sizes are three-string, and so on up to half-ton (six-string) "square" bales – actually rectangular, and typically about 40 cm × 45 cm × 100 cm (16 in × 18 in × 39 in). [5] Small square bales weigh from 25 to 30 kg (55 to 66 lb) depending on moisture, and can be easily hand separated into "flakes".

  7. Hayloft - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hayloft

    However, farms that use small square hay bales may still use the hayloft for storage of hay. Many farmers now use bales of hay so large they must be handled by machinery, and these are normally stored in more open buildings or outside. Others have forgone hay in favor of grain or silage. [1]

  8. Silage - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Silage

    Haylage sometimes refers to high dry matter silage of around 40% to 60%, typically made from hay. Horse haylage is usually 60% to 70% dry matter, made in small bales or larger bales. [9] Handling of wrapped bales is most often with some type of gripper that squeezes the plastic-covered bale between two metal parts to avoid puncturing the plastic.

  9. Bale handlers - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bale_Handlers

    Bale spears can often move both round and square large bales. [3] [4] Bale squeezes are used with bales that are wrapped for silage, [5] large piles of large and small square bales, [6] as well as a special squeeze that can be used to unroll large round bales for winter feeding. [7] Bale handlers with hooks are used to move large and small ...