One good thing about the drought of 2002 was it taught us the value of alternate feed stuffs. We found out you can actually feed a lot more straw in a ration and hay is usually overpriced?
Last year we baled up the rained on stuff in round bales and sold the "horse hay" in small squares. This year we were lucky in that we got it all up in squares. We cut it and a custom operator bales it and stacks it for 60 cents a bale. We cover it. He pays us $2.75 and he sells it and delivers it...I assume he is making a decent profit on top of the $2.75?
This year it worked out to 102 bales an acre. We put $42/acre of fertilizer on. I charge myself $10/acre to cut it. Net profit is in the neighborhood of $160/acre which is fairly good in my opinion....I wish my darned barley would do as well!
The point here is this hay is going to the pleasure horse trade! The horsey set will pay whatever it takes to have old Dobbin rolling in clover, while the feedlots/hogbarns will be as cheap as they possibly can! So why not grow a product that people will actually pay for instead of something nobody wants?
Last year we baled up the rained on stuff in round bales and sold the "horse hay" in small squares. This year we were lucky in that we got it all up in squares. We cut it and a custom operator bales it and stacks it for 60 cents a bale. We cover it. He pays us $2.75 and he sells it and delivers it...I assume he is making a decent profit on top of the $2.75?
This year it worked out to 102 bales an acre. We put $42/acre of fertilizer on. I charge myself $10/acre to cut it. Net profit is in the neighborhood of $160/acre which is fairly good in my opinion....I wish my darned barley would do as well!
The point here is this hay is going to the pleasure horse trade! The horsey set will pay whatever it takes to have old Dobbin rolling in clover, while the feedlots/hogbarns will be as cheap as they possibly can! So why not grow a product that people will actually pay for instead of something nobody wants?
Comment