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 I Chore in Chucks
Posts: 2882
        Location: MD | I'm new to the round bale scene and frankly I love not having to drop hay every morning or really even worry about it.
does everyone have a tractor? or can you use a quad or mule if your round bales are up on something they can pull it on, like a flat bed trailer? I just can't imagine buying a tractor for my two and would prefer to use rounds.  |
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 Midget Lover
          Location: Kentucky | We don't have a tractor. We use our offroad Ford Ranger to go get round bales from my hay guy. He uses his tractor to load them in the bed. They are about 900 pounds. When we get home (it's about a 10 mile trip) we are able to roll them out of the bed into the pasture. I do use a hay ring. I'm having a hard time justifying a tractor also since I only have three, and I only use round bales in the winter. |
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 Underestimated Underdog
Posts: 3971
         Location: Minnesota | We have a flat bed trailer and will role them off as we need them. |
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 World 4D Champ
Posts: 28264
           Location: PA | My hay guy delivers a months worth at a time, so 4 bales. They are about a 1000 lbs each. He drops them off right near the gate, and my husband and I roll them out by hand every week. Not the easiest method. But we don't have a tractor right now, and its what we've been doing for 7 years. Someday we'll get a tractor, but for now..we make it work. |
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 Expert
Posts: 3782
        Location: Gainesville, TX | We have a hay buggy. We can pick them up one at a time by backing into them and put them wherever we want by backing up again, no tractor required. |
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  More bootie than waist!
Posts: 18425
          Location: Riding Crackhead. | We have tractors and loaders. We also put up our own small squares and big rounds so we're equipped to handle them. |
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 I Chore in Chucks
Posts: 2882
        Location: MD | oija - 2014-02-18 10:29 AM
We have a hay buggy. We can pick them up one at a time by backing into them and put them wherever we want by backing up again, no tractor required.
well that is a neat little tool!
I just googled it... never would have even thought those existed! |
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 Expert
Posts: 2161
    Location: NW. Florida | I put a rope around it and pull it with my truck where ever I want it. |
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 Shelter Dog Lover
Posts: 10277
      
| Husband, tractor and loader. |
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 Hummer's Hero
Posts: 3071
    Location: Smack Dab in the Middle | We use our skid steer. But I've also had my neighbor guys (whom I buy my round bales from) just bring them over with their tractor, and paid them a little extra for the time and fuel.
Growing up, we used a bale buggy that my dad made. It worked spiffy, but it was on a wench systerm and almost broke my brother's arm once. I am pretty sure my dad still has it, but doubt he uses it much since he bought a skid steer a couple of years ago. |
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 Cute Little Imp
Posts: 2747
     Location: N Texas | Carbon Copy - 2014-02-18 10:39 AM
I put a rope around it and pull it with my truck where ever I want it.
We did this for years. Get a long rope, put it around the bale, just a few inches off the ground, attach each end to the hitch on the truck and drag it wherever it needs to go. Then we got a hay dolly and it made moving them easier, it was just a pain to lower and raise it so many times if you have several bales to put out.
We've also left round bales on the flatbed trailer, back the pickup right up to the trailer, and roll a bale into the bed.
Not having a tractor makes you have to get creative! |
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 The Bling Princess
Posts: 3411
      Location: North Dakota | We use my father in law's tractor and loader. |
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 Expert
Posts: 1392
       Location: Central Texas | I have a hay buggy now but before that I just used the truck to push, pull, drag, shove it where I needed it. |
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Elite Veteran
Posts: 941
      Location: Kansas | We have a truck with a Deweze hay bed on it. Very handy because you can roll a bale out or lift it and set it in a hay round. We just bought a newer truck with a bed and should sell the old truck. It will be good for someone who doesn't want to move a lot of bales. My husband also uses the hydraulic arms to lift and carry things. We used a tractor with bale spear on the back for years. We didn't know how much we would like the hydraulic hay bed. We fork hay off of a bale for the pens at the barn when we have horses in them. He will also roll out a few feet of hay to fork-easier than scraping it off the bale. This is actually easier for me than bucking bales and climbing in the loft to get them out. |
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 Chicken Chick
Posts: 3562
     Location: Texas | We usually just bought one at a time, so we would roll it out of the bed of the pickup at the gate (land was down hill) and it stopped rolling within a few feet of where we wanted it. If we had more then one, we would have the extras put outside the gate and when we needed a new one hubby and I just rolled it where it needed to go. I think I was just there more for moral support cause I think my husband was actually doing all the work... I just did a lot of grunting Haha! |
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 Thick and Wavy
Posts: 6102
   Location: Nebraska | oija - 2014-02-18 10:29 AM We have a hay buggy. We can pick them up one at a time by backing into them and put them wherever we want by backing up again, no tractor required.
we have one too! We haven't really used it yet as all I could get last year were square bales, but I'm hoping to just leave out round bales this year! |
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 Buttered Noodles Snacker
Posts: 4377
        Location: NC | Murphy - 2014-02-18 10:08 AM We don't have a tractor. We use our offroad Ford Ranger to go get round bales from my hay guy. He uses his tractor to load them in the bed. They are about 900 pounds. When we get home (it's about a 10 mile trip) we are able to roll them out of the bed into the pasture. I do use a hay ring. I'm having a hard time justifying a tractor also since I only have three, and I only use round bales in the winter.
Ditto to eveything they said except we feed them year round. |
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 Zeal Queen
Posts: 3826
       Location: TEXAS | We push them when the horses need another one LOL |
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Sideways Riding Expert
Posts: 11371
        Location: ND--it snows, it floods, it snows, it floods | We don't have a tractor so I borrow a wrangler from work to off load them. That being said to move them out to the pasture we went to Lowes and bought a length of metal braided rope (like a dog tie out type metal rope) and had it cut to our specifications. We put two loops at the ends and wrap the rope around the bale and then put the loops around the ball of the bumper hitch on our pickup. Works like a charm and easy....we can move with either pickup or our 4-wheeler if we have too. |
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 I Chore in Chucks
Posts: 2882
        Location: MD | slacy09 - 2014-02-18 2:53 PM
We push them when the horses need another one LOL
I would do this and recruit my boyfriend but he has really terrible allergies and he'd be coughing and sneezing for a week if I had him messing with hay! and I'll be honest I have tried to move them but my 120lbs self isn't moving those big a*s bales! |
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