Coffee anyone ?

Mini Horses

Herd Master
Joined
Sep 4, 2015
Messages
10,572
Reaction score
34,413
Points
758
Location
S coastal VA
I keep mine close enough to be easy to feed, far enough to keep animals out. Heck, I even fill my trailer, park it close & move bales from there :idunno it sits unused a lot, so why load & unload several times? Fence & hotwire around shed near animal pastures. I've not had more than chickens or a cat get into mine. And I have 🤭 goats!

I use squares because it's easier on ME. I'm considering a couple rounds for Jan/Feb...not yet decided. Simply cost effect, because I can keep the hay feeders full. ALL feed is high & rising. 😩🫨

Today has gone beyond chilly to downright cold!! I'm going to work shortly! With lots of layers on 😉. I work to feed animals!
 
Last edited:

Alaskan

Herd Master
Joined
May 9, 2017
Messages
5,641
Reaction score
14,038
Points
563
Location
Kenai Peninsula, Alaska
How far away from animal barn would you put your hay shed? I'm planning on tinning over an old portable shelter so I can buy square bales in bulk. Round bales are more economical per lb but I have no equipment to handle them...
Keeping hay dry, and keeping it clean, means the nutrition of the hay keeps a really long time. So, if you have the space for it, it is worth it in the long run.

I greatly prefer to keep hay where it is fed.

At my place our barn has a huge loft. We keep 2 really long sturdy boards that are ... uh.... 4x 12s maybe.? (Been some time since we have used them.. can't remember). But one end of the boards would be dropped down from the loft. So, one end in the loft, 1 end on the ground. This made a ramp. With wood prices now, if I had to do this again... I would splice a bunch of junk wood together to get the same function.

Anyway, you have your ramp... then up in the loft you have a winch. Stab the round bail with a long metal bar, rope on ends of bar and then up to winch.

Turn on winch and walk the round bail up the ramp.

Once in the loft, roll it to the side and repeat for the next bail.

Yes, even with the winch, it is a bunch of work, but it us only 1 day of work. Feeding is easy!

To feed you toss the feed down into a feeding area. I never did make a shute into the hay rack... but that would be ideal.

My barn also has a drive-through, which is nice. That isn't used with round bails, but with squares. You drive in, and can stand in the truck bed, or on the cab and toss the square bails up.

My grandfather's barn had no stalls (but he just had cattle and horses). For his barn, it was only 1 level, no loft, it had a large tack room, a large central area for hay storage, and then 2 sides, into 2 different pastures, had long feeding troughs with deep roof overhangs. Also, it didn't have a drive through. You opened a gate, backed up into the barn and unloaded the hay. The floor of the barn had pallets to raise up the hay from the damp ground. But then you had to grab the hay, and lift UP into those feeding troughs. It was hard to do as a kid.

I really liked this one barn.. huge 2 story hay barn, no drive-through though. So a pain to load it up with hay. But, once it was full of hay it was great. It had a feeding trough all along one very long side, covered with maybe 12 feet deep of roof. And all along that feeding trough was an elevated walkway between the trough and the barn. So you walked along and got to toss the hay DOWN into the feeding trough. Very nice. Also, a great way to look over the cattle.
 
Top