20kidsonhill
True BYH Addict
We are going though a ton about every 6 weeks, but there will be a point were we go through a ton a mong or every 3 weeks.babsbag said:For those of you that are using a ton of grain (literally), are you buying it bulk and if so, how do you store it? Looking at grain bins and they are not cheap.
We use 55 gallon barrels, they hold 300 lbs each. 350 piled to the top.
and we have a wooden feed bin made out of plywood and a flip up lid on hinges, pretty much just a wooden box and we set it on a pallet with heavy duty wheels underneath. the wheels were about 100 dollars and your plywood would be peices, so I think around $120 and some hinges and nails. It is not easy to push with almost a ton of feed in it. We talked about making two of them and putting half a ton in each.We roll them out to the truck, which parks at the edge of our concrete surface. This works for us and our barn set up. But if you don't have concrete or a really hard flat surface there is no way they would roll. We use a dolly to move the barrels, but even that is not real easy with 300 lbs each in them. The boony(spelling?) on the feed truck can move and he shuts of the feed flow and we adjust the barrels or he moves the booney. We have been getting 2,800 lbs delivered. That is why we are using the barrels as well. We have another farm that comes and buys our feed so I get extra for them during each delivery. they only use like 500 lbs every 2 or 3 months.
The feed trucks booney can navigate a doorway, so they did say we could just put a perminant feed bin in the shed and they would drop the feed into it through the door way. They said they would come out and look at our set up and make suggestions.
We just lift the lid and scoop out of it. We don't have any little door at the bottom. I dealt with stuff like that for years on farms and those little doors dive be crazy. So I just scoop from the top. It is a little hard to reach all the feed at the back when you get near the bottom, but I just put blocks in front of the bin to stand on and use a flat bottom shovel to pull the feed forward when I get that low.
The trucks are heavy, your driveway has to hold up to the weight of the trucks.
We can also get it bagged, but it is $2.00 a bag, so $2 per every 50lbs more. WE are paying $10.20 for 50 lbs right now. Or $420 a ton.
You may want to start another thread under feeding, to get some attention. People may have stopped reading this thread.