Hey it's nice to hear your mom helps out on the farm. My wife's grandmother would help on her farm driving tractors and machinery. She was on tuff lady.
First time seeing a bale wrapping machine in action... that was pretty neat! Things sure have come a long way since the days of twine and string on round bales. Thanks!
This video makes this look a lot more fun then it actually is lol. I have 5 rows of 600 bales and can say without doubt it’s incredibly momentous and boring. I run a little more off the ends to twist and tie to completely seal then ends. Most people think only high moisture bales can be wrapped. I wrap all my dry orchard grass and they are beautiful by time of feeding. It was nice seeing the Tubeline in action. I have a Anderson.
@@mihaimera7837 same thing as storing indoors. I run out of building space pretty quick at 800 bales. If you leave bales outside in the weather, especially laying in the ground they rot. I can wrap a dry bake and still have a high quality bale a year later…though I rarely have much hay leftover from year to year.
Very well done video Ryan. Very great coverage on how a bale wrapper is operated & how it works. My first time seeing this operation done. Just another better & efficient way to preserve round bales until they are needed. Thanks for doing this video to all that participated in its making. Take care and I am looking forward to your next video.
With all the craziness in the world. What a breath of fresh air this channel is. I drive by this stuff every day. Always wanted to see how it worked. Love the channel. Proud your doing this in Wisconsin.
That was awesome to see. Can't say that I've ever seen a bale wrapper actually run before, so I learned my new thing for today. Keep up the great work, we all appreciate it!
I hope to be doing the exact same thing tomorrow. I have an ancient Stretch o matic wrapper. This wrapper is much newer and nicer, yet the one thing i like about my old one is that its self propelled so no need for a truck or tractor to move it around. Great video.
This is a great video. I have seen those round bales and never even knew what they were, due to growing up in a major city. Now living in a more rural area I am learning more about these types of things.
Nice way to preserve your bales...and one hell of a snow fence 👍 The JCB is sweet for your farm. Lifting is its main job. We have a brush cutter and a mulching head for our loader, so higher hp is needed...or useful. Whatever Travis is always saying about more power.
My friend farmer ,when he started round bales ,used a wrapper like this;it was a demo that he used all summer.He had problems in the winter picking up bales cause of the snow accumulating aroud the bales.The next year he bought a single wrapper and he could stack the bales 2 or 3 high on the flat side with a clamp on the loader.On a normal day we could bale and wrao 100 bales with 2 guys and 2-3 tractors.
Great video! We stack up our bales in a big pile and put a fleece on top of it, the fleece is reusable and there is no need for wrapping them, if they are dry enough. Best regards from Germany!
Watching from Aberdeenshire in Scotland great video as usual these wrappers were very popular with us but the individual wrappers have taken over with us now
Want to feed a single bale, grab one and go and you don't open the rest to the air or rain. If you want to sell bales you have the same thing. Another thing is storage room, with individual wrapped you can stack them if needed, cannot do that with tubes. Last is hot bales, in the event a bale overheats there is less chance of every bale going up in flames, with the tubes you can end up with a real mess.
TheTH-camGuy if there is to much moisture in the bale it will start to ferment which can create lots of heat and could set the bales on fire. This is how bale fires happen most of the time
First time I have seen one of those in action we have an individual wrapper but I have seen the photos of bales wrapped like that and of ag-bags but hadn't seen either until one of BTP's videos of an ag-bagger and now this, thank you for a great video
Sure like to hear the pros and cons of bale wrapping from both Ryan and Travis. I remember my grandad uses tar paper to cover the bales back in the old days.
Paul Griffin cause the bales were put in a tube. Where we farm we call them tubers and the ones that wrap bales individually are called wrappers... no different than some farmers call a type of tillage equipment diggers while others call them field cultivators
A "little" cost but no loss for winter - give a look sometimes to the plastic damages ( cats claws , crows ) The best solution for big number wrapping ! Here in France because of tourism , people prefers us to use black or green plastic but the white provides the best results (the black create a cooking effect in hot areas and coloured does'nt have good stability in long conservating period ) give a hugg to poor foot damaged Travis !
Just a tip black wrap keeps the heat in better than white or even green. And if you start to do more wrapped bales you could invest in a mchale wrapper?
Nice Job Ryan, its cool to see a Bale Wrapper in progress. Nice job on the videos Ryan!!! Where has Jamie been lately..!! Keep up The good work Ryan and Travis and ur Dad!!
How do you separate these bales when feeding them out? Do you slice the plastic at each bale break, then remove one with the skid loader, and take the plastic off each bale elsewhere? I assume the exposed bare (unwrapped) end will have exposure only a short time. What if they are a bit damp (as you mentioned in one handful)? Do they remain damp, without spoilage when wrapped tight?
I've never seen a wrapper like that before. In the UK they're usually towed behind a tractor which picks the bale up and wraps it as you drive. You'd then use a bale handler on the loader which squeezes the bale rather than spiking so it doesn't break the wrap.
I would not criticise, but rather respectfully disagree with Ryan there. I find pallet forks to be a pain for moving bales and prefer bale spikes, especially when moving bails off the paddock. You don’t need to be as precise with the positioning of the spikes meaning you can pick bails up without stoping or even slowing down in some cases where as the forks you have to make sure you are lined up perfectly to get under the bail without damaging the net wrap. The spikes also have an advantage feeding as you can hold the bail up in the air and just stand in one spot pulling the net wrap off as it unwinds off the bail rather than sitting the bail on it’s flat and walking around it, something that makes life a lot easier if your walking in foot deep mud to feed out. Of course there is a level of personal preference in that as well so I don’t want to discredit Ryans reasoning, some people like myself prefer to use bail spikes for every application, others, like Ryan may not. Both are valid ways of doing the same job.
Interesting. How about a cost-benefit analysis? Without wrapping, what do you do with the bails? I saw some stored in shed. What is average cost per bail to wrap?
MrSea2river depends on how much wrap you put on anywhere from $2 and up but with Ryan’s numbers at the beginning of the video $3.57 a bale in wrap and then the use of the wrapper and skid steer and your time which nobody has a perfect number for those expenses
Depends on where you are. It can be recycled but there are a LOT of states where there are no recycling plans at all. In those it either goes to a landfill or gets tossed on the pile of bad hay/brush and gets burned.
So very cool. I miss picking up hay and walking the fields during hay season. Best part of living in a rural town. Hope you purchase the JCB soon. That would be such a cool investment.
The wrapping will create a cure process, increase protein with the correct moisture. Usually, higher moisture to create the correct cure environment. Yes, weather protection will give 100% usable feed. One has a choice; build a building for storage or wrap.
Interesting video! Never seen this method before, i'am living in the Netherlands and here they wrap a lot of bales but they do it one by one and still on the land.
Don’t worry about the bales rolling but need to pay attention to watershed. Water can build up behind bales and cause them to float and break the tube.
thanks for the video ryan it was nice to see one of those machines in a step by step ive never used one so it was very interesting and your friends model seemed like a easy simple machine to operate .
Just depends on how many bales you do, we wrap several hundred with an individual wrapper and stack them up. Saves a lot of space, neighbor has a inline and loves it- so I guess it’s what’s you want.
Never seen a wrapper like this - self-powered. Most here are trailed and PTO driven. Some are add-ons attached to balers. This kinda reminds me of a silage tunnel.
Pretty cool set up!! Years ago when we did round haylage, we stuffed two bales in an Ag-Bag and tied it shut... (Over 30 years ago). Got a little hint for you... When you pick up a bale, tip the Spears down just a little, not much, then lower the boom to compensate for the angle. Gets a much better hold of the bale😎 Later rapper boys..
MrEFarmer same question here , silage always better quality , in Oz we try to cut & Ted on day 1 then bale & wrap day 2 . ( 2 teddings if crop heavy ) wrap cheaper than here & we don't appreciate your different climate
Both. If you are making haylage, it has to be deprived of oxygen for fermentation to occur. If wrapping dry hay, you have very little spoilage when stored outside. This hay was way too dry to be made into silage.
It depends a lot on what you want to do with them. Here they do both. But normally they will locate the tubes closer to where they are planning on using it, that way you don't need to plow a long path through the snow!!
@@SagittariusChris 6000 is alot we only do 1000 and the tube wrapper is much faster. The loader can't keep up we usually use 2 skid loaders to wrap. The individual wrapper we had. One skid loader would wait on it
Hey Ryan. As always That was a really fun to watch video. What I wonder is what happened to the end points of the tubes? Did you leave them open or is there a method to also wrap the end points and make a whole seal on the tube?
That's pretty cool Ryan thanks for sharing I've seen that done in Georgia What's cotton except they real them one bill at a time but it'll make them last a lot longer
Tip... that bale that had the net wrap messed up and hay/ oats sticking out the top... roll bales like that to where the error or part sticking out is on the bottom of the bale. Less of a chance that the wrap will tear or become damaged there while in storage
I have the same one wrapper A couple of questions 1st why are you wrapping hay if it is at all damp it will rot in the hot weather 2nd why are you putting on so much plastic 3rd how much are you paying a bale. I do it for 4 dollars a bale if you have plastic and 8 if I have to supply it.
@@HowFarmsWork It was just a thought because I figured twine wouldn't be as expensive as the porous wrap that you currently use. Great vid on the wrap and the explanation why you did it.
Hey it's nice to hear your mom helps out on the farm. My wife's grandmother would help on her farm driving tractors and machinery. She was on tuff lady.
First time seeing a bale wrapping machine in action... that was pretty neat! Things sure have come a long way since the days of twine and string on round bales. Thanks!
Exactly
G.N.G over in the UK weee still use twine and string it's the stuff dreams are made of 😂
@@harryfinch4986 I'm sure you know the joys of cutting the twine and having to gather it after offloading the bale! Good times :-)
@@harryfinch4986 Maybe you do! Others are far more advanced in the UK! ADAPT OR DIE
I saw it allready randomly live
This video makes this look a lot more fun then it actually is lol. I have 5 rows of 600 bales and can say without doubt it’s incredibly momentous and boring. I run a little more off the ends to twist and tie to completely seal then ends. Most people think only high moisture bales can be wrapped. I wrap all my dry orchard grass and they are beautiful by time of feeding. It was nice seeing the Tubeline in action. I have a Anderson.
@@mihaimera7837 same thing as storing indoors. I run out of building space pretty quick at 800 bales. If you leave bales outside in the weather, especially laying in the ground they rot. I can wrap a dry bake and still have a high quality bale a year later…though I rarely have much hay leftover from year to year.
Very well done video Ryan. Very great coverage on how a bale wrapper is operated & how it works. My first time seeing this operation done. Just another better & efficient way to preserve round bales until they are needed. Thanks for doing this video to all that participated in its making. Take care and I am looking forward to your next video.
With all the craziness in the world. What a breath of fresh air this channel is. I drive by this stuff every day. Always wanted to see how it worked. Love the channel. Proud your doing this in Wisconsin.
That was awesome to see. Can't say that I've ever seen a bale wrapper actually run before, so I learned my new thing for today. Keep up the great work, we all appreciate it!
I NOW KNOW what wrapping hay/oats/corn stalks mean. First time I ever saw it done. Great presentation by all!!
You should look for a video on single bale wrapping, thats how most people do it. This is the fist time I've seen continuous bale wrapping.
I hope to be doing the exact same thing tomorrow. I have an ancient Stretch o matic wrapper. This wrapper is much newer and nicer, yet the one thing i like about my old one is that its self propelled so no need for a truck or tractor to move it around. Great video.
This is a great video. I have seen those round bales and never even knew what they were, due to growing up in a major city. Now living in a more rural area I am learning more about these types of things.
Nice way to preserve your bales...and one hell of a snow fence 👍 The JCB is sweet for your farm. Lifting is its main job. We have a brush cutter and a mulching head for our loader, so higher hp is needed...or useful. Whatever Travis is always saying about more power.
My friend farmer ,when he started round bales ,used a wrapper like this;it was a demo that he used all summer.He had problems in the winter picking up bales cause of the snow accumulating aroud the bales.The next year he bought a single wrapper and he could stack the bales 2 or 3 high on the flat side with a clamp on the loader.On a normal day we could bale and wrao 100 bales with 2 guys and 2-3 tractors.
Great video! We stack up our bales in a big pile and put a fleece on top of it, the fleece is reusable and there is no need for wrapping them, if they are dry enough. Best regards from Germany!
Hey Ryan!! I've never seen bales wrapped like that. That is pretty darn cool. Thanks for the video.
Watching from Aberdeenshire in Scotland great video as usual these wrappers were very popular with us but the individual wrappers have taken over with us now
why have you moved to the individual wrap?
Want to feed a single bale, grab one and go and you don't open the rest to the air or rain. If you want to sell bales you have the same thing. Another thing is storage room, with individual wrapped you can stack them if needed, cannot do that with tubes. Last is hot bales, in the event a bale overheats there is less chance of every bale going up in flames, with the tubes you can end up with a real mess.
@@Blazer02LS I don't think there is a high chance of bales setting on fire in Scotland lol.
Bale the hay green and it doesn't matter where you live. It will get hot.
TheTH-camGuy if there is to much moisture in the bale it will start to ferment which can create lots of heat and could set the bales on fire. This is how bale fires happen most of the time
First time I have seen one of those in action we have an individual wrapper but I have seen the photos of bales wrapped like that and of ag-bags but hadn't seen either until one of BTP's videos of an ag-bagger and now this, thank you for a great video
Sure like to hear the pros and cons of bale wrapping from both Ryan and Travis. I remember my grandad uses tar paper to cover the bales back in the old days.
Using the inline tube wrapper is definitely the way to go. It can easily be operated by one person and saves time and money
We have a Tube line wrapper. We’ve always called it a Tuber but personal preference. I prefer a tuber over a wrapper that wraps individual bales
why?
Paul Griffin cause the bales were put in a tube. Where we farm we call them tubers and the ones that wrap bales individually are called wrappers... no different than some farmers call a type of tillage equipment diggers while others call them field cultivators
@@paulgriffin7432 less plastic to tidy up afterwards
A "little" cost but no loss for winter - give a look sometimes to the plastic damages ( cats claws , crows ) The best solution for big number wrapping ! Here in France because of tourism , people prefers us to use black or green plastic but the white provides the best results (the black create a cooking effect in hot areas and coloured does'nt have good stability in long conservating period ) give a hugg to poor foot damaged Travis !
Just a tip black wrap keeps the heat in better than white or even green. And if you start to do more wrapped bales you could invest in a mchale wrapper?
Masseyman6480 black wrap would be no good over there uv rays would ruin the bales
Nice Job Ryan, its cool to see a Bale Wrapper in progress. Nice job on the videos Ryan!!! Where has Jamie been lately..!! Keep up The good work Ryan and Travis and ur Dad!!
How do you separate these bales when feeding them out? Do you slice the plastic at each bale break, then remove one with the skid loader, and take the plastic off each bale elsewhere? I assume the exposed bare (unwrapped) end will have exposure only a short time.
What if they are a bit damp (as you mentioned in one handful)? Do they remain damp, without spoilage when wrapped tight?
I've never seen a wrapper like that before. In the UK they're usually towed behind a tractor which picks the bale up and wraps it as you drive. You'd then use a bale handler on the loader which squeezes the bale rather than spiking so it doesn't break the wrap.
First time see a wrapper in action. I there a different from using a pallet fork vs the bale spear. Love the videos! Keep up the great work
The spears are good for unloading into the wrapper, the pallets are good for stacking
I would not criticise, but rather respectfully disagree with Ryan there. I find pallet forks to be a pain for moving bales and prefer bale spikes, especially when moving bails off the paddock. You don’t need to be as precise with the positioning of the spikes meaning you can pick bails up without stoping or even slowing down in some cases where as the forks you have to make sure you are lined up perfectly to get under the bail without damaging the net wrap. The spikes also have an advantage feeding as you can hold the bail up in the air and just stand in one spot pulling the net wrap off as it unwinds off the bail rather than sitting the bail on it’s flat and walking around it, something that makes life a lot easier if your walking in foot deep mud to feed out.
Of course there is a level of personal preference in that as well so I don’t want to discredit Ryans reasoning, some people like myself prefer to use bail spikes for every application, others, like Ryan may not. Both are valid ways of doing the same job.
I have always used bale forks just wanted to to know if the was a difference in move bales with forks
@@fjkingswood "BALE".
auntwayne I’m a farmer, not an english professor and this is youtube, not an english essay... hahaha
"Consistently inconsistent" sounds like a great life moto haha
It just looked like gravity/sideslope pushed it out slightly - that's not really human error.
@@RangieNZ I know you're talking about the bale snake, but what's that got to do with my comment? lol I'm confused
We wrapped 450 bales in a day with a kemcowrapper. It doesn’t take very long, but the ac went out in the jd 333g skidsteer. Man it was hot
Just noticed you have a double bale spire. Single spear works a lot better on round bales. And yes going in a straight line is the hardest part.
We have the same wrapper. Also if you ever so it a gain if you line them up on an angle where you want to wrap it goes a lot faster
What an interesting machine! I always wanted to know how they wrapped the bales. Thank you.
The tube wrapper was first made by grays in Aberdeenshire.
Spent more time wrapping silage than I care to think about.
Good video. Thanks.
Interesting. How about a cost-benefit analysis? Without wrapping, what do you do with the bails? I saw some stored in shed. What is average cost per bail to wrap?
MrSea2river depends on how much wrap you put on anywhere from $2 and up but with Ryan’s numbers at the beginning of the video $3.57 a bale in wrap and then the use of the wrapper and skid steer and your time which nobody has a perfect number for those expenses
Love watching combines and planters at work, however what a great informative video. Very well done.. thank you
What happens to all of that plastic, when you use the bales? Can it be recycled, or does it end up in a landfill where it will last forever?
Depends on where you are. It can be recycled but there are a LOT of states where there are no recycling plans at all.
In those it either goes to a landfill or gets tossed on the pile of bad hay/brush and gets burned.
It gets recycled in my area
One good thing about having it make a long tube you would use less plastic than the wrappers that wrap each bale.
Daniel Sweeney that’s definitely an advantage!
No help durinr the winter when you are going to a muckey field to bring in bales
@@HowFarmsWork Is that the only advantage or are there other ones?
Where did the straw bales come from? I don't remember you guys growing anything other than beans and corn.
Ryan posted a video 5 days ago.
@@dwightl5863 I'm asking about the straw not the oats.
Paul Reed Ryan cut the oats (the whole plant) and round baled it. It's when the bearing went bad on the round baler. That's where the bales came from.
So very cool. I miss picking up hay and walking the fields during hay season. Best part of living in a rural town. Hope you purchase the JCB soon. That would be such a cool investment.
Awesome! Thanks for the video. This is the first time for me to see this operation.
We have an anderson and it works great for bale wrapping
We ferment ours for better feed quality
I think you guys will really like that! More hay and less waste !
The wrapping will create a cure process, increase protein with the correct moisture.
Usually, higher moisture to create the correct cure environment.
Yes, weather protection will give 100% usable feed. One has a choice; build a building for storage or wrap.
Nice to see the Bayliner hooked up, ready to go.
Life, (and summer) are too short to not have some fun.
Interesting video! Never seen this method before, i'am living in the Netherlands and here they wrap a lot of bales but they do it one by one and still on the land.
Great video. Enjoyed learning how bales are wrapped. Look forward to next video
Don’t worry about the bales rolling but need to pay attention to watershed. Water can build up behind bales and cause them to float and break the tube.
thanks for the video ryan it was nice to see one of those machines in a step by step ive never used one so it was very interesting and your friends model seemed like a easy simple machine to operate .
Those silage bales will be real good feed for your cows, great video Ryan!
Just depends on how many bales you do, we wrap several hundred with an individual wrapper and stack them up. Saves a lot of space, neighbor has a inline and loves it- so I guess it’s what’s you want.
Always wondered how that was done. Never saw it being done. Thank you!
Never seen a wrapper like this - self-powered. Most here are trailed and PTO driven. Some are add-ons attached to balers. This kinda reminds me of a silage tunnel.
Pretty cool set up!!
Years ago when we did round haylage, we stuffed two bales in an Ag-Bag and tied it shut... (Over 30 years ago).
Got a little hint for you... When you pick up a bale, tip the Spears down just a little, not much, then lower the boom to compensate for the angle. Gets a much better hold of the bale😎
Later rapper boys..
Nice to see how this is done.
Thanks again Ryan! I had never seen one of those in operation.... pretty cool.....
We have a tube line wrapper we love it . We wrap our 1st cut , oat and barley and some third cut , 400 in total ,
Very interesting process to now know! Ryan, you totally missed the opportunity to play some Whitesnake music during this video!! LOL
Did he play .50 cent or N.W.A. instead? (get it rap for wrapping ... oooohhh that was awful!)
If you pick some corn a little early when the stalks are still a little green and bale right behind the combine and wrap them makes good feed.
Is the plastic an oxygen barrier or just water? Trying for full silage or just keeping them dry?
MrEFarmer same question here , silage always better quality , in Oz we try to cut & Ted on day 1 then bale & wrap day 2 . ( 2 teddings if crop heavy ) wrap cheaper than here & we don't appreciate your different climate
Both. If you are making haylage, it has to be deprived of oxygen for fermentation to occur. If wrapping dry hay, you have very little spoilage when stored outside. This hay was way too dry to be made into silage.
Really awesome video nice job have a great evening 👍👍👍👍
Very interesting. We wrap each bal individually. First time every seeing a continuous wrap. Not sure I would want that long of a row.
Seems like the tubes really limit your storage/usage flexibility as opposed to individually wrapped bales.
roscoe jones exactly the same thought here
It depends a lot on what you want to do with them. Here they do both. But normally they will locate the tubes closer to where they are planning on using it, that way you don't need to plow a long path through the snow!!
Also you don't have to move them after you wrap them until you want to feed them. We have had one for 10 yrs to wrap baylage and it works great
The tube wrapper we have uses much less wrap then an individual wrapper
@@SagittariusChris 6000 is alot we only do 1000 and the tube wrapper is much faster. The loader can't keep up we usually use 2 skid loaders to wrap. The individual wrapper we had. One skid loader would wait on it
Hey Ryan. As always That was a really fun to watch video.
What I wonder is what happened to the end points of the tubes? Did you leave them open or is there a method to also wrap the end points and make a whole seal on the tube?
There's a nice way to leave bales for loading a wrapper, you will figure it out!
That's pretty cool Ryan thanks for sharing I've seen that done in Georgia What's cotton except they real them one bill at a time but it'll make them last a lot longer
Enjoy your summer my friend, amazing video as always from a Canadian fellow 😉!
First time seeing a bale wrapper,interesting to see if going back to just twine and wrap or net wrap and bale wrapping, cost etc
Won’t the plastic cause humidity inside ruining the hay? and how do you get the bales off the field in such large wrappings?
Really cool. Never thought of that way of wrapping
That was very cool! Thanks for showing us!
That was my first time ever seeing how bales were wrapped in real life. Hows Rocket Feeling?
Now that is a very cool piece of kit.
That is cool the mom helps out with bailing bales
I live in Wisconsin and I have never seen this done before. One day there would be bales then the next day there would be all the bales wrapped.
Why do yall wrap the hay?
That dog looks soo exhausted that's a hard worker right there
Aren't you meant to have a single fully wrapped bale at the start and end as a plug so the air and rain doesn't get in and rot the end bales?
Why didn’t you use end caps on the first and last bales
We aren’t fermenting the bales
Ok
How Farms Work we ferment ours for better feed quality
Tip... that bale that had the net wrap messed up and hay/ oats sticking out the top... roll bales like that to where the error or part sticking out is on the bottom of the bale. Less of a chance that the wrap will tear or become damaged there while in storage
Great video! What’s the music during the drone shots?
QUESTIONS???? What was the cost per bale for material? How long did it take to complete project? Approximate cost of bale wrapper?
Great video, first time seeing a wrapper in action! Great demonstration on how it works
Great video I had never seen a wrapper in operation before 👍
Cool Ryan, that's something very different to single wrapping over here:):)
Pretty awesome I do square grass bales. It would be neat to do round bales and wrap them. Not sure how many I’d get off 5 acres.
That was cool to see.. is that the same type wrap they use to wrap boats?
That's a pretty trick machine. Do you have the ability to steer it to keep in on a (reasonably) straight line, or does it just kinda go along?
He did say it was steerable.
I have the same one wrapper
A couple of questions 1st why are you wrapping hay if it is at all damp it will rot in the hot weather
2nd why are you putting on so much plastic
3rd how much are you paying a bale. I do it for 4 dollars a bale if you have plastic and 8 if I have to supply it.
Could you have baled with twine rather than the regular wrap that you use? Thought it might be less expensive.
I believe so! I thought about that before we did it but I’d have to look into how we’d get the baler set for that
@@HowFarmsWork It was just a thought because I figured twine wouldn't be as expensive as the porous wrap that you currently use. Great vid on the wrap and the explanation why you did it.
I was sure you were going to end the video with "It's a wrap!"
How many months need the bales to be ready for feeding?
What do you do for a living? Does any of you three work full time on the farm or another farm?
How much time did it take to wrap 93 bales
90 minutes.
The moment the camera was on Travis in the JCB, my response to that was....Dam the visibility on that is so nuts! 12:22
Awesome video. Interesting to see the process in action...Thanks.
Great video as usual. Good to see a Ram on the farm!
Good video really enjoy the watching the machine work. I knew they were out there. Keep up the good work
We did wrapped 200 bales in a day and I ran the skid loader
It doesn’t take very long to wrap them at least, but the day we were wrapping the ac went out in the jd 333G skid steer
what kind of pencil did you use to draw your butt at the end of the day?
We wrap almost all our hay anymore. The only disadvantage is tearing up feilds when it’s really muddy to get to them.
And that's a wrap ryan and very interesting idea and a good idea also.
How many bales do you need for the winter with the extra cows you have?
Can I ask why you would wrap straw? Seems redundant to me.
I believe it stops it from rotting
another dumb question from me... can you set your tension on the wrapping to compress the bale (for what reason I'll never know, but it's a thought)?
Not really, the plastic stretches as it wraps and you can break it if it's set too tight.