Old (REALLY OLD) Hay...what the heck to do with the stuff

   / Old (REALLY OLD) Hay...what the heck to do with the stuff #11  
I use old beat up old hay bail as mulch material in the garden and till them in in the fall. Getting it out of the barn easily is the difficult part of it. Pitch fork and whole bunch of sweat to get it out of the barn.:eek:

JC,

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   / Old (REALLY OLD) Hay...what the heck to do with the stuff #12  
RickB -- you could be right but I do know if the hay gets wet at all that it just holds the moisture in the wood and it rots very quickly. In the old bank barns I have had the mow floors have rotted through where covered with hay but not in the areas without hay -- you could draw a line where the rot is and the hay was:( -- and the thicker the hay covering the more rot. -- Just an observation
 
   / Old (REALLY OLD) Hay...what the heck to do with the stuff #13  
RickB -- you could be right but I do know if the hay gets wet at all that it just holds the moisture in the wood and it rots very quickly. In the old bank barns I have had the mow floors have rotted through where covered with hay but not in the areas without hay -- you could draw a line where the rot is and the hay was:( -- and the thicker the hay covering the more rot. -- Just an observation

The hay isn't the source of the moisture, it is just keeping the floor wet like a mulch in the garden.

You need to take a real good look at your roof.
 
   / Old (REALLY OLD) Hay...what the heck to do with the stuff
  • Thread Starter
#14  
Studor,Duffster, we sound like we're in the same boat, my floors are pretty iffy. Though the hay is dry and its not the sole cause of the rot i dont think.

mine is an old cattle Barn, and likely the heat/moisture that came from the lower cattle level upwards is what caused much of it. the barn was build in the 20's. the upper post and beam section is in pretty nice shape.

the floor of that upper part is not great and the cement foundation is bad in a few spots. I had the wall behind the bank section straightened out 2 yrs ago, it was leaning badly. Its now been Buttressed and i put eves trough on the barn to help water drainage.

my focus for now is to prevent further deterioration until i can afford the time and $ to renovate it.

i think ill get a sawmill and do my own timber, it may be the most cost effective.
 
   / Old (REALLY OLD) Hay...what the heck to do with the stuff
  • Thread Starter
#15  
I use old beat up old hay bail as mulch material in the garden and till them in in the fall. Getting it out of the barn easily is the difficult part of it. Pitch fork and whole bunch of sweat to get it out of the barn.:eek:

JC,

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Thats what i figure ill do for now. ive got a huge vegie patch that we only use a small part of just now. keeping the weeds down is ****, my wife tills it weekly. this may be a good soluton to 2 problems.
 
   / Old (REALLY OLD) Hay...what the heck to do with the stuff #16  
dave,

I do not add any chemical fertilizer or pesticide on my garden patch. I have done weekly tilling for two weeks, on my hand and knees pulling stuff out to no avail. I got my push mower at the lowest level and scalped the surface:eek: and I still had weeds galore. It appeared I was rejuvenating them by my cutting as they'd come back looking stronger. It took me 4 hrs and a 1500 lbs bail that I peeled off by hand layer by layer and covered the garden. It mats down a bit, it totally denies weeds light for photosynthesis, keeps the ground nice and moist (no chance of rotting the floor). actually it's like tropics under the one foot thick mulch. Soft body crawlers seems not like to crawl on the spiny rough surface. By the way, I never watered my tomatoes but once and that was 8 oz cup per plant when I originally planted them. Rain has been friendly and timely as well. Things that like to sprawl like squash love to float on top and the fruits are clean and disease free.

JC,

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   / Old (REALLY OLD) Hay...what the heck to do with the stuff #17  
I use old hay in trails i have cut in my woodlot. I spred the hay out and retards new growth. In time after driving over it it becomes part of the trail and I don't notice it anymore. Cuts down the mowing by about 75%. It's great for the soil as I never use weed killer.
 
   / Old (REALLY OLD) Hay...what the heck to do with the stuff #18  
If you have plenty of ventilation in the barn can you use a good strong leaf blower to blow it out the door or will the hay not pick up and move that much?
Another question if you use the hay in your garden won't it start to sprout new stuff eventually and cause you more work of pulling weeds?
 
   / Old (REALLY OLD) Hay...what the heck to do with the stuff #19  
The hay I used was pretty old and dry stuff. There is no soil contact on top, bottom and middle is pretty hot, moist and dark. It seems they would want to rut before sprouting. I'm looking for a 3 month window of not hassling with the weeds and then they all get tilled in. I think the major key is blocking the sun.

JC,
 
   / Old (REALLY OLD) Hay...what the heck to do with the stuff #20  
Dave and Duffster -- in my case the roof is not the problem -- the moisture has come in over the twenty years through blowing snow, driving rain and condensation. Then as Duffster says the hay acts like mulch, trapping the moisture in the floors. If the hay was not there the floors would be sound.The roof in my case is metal with no rust and a few very small holes
(.22 after pidgeons I suspect)
Tree Monkey -- after sitting for twenty tears you would need a tornado to move that hay:p -- and in my case it would probably move the barn before the hay!
JC -- I will your weed prevention method this weekend -- just never thought of it
 

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