Well get to it... It is most satisfying work, WHEN others appreciate your efforts.
Even if they don't, it's tractor time.
Yep...
When it's ready, it's ready. Short time for prime horse hay.
Hopefully the weatherman gets it right and you have 4 hot, but usually kinda humid days.
1st day you mow what you think you can get baled and into the barn on the 4th day. You are covered with sweat and seeds. It lays in the sun the rest of the day and begins to turn a little blue on top. You clean out your tractor radiator and get equipment ready for the next day. (You check the weather report, even though once the hay is cut you can't do anything about it )
2nd day it is likely covered with dew, so you go over it with a tedder to pick it up off the ground to get air to it.
3rd day, when it feels right you rake it into windrows so it won't dry too much.
4th day, when the dew is off the windrows you bale it, load it on a wagon,
hall it to the barn, stack it, and make repeat trips till your all done. By then the weatherman has probably changed his tune, the sky is getting black
and you hear thunder in the distance.
If you have made rolls instead the baling part goes much faster, there is no manual loading of a trailer and no manual stacking in the barn, but you still are often racing the weather with a spear on the back and one on the front going as fast as you can to the barn with 2 rolls at a time.
If all goes well you have a lot of good hay that will cure properly and has never been wet.
We can usually complete a cycle in 3 days using a tedder and round baler if the hay isn't too thick. With 90/365 of good sunshine around here 4 days in a row doesn't happen often.
You then hope for another 4 day cycle of good weather very soon to repeat the operation and get another batch in before it gets too old on the stem.
The folks that try to do this in the evenings after working a job all day are not producing the high dollar value hay Dave's been thinking about making.
As "MotorSeven" said, if it gets wet you usually can't give it away or even cover your cost to make it. Time to get some young steers