Barn is not really that open and I couldn't unload those stacks from those accumulators all at once. As far as round bales, I don't think I can get a round baler that makes 4x5 round bales that my tractor can handle.
Your DK35 should be able to handle a 700-1200# round bale on the loader. We have a
L3830 that will make a 5x5 round bale with our Ford 552 round baler, it grunts for the last foot and that makes it hard for the
B7500 to scoot the bale around on the 3 point, so we generally stick to a 5' Long x 4' Diameter round bale.
The way to go would be to rake and tedd the hay with your 35hp tractor and buy an older big tractor and kick them into wagons, I don’t see any other way.
If you don’t have any equipment yet and this is something you are definitely going to do, I would buy a big tractor first and buy a NH baler with a kicker or whatever baler you want and four wagons, then your in business..
We do it all with our
L3830, we bale with either a NH 269 (with a belt kicker and a basket wagon in tow), or a Ford 552 round baler.
I would look again at round balers, the reason they have become popular is that they are so much less labor-intensive. Round bales are also more weather resistant, so you have more leeway in getting them put away. Small square bales only make sense if you don't have the ability to feed round bales.
I also have a 35 hp tractor, and I spent some time looking at round balers, there are a bunch that make bales in the 500 pound range that require less than 35 HP. The bale is going to be about 4x4. Here's the list of models I came up with:
New idea 6343
Challenger rb34
Hesston 530
International 8420
Hesston 730
New idea 6243
Massey 1734
Hesston 5530
Krone KR 125, 130
Krone KR 100
(A lot of these are rebadging or renumbering of the same basic baler).
A couple that take 40 HP:
New Holland BR 730
Deere 330
Add the Ford 552 (Aka the Gehl RB1500A) to your list. We run one with our
L3830 and it makes up to a 5x5 round bale with 32 PTO HP.
Regardless of the technology, this is going to be a big job for a small tractor. I get a little under 5,000 lbs of hay per acre, if you've got 20 acres that's 100,000 lbs of hay that needs to be moved, one way or another. Your tractor is about 3,500 lbs, how much weight do you feel you can safely control? Would you feel comfortable going down a hill with a wagon that outweighs the tractor? Where ever you decide your limit is, it's going to be a lot of trips.
We run our baler with our
L3830, with loaded tires and the snowblower frame on the front it is about 4000#. The only time I have felt a little pucker factor towing the NH269 baler and a ~120 bale basket wagon around the field is when going downhill into a curve on a cleanup pass (read, moving fast with a full wagon, downhill and into a curve). Otherwise, it has been fine.
I concur with quicksandfarmer. I fantasize about doing square bales on my place again some day, but it is a major headache handling them. I'm going 4 x 4 round bales with my 38 pto hp tractor. That way I can cut, rake an bale by myself when I want to. And I am still going to target horse people, they will just have to be ones that can feed round bales.
That is where we are at. With a round baler, my wife and I can bale a field by ourselves in an afternoon (me baling, her running the bales back to the barn), square bales takes at least 4 more people (2 to unload the wagon/feed the elevator and 2 to stack in the barn).
I bought an old New Holland 630 round baler which I haven't tried yet, but it should do okay. Vermeer rebel 400 may be another one to look at. Get something that controls bale density with spring tension. The only hydraulics on my 630 are to lift the tail gate.
Our Ford 552 is similar, the only hydraulics are the ones to lift the tailgate and to move the twine arm back and forth. Bale tension is done with belts and springs.
Aaron Z