Thinking about those 22-24" bales ... I've not heard of anyone marketing them .... I may be able to get 16 bales in the grapple unit. I think I'll try some ... what are those size bringing per bale?
Don't know,different grasses up here, but it will be like gold this fall up here as there will be no second cutting unless we get a bunch of rain soon. We have been in a drought since the first of May. The first cutting was about 1/2 normal and pastures are turning brown. In the last 60 days we have had less than 3/4 inch of rain here. Other places have had more but not near normal.
Most hay up here is orchard grass, timothy, clover, and alfalfa. The more alfalfa the higher the price. Most hobby horse folks think they want lots of alfalfa until they get some experience and find that too much alfalfa is too rich for most pleasure horses. They have to cut the amount back per feeding and then the horses don't get enough bulk.
The pure alfalfa is for dairy cows and beef production. It is usually raised as a rotational crop with corn, wheat, and soy beans.
Barns are very expensive, but the loss from outside storage is too. Some folks up here use bale wrap for outside stored rolls, others use the big plastic tube machines which is more expensive. An unwrapped roll outside up here with winter to contend with is usually figured at 1/3 loss. Even if the animals eat part of the 1/3 it is not doing them much good for growth.
So I look at it as, if your going to spend the time, fuel, and machinery wear to cut, ted, rake, bale, and haul to a storage place it needs to be inside. Otherwise you spent 33% of your time, sweat and money to produce nothing of value. I'd rather sit on the porch.