piller
Gold Member
If you like the neighbor and he is taking good care of the place for you it might be a good arrangement. However you said your goal was to improve the soil. You need to get a complete soil test done so you know what you have and then you can see how it improves in the future.
As for hay, I won't make hay on my farm, I believe it makes much better sense to purchase hay than to make it. Look at the Penn State analysis link a couple of posts above this one, you are looking at break even numbers of $100 - $200+ / ton. You can buy hay for less than this and when you bring it to your farm you are adding nutrients/fertility to your ground while nutrients/fertility is leaving the field where the hay was produced.
I'd go with the natural compost on the field and then I'd see if the Amish neighbor would rotationally graze his cows in the field; hit it hard with animal impact then let it recover.
As for hay, I won't make hay on my farm, I believe it makes much better sense to purchase hay than to make it. Look at the Penn State analysis link a couple of posts above this one, you are looking at break even numbers of $100 - $200+ / ton. You can buy hay for less than this and when you bring it to your farm you are adding nutrients/fertility to your ground while nutrients/fertility is leaving the field where the hay was produced.
I'd go with the natural compost on the field and then I'd see if the Amish neighbor would rotationally graze his cows in the field; hit it hard with animal impact then let it recover.