Need ideas for a hay cart

   / Need ideas for a hay cart #1  

Stihlrunner

Silver Member
Joined
Mar 30, 2010
Messages
139
My wife needs a cart to haul hay from the barn to the horses, appx 100'. Due to our fabulous Oregon rain, it is usually through some thick mud.

The bales are too big for her to carry by hand so right now she has to make several trips carrying small bundles. Other times she starts up the tractor and uses it, which never gives it time to warm up and tears up the ground.

I would like to build a hand cart similar to a drum dolly. Something that could scoop up a bale and easily transport it to the horses. I could use bicycle wheels but I'm afraid they would be too skinny for the mud. Wheels off a dolly aren't big enough, we've tried that. Maybe wheel barrow tires?

Any ideas on this would be appreciated!
 
   / Need ideas for a hay cart #2  
Where are you located?

Mom likes the Rubbermaid Garden Cart.

H_2663_M.jpg

You may be able to get them with dual wheelbarrow tires, but the big wheels tend to do fine for most of what is around here. Perhaps it would depend on how deep your mud is. If you buy a new one, they may have both tube tires and no-flat foam tires. Get one of the no-flat tire ones.

These garden wagons also work well.
143031_lg.jpg
 
   / Need ideas for a hay cart #3  
farmtek has a bunch of them listed in their catalog, I would look at northern tool also.
 
   / Need ideas for a hay cart
  • Thread Starter
#4  
We've tried the wagon route and they are too tippy with the hay bale on top, for some reason they make the axles so narrow and tires too small! We've also done the wheelbarrow and rubbermaid cart and bales are too big for rubbermaid cart.

I would really like it to be something she could wheel up to a bale and just scoop it up. Needs to keep the bale low to the ground for gravity.

Have you seen drum dollies? drumdolly.png
 
   / Need ideas for a hay cart #5  
If you were building your own, you could make a 4 wheel wagon with wide wheels, perhaps dropping the bed down to the axles, although the steer axle could be a problem.

A drum hand truck isn't any different than a regular hand truck, except perhaps with a holder optimized to pick up the lip under a barrel.

I've seen people use the Rubbermaid Carts with ONE bale quite effectively. The large (and expensive) carts, of course. How many bales do you want to carry? Perhaps you have much rougher terrain than I was thinking.

So, if you're building, if you don't like the 4-wheel cart, then perhaps something like the two wheel wooden garden carts.

wood_garden_cart.jpg


The trick would be to get the balance right so there is just enough weight on the handles. You could put large or small tires on it, although the tire size may also determine tire placement.
 
   / Need ideas for a hay cart #7  
Can I vote for a conveyor belt? 100' wouldn't be to bad! Could you put a a couple pallets down and cover the hay with a tarp? Or but up one of those plastic sheds/tool storage things to keep the rain off the hay? Carry some out for her every couple days or once a week and she wouldn't be tearing anything up and it would eliminate her heavy lifting as well as the trips through the mud?
 
   / Need ideas for a hay cart #9  
I wouldn't recommend the garden wagons, too tippy I find anywhere but the driveway.
 
   / Need ideas for a hay cart #11  
I was looking at one of the 4 wheeled garden wagons at the store today.

I'm not sure why they would be inherently tippy. Part of the problem is that one in the store had fold down sides, so the wheels had to be designed to fit inside the sides.

If you were building your own, you could use larger wheelbarrow sized wheels, and place them farther out (as long as they fit through your doorways). Or perhaps large rear wheels and smaller steer wheels.

The wheelbarrow tires, of course, have wide set bearings. It is possible to cut the bearing tubes shorter so they fit onto carts & two-wheeled devices better.
 
   / Need ideas for a hay cart #12  
Perhaps you should think about making the path less muddy. Some pavers, gravel, mulch, pressure treated wood walkway, concrete, whatever.
 
   / Need ideas for a hay cart #13  
I don't imagine the drum dolly tires would be any wider than bicycle tires and it wouldn't take much for them to sink to the axle in mud.

The best solution my mind can come up with is a UTV.
 
   / Need ideas for a hay cart #14  
For one bale at a time, use a regular pneumatic rubber-tired handtruck. Stand the bale on end, use a cargo strap or rope to secure it to the uprights and pull it behind you. <70lb bales are easy to handle this way, and can make it over reasonably bumpy/muddy ground with ease.
 
   / Need ideas for a hay cart #16  
For not a lot more than some of these wagons, carts and gizmos cost, a small storage building where you could store a week or twos worth of hay could be built. It does not need a foundation or even posts in the ground. Build it on runners so you can move it if needed. There normally is no real estate taxes on a movable building.

Another consideration would be to find and enclose a flatbed hay wagon or an enclosed trailer. Then you can move the wagon back to the barn for refilling.
 

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