Marveltone
Veteran Member
- Joined
- Jun 20, 2010
- Messages
- 1,411
- Location
- Somewhere north of Roseau, MN
- Tractor
- Fordson Major Diesel, McCormick Deering W4, Ford 1510, John Deere L111
A short while back, I had bought a vintage John Deere side delivery rake, hoping it would do a satisfactory job raking my hay field. Short answer: I works great!
Now for the disclaimers:
1. This field is ROUGH! I imagine it was worked up many years ago but never planted. In other words, it was never meant to be used as a hay field. All the grass is volunteer, and I'm hoping to convince my renter to pull his big field roller over it after it rains sometime soon.
2. This field was cut with a rotary cutter instead of a sickle mower or other type of hay mower. I used the RC because I had absolutely no idea what to find in the field, and I could shave off some of the highest dirt mounds this way. (See no.1)
3. The "hay", if you can call it that, is pretty short and past its prime. I merely want to rake it off the field to help the grass grow back better and thicker next spring, and to chop out the weeds as part of my field renovation efforts. This is not being cut to feed to any animals, so quality is not a concern at this point. Just removal.
4. I experimented with going around two times counterclockwise and one clockwise to maximize my windrows for ease of removal. (See nos.2 & 3)
All things considered, I was very pleased with the results. By next year, I should be cutting and raking the "real" stuff!
Joe
Now for the disclaimers:
1. This field is ROUGH! I imagine it was worked up many years ago but never planted. In other words, it was never meant to be used as a hay field. All the grass is volunteer, and I'm hoping to convince my renter to pull his big field roller over it after it rains sometime soon.
2. This field was cut with a rotary cutter instead of a sickle mower or other type of hay mower. I used the RC because I had absolutely no idea what to find in the field, and I could shave off some of the highest dirt mounds this way. (See no.1)
3. The "hay", if you can call it that, is pretty short and past its prime. I merely want to rake it off the field to help the grass grow back better and thicker next spring, and to chop out the weeds as part of my field renovation efforts. This is not being cut to feed to any animals, so quality is not a concern at this point. Just removal.
4. I experimented with going around two times counterclockwise and one clockwise to maximize my windrows for ease of removal. (See nos.2 & 3)
All things considered, I was very pleased with the results. By next year, I should be cutting and raking the "real" stuff!
Joe