If I use an old/cheap rotary mower and grind off one side it shoots it out rather quick and doesn't keep it inside that many rotations at all. I've heard and seen people do it successfully. I've never done it so maybe we'll see for real one day lol. Three reasons I like this. It's cheap, they don't break and I can use it for other stuff if I just put some chains off the open side or hinge the side back on.
I have a large bucket and tines for my bucket already that should scoop a row fairly well into a trailer after raked into a row?
Regarding storing, you just need to think and remember how it was years back. People used to store hay outside with no cover and it would be fine all winter by hand just under the surface. If I, in 2024 with a $100,000 in tractors and stuff can't figure out how to store it under a partially covered tarp or in one of my open barns on pallets or some such where the cats can keep an eye on it, what are we even doing right lol
If it all grows well I'd be more willing to buy more equipment later. But for now I'm thinking I'd like to keep it cheap if I see it's not worth doing I can just walk away and know I have a much better field to manage weed outs of it. Half of that is probably because I've never used any of the old or new hay equipment and fixing it or buying the right used stuff seems like a workload I'm not interested in right now. I make my schedule but it is jam packed and while I can build, farming is still rather new to me, only been doing it a few years as I build it out and by day I'm a portfolio manager lol.