The Life of a Custom Mowing contractor

   / The Life of a Custom Mowing contractor #1,031  
I love the challenge. It inspires me to rise up to it and defeat it. If you knew me personally and saw me, you’d understand.



In some cases you are right, but many of have found the sweet spot. There’s a lot of gross income, but the expenses can be quite high. Depends on your repairs/parts invoices for the year. Sometimes you get the bear, sometimes the bear gets you. It IS an equipment-oriented business. The key for me is to have off-farm work that supplements my income. I consider my business as a “large property management” business. We take on anything from farming, to tree work, to brush clearing, large area mowing, etc.
Any kind of farming or bull-work and we have you covered. If all I did was farming, I would acquire more land and make more gross income from hay sales. We could never have enough mushroom hay to sell. Its a unique area with a unique demand. We have hay trucks pouring into my area 6 days a week loaded with hay.





Partially correct. The expenses are great if you must have newer equipment. I run mostly ~10 year old equipment. It’s fine and doesn’t really give me too much unexpected trouble.
However, in MY area, bigger farming businesses are more than happy to gobble-up smaller ones. This just happened in my area. A medium sized hay farmer went under. I was given about 150 acres and another much larger farmer got 500+ acres.
In MY area, the small guys are dropping like flys.





That happens here occasionally. 2nd or 3rd cutting can be thin enough to be left as fertilizer and the existing grass stand will grow through it.


I think you're good at what you do. It seems you are a quick study and each mistake is a learning experience. I think your key to success is diversification. Not all of your eggs are in one basket.

I hope for your success. I'm always looking for little examples of how this country is doing. I always pay attention to your haying business because you are a bellwether of so much of what America is. I'm saddened to hear of a similar person failing. I am very cognizant in my line of work to the affordability of life. I deal with very costly products and I too see people and business failing right now. We need some things to go right in the near future, otherwise...it's bleak.
 
   / The Life of a Custom Mowing contractor #1,032  
Many problems can arise in hay. A horse around here died because the bale it was eating from had a dead animal deep inside the bale that got baled up, unknowingly and caused botulism.
I’m surprised that doesn’t happen more often. Small bales are safer to feed because they are handled with human hands before being fed.
I kept horses on the ranch for 20 yrs and found many snakes, birds, and small animals in the bales. I lost my best rope horse to EPM Equine Protozoal Myeloencephalitis , a neurological disease from ingesting possum feces in hay.
 
   / The Life of a Custom Mowing contractor
  • Thread Starter
#1,033  
I think you're good at what you do. It seems you are a quick study and each mistake is a learning experience. I think your key to success is diversification. Not all of your eggs are in one basket.

I hope for your success. I'm always looking for little examples of how this country is doing. I always pay attention to your haying business because you are a bellwether of so much of what America is. I'm saddened to hear of a similar person failing. I am very cognizant in my line of work to the affordability of life. I deal with very costly products and I too see people and business failing right now. We need some things to go right in the near future, otherwise...it's bleak.
Thank you and well said. Wish you’d post more. Personally, I think you are a brilliant person with a lot of wit.

My wife and I were taking our daughter to the airport. A 30 minute drive. On the way we saw 3 closed businesses being torn down.

Pennsylvania is in awful bad shape.
 
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   / The Life of a Custom Mowing contractor
  • Thread Starter
#1,034  
I kept horses on the ranch for 20 yrs and found many snakes, birds, and small animals in the bales. I lost my best rope horse to EPM Equine Protozoal Myeloencephalitis , a neurological disease from ingesting possum feces in hay.
Damn!
I’ve never been super comfortable selling feed hay for these very reasons. No matter how hard you try, there’s no doubt you’re going to bale up a dead raccoon, mice, snakes, etc.
Make someone’s horse sick and you have trouble. People will take the easy route and blame the farmer.
That’s why I like mushroom hay. And I like making a lot of hay, so it fits my personal likes better.
Making 1,000 tons of mushroom and 100 tons of feed hay is my “lane”.
 
   / The Life of a Custom Mowing contractor #1,035  
Cubes and pellets are another popular route for horse feed. I never used either one because any animal parts are completely unrecognizable in those forms. And contamination has happened.
The mushroom hay business sounds like a very good option.
 
   / The Life of a Custom Mowing contractor #1,036  
Thank you and well said. Wish you’d post more. Personally, I think you are a brilliant person with a lot of wit.

My wife and I were taking our daughter to the airport. A 30 minute drive. On the way we saw 3 closed businesses being torn down.

Pennsylvania is in awful bad shape.

I'll have more time to post after my hunting trip and before snowboard season starts.
 
   / The Life of a Custom Mowing contractor #1,037  
How was your vacation? Curious what you thought of Glacier Park and surrounding areas. From someone who lives in the area. Always nice to get a different perspective an outside the box thought.
 
   / The Life of a Custom Mowing contractor
  • Thread Starter
#1,038  
How was your vacation? Curious what you thought of Glacier Park and surrounding areas. From someone who lives in the area. Always nice to get a different perspective an outside the box thought.
I thought it was stunningly beautiful. Whitefish was really neat! Can’t believe the real estate prices :ROFLMAO:
Plenty of places to eat and explore. Very clean. Nice people. I am a fan of Ryan Zinke, too. Loved Flathead Lake.
I thought it was really cool that you have an Amtrak rail station at Glacier Park and an airport nearby at Kalispell.

I’d give it a 9.5/10
 
   / The Life of a Custom Mowing contractor #1,039  
Thank you and well said. Wish you’d post more. Personally, I think you are a brilliant person with a lot of wit.

My wife and I were taking our daughter to the airport. A 30 minute drive. On the way we saw 3 closed businesses being torn down.

Pennsylvania is in awful bad shape.
HD, it is pretty much the same all over. Here in Oregon, you will see all kinds of commercial buildings for lease, I have a small one in a good area that has been for lease for over a year, this is not uncommon.
 
   / The Life of a Custom Mowing contractor
  • Thread Starter
#1,040  
Our buildings in the commercial areas will sit “for lease” for years. Then finally the excavator shows up and tears it down.
PA is just another high tax, high regulation blue state.
If it weren’t for fracking, there’d be no industry here.

Everything is gone-packed up and moved south or overseas.
 

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