Wait to put round bales in barn?

   / Wait to put round bales in barn? #11  
In my part of the country many folks feed loose minerals to their cattle. Many feed high-mag minerals to get additional magnesium to help prevent grass tetany in their cattle. When my brother stores his 1200# round bales in the barn he spreads a small bucketful of high-mag minerals on the hay. On high humidity days the minerals leach their way into the hay. This assures that when the cows eat hay, they get their minerals. I cannot say if this reduces the heat buildup.
 
   / Wait to put round bales in barn? #12  
You should be able to get a hay moisture/temp probe from any ag dealer. Farmex is one of the main brands and I bought mine thru my New holland dealer for around $180. Farmex made it and put New Hollands logo on the front and on the box. Your dealer should have a brochure of the different styles. My dealer had the one I bought in stock but they had to order the baler mounted tester.
 
   / Wait to put round bales in barn? #13  
Thanks all for the replies.
 
   / Wait to put round bales in barn?
  • Thread Starter
#14  
You guys are an invaluable resource! Thanks for the responses.
 
   / Wait to put round bales in barn? #15  
2 points:

A slug of wet hay the size of your fist in the middle of the mow can be enough to start a fire.

Salting has been proven to be ineffective against heating.


The salt is supposed to draw in moisture but it is generally already at saturation. 50 tons of hay at 20% moisture needs to loose 2.5 tons of water to get down to 15%.

If salt could be spread evenly in the hay it would help prevent bacteria from growing.
 
   / Wait to put round bales in barn? #16  
<font color="green">Salting has been proven to be ineffective against heating.

</font>

This is one of those things that I don't what the researchers were smoking when they did the study. We have done it time and time again with wet hay and it DOES work. We have done numerous moisture tests of the hay both salted and not salted and it has made a significant difference. The hay will not spoil that is treated with salt.

Now the heat issue is a separate subject and I don't think researchers understand the whole process sometimes. Hay will go through a sweat, even the dryest of hay and this will produce heat. There is nothing that will stop that. All hay is going to produce heat, how much it produces and how fast it dissipates is the key to it not catching on fire. If the hay is too wet then it will start the decaying process and produce tremendous heat that when it reaches the dryer hay it will combust. This is what the salt controls. It provides faster drydown times resulting in less heat produced so that it doesn't enter the decomp stage where it molds and continues heating.
 
   / Wait to put round bales in barn? #17  
In this part of the country, if you bale hay that is green enough to heat up it was not dried properly in the field. Now there is a difference in what a cow can tolerate and what a horse can and my experience is all with horses but even at that, my brother-in-law is a dairy farmer and all his round bales go in the barn the same day they are rolled. If you leave them out how do you keep the rain and the dew off them? I will agree that new hay should not be fed out for about 4 - 6 weeks to prevent the possibility of colic but we take our square bales from the field and pack them in the hay loft the same day. We never have a problem with moldy or dusty hay.

Thanks
 
   / Wait to put round bales in barn? #18  
<font color="green">if you bale hay that is green enough to heat up it was not dried properly in the field. </font>

Yes that is always nice to do. Problem is there are invariably pockets of hay that are sometimes still wet. As far as roundbales go leaving them out doesn't hurt at all. After a year or so then you get alot of spoiled hay, unless you are not using wrap. With the wrap my hay is just as good outside as it would be inside. At the very most you get about a 1/2" of spoiled hay.

Also there are many times, especially in the spring, when you take a chance on hay when rain is coming. Either way if it gets rained on or you put it up too wet it's going to be ruined. But it's a heck of alot better to get the hay off of the field wet than to leave it there and try and bale it later.
 

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