#18 Raking And Baling Hay With Kubota M7060 & Hesston Baler
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- čas přidán 21. 05. 2021
- Today we finish our first cutting of hay. We raked it with our H&S rotary rake on our Kubota M7060 then baled it with our Hesston inline baler.
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Beautifully done. Love the music. Just looking at that rake, my first thought was that it would knock most of the fine leaves off. Not at all. It seemed to do a really good job. I have never seen one of these work. I would have to say that I am impressed with it. we had 2 John Deere 4 bar rakes on steel wheels. They did an awesome job. Later on, a friend gave me a David Bradley 4 bar rake on rubber tires. Pretty much the same as the Deeres but I was able to travel on the road with it in road gear. Couldn't do that with the Deeres. You could, but you wouldn't have anything left when you got where you were going.
Ive been super happy with the rotary rake it really does a good job scooping the hay. I picked this one up cheap in rough shape i think 5 of the arms are home made out of reg sced 40 pipe lol. Thanks for watching Gary!
Awesome
I’d like to have an inline baler. I like the low profile pickup head on them, it helps prevent crop loss. Great video!
It was really the first time using the inline, last far my 565 new holland burnt up in the barn fire. I went up to canada in december to pick this one up its in excellent shape similar capacity to the 565. Thanks for stopping by!
@@HillsideAcres ب
@@HillsideAcres پ
@@HillsideAcres پ
Watched the tedding video and this one, you NEED to invest in a couple of PTO shields, these two shaft are EXTREMELY dangerous if not properly covered. I grew up farming and all of our PTO shafts had metal covers rather than plastic covers like they come with now days, but we never had an accident. It happens faster than you can react. Be safe!
Definitely much safer to have the covers on, thanks for the tip, thanks for watching Mark!
I'd Be in the wagon stacking it💪
We run an Allis 6080 w/ New holland 570 baler.(same baler been used for over 15-20 years)
Everyone stacking is in the dry vans just shoot them in loose and rotate wagons
Great video love watching the kicker 😜, Ben at K&H tractor sent me over..
Thanks for coming over! Ben has an amazing channel and is very knowledgeable. I really look forward to seeing what his next video is going to be. I hope you enjoy our channel as much as we enjoy K&H!
Love the way it kicks it back there I've bucked alot of hay by hand way back then lol.
The bale thrower is a HUGE labor saver, not to mention it all hast get stacked to store anyway so why stack it twice lol. Thanks for watching!
The Inlines are the way to go: we had a 4590 for years & it made perfect bales every time. A conventional Baler won’t be nearly as consistent in our experiences. A JD or New Holland wouldn’t come close.
@@hse785 Before our barn fire i had a new holland 565 that burnt up it always treated me well, but due to losing it i had to buy a used baler over the winter and got this hesston in excellent shape! little less capacity than your 4590 but this thing is clean. I did have some concerns of what to expect from a used baler but i took it out in the field and the only thing i had to adjust was the spacing on the bale thrower and belt tension, didnt miss a single know and bales always came out nice and consistent. I also like driving over the row versus looking over the shoulder alot with a conventional baler... Thanks for watching!
Nice vid. I like the tool box on the tractor, been looking for something in that size for my M7040. Did you find that online or local store?
Cheers
Bill
Our video #47 has more information on the aftermarket tool boxes. The one on the M7060 is custom made! Thanks for watching Bill!
Hey guys, just suggesting that you don’t close those doors on the semi trailer, we sell some hay to a large hay hauler and he staggered the piling in his trailer and doesn’t store it very long in there! It sounds like you had some bad luck with a fire and don’t have a hay barn right now but make sure for air flow around fresh bales. No heat or mold then! Great video though!
Thanks for the suggestion, we keep the doors open 95 percent of the time, only close if its going to be heavy rains and winds coming, what we lucked out with this one is that its a reefer trailer and fully insulated and hay is up on pallets, we have another trailer coming for second cut which isnt insulated, i think best thing is pallets on the bottom, as well as on the walls to promote air floe and possibly get an air mover fan to rotate between the two
@@HillsideAcres , do you guys ever try stacking the bottom row on the bale edges instead of laying them flat? We also used to sprinkle salt on the bales to help draw moisture out.
I like that idea of leaving the doors open at least during the day when it is dry.
@@tractortalkwithgary1271 The inline baler actually puts the cut side of the bale on the bottom versus the side on a conventional baler. The sale could be a good idea for when storing in these trailers, This first cutting was baled on the 4th and 5th day so it was really super dry!
@@tractortalkwithgary1271 We typically leave them open all the time unless its going to be storming hard with alot of wind it seems to do a pretty good job. Definitly want the most air flow it can get.
How many models of baler machine
I’m not sure I understand the question.
What type of grass is that?
Its just mixed grass, a little different in different areas. Orchard grass, clover, we usually have a lot of reeds canary but last year was a drought year and it seems a lot of that didn't seem to come back! thanks for watching!
Beautiful!!
Why is there a fn porta potty?
Because we had a major fire …. People still have to use restrooms in the meantime