Hay making equipment.

Lazy-Farmer

Member
Mixed Farmer
Not made hay on the farm for about 20 years and changing the business plan a bit and looking to make about 5ha of hay to start with then ramp up to 15-20ha as fields come round in rotation. Got zero kit for fodder production just now and looking to get a mower (prefer with conditioner), rake/Tedder and bring in a contractor to bale.

Don’t wanna break the break the bank as I’d like to make a profit at some point so used kit is where I’ll be looking. However I need to be able to get the job done while the sun is shining. In Scotland that’s often way to short a window.

looking for suggestions on what’s good and what’s to be avoided. Could probably get away with an old PZ 300 year one butwould like to get buy the right thing and keep it well looked after.

Has anyone come up with a good modern rake and tedder combo machine or is two bits of kit the only way to go.
 

Sharpy

Member
Livestock Farmer
The Lely is the best tedder for hay. No ifs or buts. It rows hay well (if its the combi) but makes a terrible job in silage or haylage. We do most of our rowing up with a 300 haybob, but the telescopic (450 ?) would be better, purely to cover ground quickly without a heavy non drying swath thats a bugger to kick out if it rains like you get with a big rake. As for the mower, steel y tines on the conditioner are a must to speed the job.
 

jpd

Member
Location
rep of irl
The Lely is the best tedder for hay. No ifs or buts. It rows hay well (if its the combi) but makes a terrible job in silage or haylage. We do most of our rowing up with a 300 haybob, but the telescopic (450 ?) would be better, purely to cover ground quickly without a heavy non drying swath thats a bugger to kick out if it rains like you get with a big rake. As for the mower, steel y tines on the conditioner are a must to speed the job.
says you
all lely tedders here traded for claas and pottinger in these here parts(including myself)
they cannot cope with seriously heavy crops of hay
grand for spreading silage
but leave too many untedded lumps for hay
my opinion
that lely owners will reject strenuously
but my check book voted anything but lely
 

Sharpy

Member
Livestock Farmer
says you
all lely tedders here traded for claas and pottinger in these here parts(including myself)
they cannot cope with seriously heavy crops of hay
grand for spreading silage
but leave too many untedded lumps for hay
my opinion
that lely owners will reject strenuously
but my check book voted anything but lely
Thats very strange. I have never seen a better job done than by a Lely, although round here everything is conditioned. Could your experiences be behind a plain mower?
 

Andrew

Never Forgotten
Honorary Member
Location
Huntingdon, UK
The Lely are a very well built tedder and very good for spreading wet grass. The larger rotors aren’t ideal for hay though. We use our Lely for the first one or 2 passes and Pottinger for the rest.
Our neighbor has a smaller ‘combi’ Lely, it lasted a season before he brought a single rotor rake.

2 machines better than one IMO, but one will be OK for your 5ha to start with then buy a rake in a few years time before you get to 50ha.
 

Lazy-Farmer

Member
Mixed Farmer
The Lely is the best tedder for hay. No ifs or buts. It rows hay well (if its the combi) but makes a terrible job in silage or haylage. We do most of our rowing up with a 300 haybob, but the telescopic (450 ?) would be better, purely to cover ground quickly without a heavy non drying swath thats a bugger to kick out if it rains like you get with a big rake. As for the mower, steel y tines on the conditioner are a must to speed the job.

Will the 450 make a good row for the baler? I know that smaller rows can cause issues with round balers.
 

spin cycle

Member
Location
north norfolk
no need for moco......swathwilter essential IMO.....if you cant afford one buy and old kidd strawchopper and convert like i did.....often i can mow day 1.....swathwilt day 2....bale pm on day 3
 

Stephen E

Member
Mixed Farmer
Location
South Northants
Whatever you get, don’t skimp on the horsepower.
86F51B98-04FC-475A-BAC3-9D74C7378CA3.jpeg
 

Will you help clear snow?

  • yes

    Votes: 68 31.6%
  • no

    Votes: 147 68.4%

The London Palladium event “BPR Seminar”

  • 13,214
  • 203
This is our next step following the London rally 🚜

BPR is not just a farming issue, it affects ALL business, it removes incentive to invest for growth

Join us @LondonPalladium on the 16th for beginning of UK business fight back👍

Back
Top