Getting ready for the wife to square bale.

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  • Опубліковано 6 жов 2024
  • getting started baling

КОМЕНТАРІ • 570

  • @paul06101939
    @paul06101939 5 років тому +10

    I miss the farm, and YES all that hard work, I'm 80 years old now, I see all the new style of equipment, of today's farming, the times, of the modern farming sure has improved, The old saying, you gotta have bad, to appreciate the good.

    • @DLHFarms
      @DLHFarms  5 років тому +1

      Yes things have changed, some for good some for bad, but for the most part equipment has gotten better.

  • @jacklabloom635
    @jacklabloom635 2 роки тому +1

    I really enjoy your videos. Love the square bailing process.
    I hauled hay one summer when I was 15 years old. My friend Ronny had an old truck with a wooden flatbed built onto it. We could load 50 bails onto the truck’s flat bed. . Each of us made got a penny a bail. The truck had a granny gear. We tied a rope to the steering wheel and put the truck in granny gear. We tossed bails until one of us had to start stacking. The person on the ground would adjust the steering wheel occasionally. We did hay hauling all summer.
    One day a farmer drove out in the hayfield to get us to help him get some alfalfa bails put up before they got rained on. He paid us two cents a bail each. We helped get his hay put up in the hay barn and then went back to our original field. It never did rain that day.
    Ronny sold his truck for $150 at the end of our summer break. The truck leaked water and was not licensed. The truck did not have doors on it, nor seat belts. Neither of us had a drivers license. We decided we had pushed our luck far enough driving the back roads. Plus, we did not want to haul any more hay after that hot summer.

  • @marcryan6581
    @marcryan6581 4 роки тому +2

    Thanks for sharing. We had our hay baled in Franklin Massachusetts back in the 80s and I loved watching Mr. Phelan and Mr. Foley cut and bale the hay. We had 7 acres of Timothy, Alfalfa, and Clover. Usually would make around 500-600 bales. We would stack it up on trailers and put it up in the hay loft and it smelt so sweet! Brings back some great memories as a kid 👍

    • @DLHFarms
      @DLHFarms  4 роки тому

      Awesome! Glad I could help with the memories.

  • @clintegbert3405
    @clintegbert3405 Рік тому +1

    That brings back a lot of memories from the farm!!!

  • @diamondranch44
    @diamondranch44 6 років тому +4

    We put up about 65,000 small bales a year. We use to us an accumulator like what you got. We now use a New Holland self propelled bale wagon. With the bale wagon we sure get the hay off the field and in the stack a lot faster than we use to. We put up about double in 3x4's I hope to get a stack wagon for them one day. Thanks for your videos my family and I sure enjoy them.

    • @DLHFarms
      @DLHFarms  6 років тому

      Thanks for watching! That's a lot of bales I only make about 5000 a year.

  • @72Stiles
    @72Stiles 5 років тому +7

    Good to see someone still making square bales!

    • @DLHFarms
      @DLHFarms  5 років тому +1

      👍

    • @alimughal8570
      @alimughal8570 4 роки тому

      Please like and subscribe my youtube channel ua-cam.com/video/wJKS7CAYT4Y/v-deo.html

  • @daveframpton23
    @daveframpton23 4 роки тому +8

    Always was my fave time of the year, I used to bale small bales too and started out with New holland and progressed up to a Welger , great times.

    • @DLHFarms
      @DLHFarms  4 роки тому +1

      Thanks for watching!

  • @mick9885
    @mick9885 4 роки тому +3

    Great Video 👍
    Brings back memories from my teens, the Bailer had a Sledge behind it with a fella making a 7 ‐ 9 stack on it then just gave it a nudge off, then loading the Trailers with a Pitch fork, certainly built your muscles up 💪

  • @marypearling1418
    @marypearling1418 4 роки тому

    I used to do all my own hay from cutting to raking to baling for my own use with horses, cows and goats and sheep. The equipment I used was 'old'. Had 2 tractors, both International Harvesters both very old. One was a 40's something cub with a tricycle front end that we had the sickle bar hooked to for cutting and an H tricycle front end that we pulled the rake and baler with. The baler was an old John Deere 24T powered by a 2 cylinder air cooled Wisconsin Engine. It may have all seen more hay than a lot of folks can even imagine but all of it worked great and accomplished the job. I loved driving those old tractors. Don't have them any more and definitely miss doing hay every summer.

    • @DLHFarms
      @DLHFarms  4 роки тому

      Thanks for the story Mary!

  • @lynnmoore2664
    @lynnmoore2664 6 років тому +17

    Nice job & really nice looking bales. Thanks for sharing all the different camera positions showing your equipment at work.

  • @Zomsky
    @Zomsky 6 років тому +3

    Nice one man! Love my BC5060, don’t care what anyone says, it’s a mighty fine baler. Looks like it munched them big windrows.

    • @DLHFarms
      @DLHFarms  6 років тому

      I think it does a fine job!

  • @sudburyhouse
    @sudburyhouse 4 роки тому +3

    Watching you backup three axles was impressive! Not an easy task! Beautiful fields up there and, You’re really easy to listen too...

  • @glenparks5175
    @glenparks5175 5 років тому +28

    Yea I got my use out of it, my farming days are long gone so love watching your videos

  • @joeachberger3455
    @joeachberger3455 6 років тому +17

    Great video, I used to throw a lot of hay back in the 70s,.....in Ohio. I would always be the one guy ,...behind the baler ,....stacking the wagon ,.....six high ,...a tie ,...and the sky! I miss those times, I would love to go back and do it again , they would need an ambulance at the end of the field.

    • @DLHFarms
      @DLHFarms  6 років тому +1

      Lol 👍

    • @robertheinkel6225
      @robertheinkel6225 4 роки тому +1

      We always went four high with a tie, probably because we had some hills. Our wagons were just flat hay racks, nothing to stack against in the back of the wagon. I kinda miss those 1,000 bales a day days.

  • @glenncountry
    @glenncountry 6 років тому +1

    Im retired but my last baler was a NH 310. I thought that was a good baler. Seeing this i see there have been a lot of upgrades on the New Holland balers. They are really Humming! ;)

    • @DLHFarms
      @DLHFarms  6 років тому

      Yes this is a high capacity with 93 strokes per minute

  • @marhuf
    @marhuf 6 років тому +5

    Man you have some really nice thick looking windrows and bales Dennis. I wouldn't be surprised a bit if you made it way past 900 bales. It's also nice to see how technology has made it so much easier, so you don't need to have someone stacking the bales on wagons(something I remember doing so much of). By the way, that small gift will be in the mail within a couple of days.

    • @DLHFarms
      @DLHFarms  6 років тому

      Thanks! And thanks for the steering gift!!

  • @mikemerkweki6949
    @mikemerkweki6949 Рік тому

    Hope your still hanging in there and have a great 2023 bale season!!!

  • @stephensfarms7165
    @stephensfarms7165 6 років тому +2

    Awesome video. I use to do this when I was on the farm. Baled hay every summer. It’s fun. Getting the twine tried together is an art so bales don’t break apart. How well do u do at that. Show us how u tie them together that’s hard to do.
    Can’t wait to see your wife baling hay. Thanks Ronald

    • @DLHFarms
      @DLHFarms  6 років тому

      It's not to hard I just make a square knot.

  • @515bucko01
    @515bucko01 6 років тому

    Watching you bale brings back memories of when I was baling, I wasn''t out of HS yet, the tractor was a model 4010 JD, which was a new model then, a JD wire tie baler and a 4 wheel haywagon on the back with two guys picking the bales out of the baler as they came out. The backing of a 4 wheel wagon was no fun. We owned a JD model 60 two cylinder tractor, with a narrow front end, no power steering, and a hand clutch. Now THAT took some time!

    • @DLHFarms
      @DLHFarms  6 років тому

      The good ol days!

  • @ohhpaul7364
    @ohhpaul7364 6 років тому +19

    I haven't helped with hay for 16 years. Oh, the hot days and direct sun standing on a trailer towed behind the bailer and running bales to the back and stacking them 6? levels high. Then having to haul the hay cart to a barn and stack it all inside before the day was done so it wouldn't get any wetter. it was some dirty work and I have a grass allergy so I would break out from all the exposure. Miss it and don't miss it at the same time. The accumulator makes it looks so nice. I cannot wait to see how you get it all on the trailer and then put in the barn. thanks for the videos.

    • @DLHFarms
      @DLHFarms  6 років тому

      I show putting some on the trailer in the next video.

    • @scottcrabtree3239
      @scottcrabtree3239 5 років тому +2

      I feel your pain, Bud. That's the way I had to do it, as well..... Lifting and stacking bales of hay on a trailer, when it's 95° degrees outside with %100 humidity. Then I had to unload the trailer, stacking them all up in an even hotter barn..... For me, I don't miss those days one bit!!!! Lol.....

    • @chrisparlow6282
      @chrisparlow6282 5 років тому +1

      Ohh Paul ---oh my Lord l know how you feel .l did it for since l was 14 years old now l stopped at 49 I'm 65 as of 18 days ago and still doing it lol,lol hey Dad hey Dad l need help.

    • @emmettanderson6680
      @emmettanderson6680 5 років тому

      Scott Crabtree |

    • @emmettanderson6680
      @emmettanderson6680 5 років тому

      ?//

  • @deanbrown4512
    @deanbrown4512 6 років тому +6

    I enjoy watching your operation. I saw the old pull grader in the background, love it. I always put my foot on the middle roller bar with spring on it. I push back on it as I hook the belt. On my new Holland 7060 , I push the wrap button to put the net wrap on small bales or when I change the net wrap roll. Give that a try. We could have some good conversations on hay production and we do things a lot the same. Thanks for the great videos and pretty hay

    • @gregsangwin8310
      @gregsangwin8310 6 років тому +1

      Dean Brown
      I have to use one foot to stretch the spring too. But I’m not as big of a guy as Dennis.

    • @DLHFarms
      @DLHFarms  6 років тому

      That's a good idea on the belt hook up!

    • @camthecanman1901
      @camthecanman1901 6 років тому

      Dean Brown Was

  • @alan30189
    @alan30189 4 роки тому +4

    That’s an amazing machine! I’d like to see the inner-workings of it and how it bales.
    Great camerawork!

    • @DLHFarms
      @DLHFarms  4 роки тому

      👍

    • @jamesbooth4335
      @jamesbooth4335 4 роки тому +2

      To know the inner workings you must become the machine

    • @alan30189
      @alan30189 4 роки тому +1

      James Booth 😳

    • @larrykoivula9086
      @larrykoivula9086 2 роки тому

      i had one-made 80 lb.bales-nice to run-sold it to a guy in cache creek b.c. 7 years ago

  • @jerrybarlar9768
    @jerrybarlar9768 3 роки тому

    Thank you for Farming!! Amazing how much you are doing solo.

  • @barbf8628
    @barbf8628 4 роки тому +1

    Good looking hay, hope 2020 is treating you well. Thanks for the tour, that is some pretty country you are farming.

    • @DLHFarms
      @DLHFarms  4 роки тому

      It’s going ok so far!

  • @philiplewis7252
    @philiplewis7252 6 років тому +9

    Great video and lovely hay. Greetings from the UK where we have been doing the exact same job during the last few weeks!

    • @DLHFarms
      @DLHFarms  6 років тому +1

      Awesome hope it's going well for you!

    • @philiplewis7252
      @philiplewis7252 6 років тому +1

      Thank You! Yes it has gone well here in Wales this year. The only problem is that it has been much drier and warmer than normal so the crops are lighter but at least it hasn't rained every other day!! Best wishes with your hay operation.

  • @caninedrill_instructor5861
    @caninedrill_instructor5861 5 років тому +1

    What's an accumulator? How's it work?
    I've never seen one.
    We've used flat racks and kicker wagons with kicker balers.
    Dad always had first cutting chopped into haylage in mid to late May.
    The other three cuttings were baled into small square bales.
    This was Alfalfa for our dairy herd.

    • @DLHFarms
      @DLHFarms  5 років тому +1

      Keep watching my older videos and you will see how it works.

  • @Hailbrutulster
    @Hailbrutulster 5 років тому +12

    excellent work well explained and good camera work. .thank you from Ireland

    • @DLHFarms
      @DLHFarms  5 років тому +1

      Thanks for watching!

  • @1811bruce
    @1811bruce 5 років тому +11

    Great video angles! Congrats on your 1st and 2nd awards on the backing contests! I knew when I was watching you back up that it wasn't your first rodeo. Haha!

    • @DLHFarms
      @DLHFarms  5 років тому +5

      Thanks glad you enjoyed the video.

  • @davesisco4637
    @davesisco4637 6 років тому +1

    Man , I don’t miss square baling at all !!! 😆

    • @DLHFarms
      @DLHFarms  6 років тому

      Oh come on you loved it.

  • @muddymudskipr
    @muddymudskipr 5 років тому +1

    One fine setup ya got there. Gotta kick at the 18:00 min mark with the FFA back up championship story:) You did one helluva job backing this chain linked contraption...wonder how I would stack up

  • @crslyrn
    @crslyrn 6 років тому

    Good looking bales. That hay baler you've got there can really pump out the bales. Pretty impressive watching you back that hay train. If that was me, I'd have it jackknifed every direction but the right one. LOL Stay safe.

  • @finscreenname
    @finscreenname 4 роки тому +1

    "Everyone is getten up hay....it's crazy" 😂

  • @kubotaman9947
    @kubotaman9947 6 років тому +2

    I was finally able to get all my hay up here in eastern Kentucky (cut 6/14 and rolled 6/16) and off 11 acres I put up 48 5x5 rolls. I should have got it up a week earlier but I was gone to our state FFA convention. I was in FFA for four years and really enjoyed it. My junior year I placed first in the region for tractor driving I’m going to miss it next year.

    • @DLHFarms
      @DLHFarms  6 років тому

      I've got 20 more acres to go I've got up about 80 acres

  • @TheByard
    @TheByard 6 років тому +6

    I learnt to drive a grey Ferguson back in 1958 on my uncles market garden farm, left school spring 1960 and went to work on a dairy farm. Two brother had three farms between them and grew all there own cattle feed, silage, hay and grains with the straw baled for bedding. They had 13 tractors between them and new kid on the block me got the way old Fordson TVO/Petrol beast. My first job was to muck out the winter sheds, hand balling onto a tipper trailer, haul that to a field and dump it to weather out. Once I finished the small sheds, I was given a Fordson Major with a front fork loader, man I was in heaven no more hand blisters. Each day I practised backing the trailer faster and faster until I could do it flat out in high range. Now the trailers were Weeks Trailer with the axle right on the arse end, so easy to reverse, the did axle ones were a bit harder to get the swing just right.
    Once a week I would attend the Young Farmers Club and they asked for contestants for an up coming YFC show, one of the other tractor drivers put my arm up and I was picked. Well I won the trailer backing and came second in the plow mount and dismount competition. The two bosses were so pleased they got me drunk in the beer tent.
    So watching you bale the hay brought back lots of memories, our baling outfit was a Massey Ferguson 35 tractor, Massey Ferguson baler and a farm made skid. The bales were taken of the baler by hand, stacked on the skid 4 high, a scaffold tube with a 1ft point would be driven into the ground in front of the bale stack, held in place and as the skid pulled forward the stack would slide off. Hopefully
    Always good to see you guys getting the crops in, well done.

    • @DLHFarms
      @DLHFarms  6 років тому +1

      Thanks for the interesting story! Nice to hear how other people do things or did things.

    • @stuartluig2911
      @stuartluig2911 5 років тому

      Good Moaning Vietnam, whow!😳 Thats a pretty cool story, must have taken you forever.

    • @jdp143
      @jdp143 5 років тому

      Ummmmmmmmmm is this a book or what

    • @stuartluig2911
      @stuartluig2911 5 років тому

      Jill Potts, no i dont think so

  • @glenbaker5311
    @glenbaker5311 4 роки тому

    Love seeing that critter in the rear, that use to be me, 25 cents a bail to load it and put in the barn,, thought I was rich,, ha, Thxs for posting this, really worth watching, gb

    • @DLHFarms
      @DLHFarms  4 роки тому

      Haha that's pretty good money

  • @kennethstout9237
    @kennethstout9237 3 роки тому +1

    Nice backing job on the sharp point.

  • @cluxseltoot
    @cluxseltoot 6 років тому +3

    Wonderful - I felt that I could smell the hay - lovely colour.

    • @DLHFarms
      @DLHFarms  6 років тому

      Thanks! It does smell great.

  • @glenparks5175
    @glenparks5175 5 років тому +1

    Baled many acres with a MF 165 and a 276 hay liner, great package together, loved those two together

    • @DLHFarms
      @DLHFarms  5 років тому

      Good equipment in it's day

  • @longviewfarm226
    @longviewfarm226 6 років тому +6

    Everything seems to be going smooth.....something you will never here me say, or think while I’m baleing. Lol

    • @DLHFarms
      @DLHFarms  6 років тому

      Lol that's not good

  • @pierregodin1668
    @pierregodin1668 5 років тому

    As a retired agricultural mechanic, i have a question for you about your bailer. Did you reset your PTO drive clutch on the bailer before starting the season? If not you have the potential of causing thousands of dollars of damage tp your bailer. I know it have fixed them after the damage was donne. Its easy and does not take much time with no special tools.Now you might want to do this with all your equipment that are equipped with PTO drive line clutches. Let me know if your interested and i will give you the procedure step by step.

  • @flordeere
    @flordeere 6 років тому

    The other day i got 1036 bales from a 2 hectare field (about 5 acres) those were the biggest windrows i have ever seen 🚜💨 Greetings from Belgium!

    • @DLHFarms
      @DLHFarms  6 років тому

      Yeah that's getting it done.

  • @camhester4251
    @camhester4251 5 років тому

    love that Massey , i have a 431 Massey Ferguson it's around 55 horse power it does all i need and more on my family farm i live on but it's not farmed anymore but i have some fields i keep up and plant food plots for deer hunting and i have a one mile dirt driveway i keep up to and bush hog around edge of fields and land line paths or fourwheeler paths , i wish i could farm my place .

    • @DLHFarms
      @DLHFarms  5 років тому

      I really like my Massey it's the first red tractor I've owned

  • @marcth37
    @marcth37 4 роки тому

    My high score on a farm was with an Aliss Chalmers 5050 tractor and a no.9 Massey baler :450 bales in an hour! It would take us 5 to 10 seconds only to change wagons and i was baling faster than the guys stacking in the barn!

  • @nathanbrandt1291
    @nathanbrandt1291 4 роки тому

    I can't believe how nice those bales look when you're only getting 10-12 strokes per bale. But I'm used to running an old 315 model, lol.

    • @DLHFarms
      @DLHFarms  4 роки тому

      It does a really good job. I like to get 14 or 15 strokes but it don’t always happen

  • @johndyrssen8176
    @johndyrssen8176 5 років тому

    J U Dyrssen Farming, what a life.I moved from 60 acres i Germany to 6000 acres in Australia,having a fantastic time there and at 82 still on a farm

    • @DLHFarms
      @DLHFarms  5 років тому

      Wow that's a lot of ground! Enjoy!

    • @johndyrssen8176
      @johndyrssen8176 5 років тому

      that was in the central west of NSW

  • @ronaldgaska4480
    @ronaldgaska4480 5 років тому

    I'm from Groton/New London coastal Connecticut. The fair is over the State line in Massachusetts about 45 minutes from me. Eastern States Fair in New England known as the BIG E in Springfield. I've been watching your vids for awhile. Today i liked, subscribed and hit the bell. Keep the quality vids coming. Seasons Greetings!

    • @DLHFarms
      @DLHFarms  5 років тому

      Thanks Ronald! Glad to have you on board. Yes the BIG E that's what I was trying to think of!

  • @alanthompson4741
    @alanthompson4741 6 років тому +3

    Great video, that is one productive equipment setup you have!

  • @bjenkins803
    @bjenkins803 6 років тому +2

    Good stuff man. It's so dry and hot down here in southern nc. The crops down here are dry and smaller than usual. I think y'all get a little more rain than we do and I'm sure it's cooler. But hey at least they are paving roads lol. This dry heat is great for that.

    • @DLHFarms
      @DLHFarms  6 років тому

      We are supper wet, it's hard to get any hay dry up here.

    • @msanford75
      @msanford75 6 років тому +2

      B Jenkins it's crazy eastern nc is to wet to cut hay we have about 100 acres have only got half of it cut .

    • @DLHFarms
      @DLHFarms  6 років тому +1

      Oh no! I bet it's really ripe by now too.

  • @frankboothe6946
    @frankboothe6946 6 років тому +1

    Great Video Dennis, I believe everyone around here is behind on their hay this year, i know i am. ha. Boy i'd love to have an accumulator like that, thats a fine and handy piece of equipment. Godspeed my friend.

    • @DLHFarms
      @DLHFarms  6 років тому

      I'm down to 20 acres of hay left I can get it if it will turn dry for 3 more days.

  • @1995jug
    @1995jug 6 років тому +2

    Good looking hay wish I was set up like you guys I would square bale all my hay like it better than round bales.

  • @stevenbetassa7329
    @stevenbetassa7329 6 років тому

    never have seen the piece of equipment being pulled behind the baler. Ive live my whole live around hay country, in Central Washington, and done baling with Freeman Balers, and we use New Holland Harrowbeds to pickup the bales. one farm I work at raise's over 5,000 tons of Timothy a year.

    • @DLHFarms
      @DLHFarms  6 років тому

      For a small operation like mine this method works really good.

  • @salmonhunter7414
    @salmonhunter7414 6 років тому

    You can back up really well. We use to back up our wagons up the barn hill into the barn before we bought a elevator.

    • @DLHFarms
      @DLHFarms  6 років тому

      Backing up is so fun

  • @honkda1
    @honkda1 4 роки тому +3

    Hi, could you please name the brand and model of your accumulator, please? It would be also nice if you show and explain the function in detail. Here in Germany this technique is almost unknown but I am searching for a way to harvest small bales totally mechanically.

    • @DLHFarms
      @DLHFarms  4 роки тому +1

      It's a Kuhns Mfg accumulator they are made is Ohio USA, I believe they have a website.

  • @climacool19
    @climacool19 5 років тому +1

    My super TIP of the day...In my neck of the woods...I wait for the County to cut the grass on the side of certain County roads(Ones that have excellent grass). Then just rake it myself the old fashion way and load it up and take it to my goats, save the rest. ua-cam.com/video/Mkf6XnQqteY/v-deo.html Thats just one tip...

  • @rayeddy528
    @rayeddy528 6 років тому +4

    Great stuff Dennis !! Thank you for sharing with us !! I was seeing the baler tieing at one point every 5 seconds ! Very good !! Please be safe my friend and may God continue to bless you !!!!!! Eddy

    • @DLHFarms
      @DLHFarms  6 років тому

      Yeah I may have been going a little to fast at times. I like to get at least 10 strokes between ties. 15 makes a nicer bale but it takes a lot longer in thick hay like this.

    • @emmettanderson6680
      @emmettanderson6680 6 років тому

      Ray Eddy ~~

    • @emmettanderson6680
      @emmettanderson6680 6 років тому

      Ray Eddy kii

  • @waltermattson5566
    @waltermattson5566 6 років тому +5

    That New Holland baler can sure handle some big windrows. Great job with all the camera angles too.

    • @DLHFarms
      @DLHFarms  6 років тому +2

      It's a hay eating machine!

  • @coloradomike4182
    @coloradomike4182 5 років тому

    Grew up on IH square bailers and all their quirks, but that's all we knew back then. 70-80's. No accumulators. We caught and
    threw bails as they were launched from kicker. Great fun and got paid $20 a week. Simpler times, I know but yeah, reality... what are we really missing now?

    • @coloradomike4182
      @coloradomike4182 5 років тому

      Also, your ground speed seems a bit high. Maxing out the pickup doesn't bode well for the fork or the ram. That's where your clunk comes in. Not big enough flywheel on equipment so it feeds back into tractor. Slow down or get a bigger flywheel on your bailer. Problem solved and less wear and tear on equipment.

    • @DLHFarms
      @DLHFarms  5 років тому

      Sounds like fun times

  • @SuperRks1
    @SuperRks1 3 роки тому +1

    NH Haytools very best in the industry !!! Shipped all over all the world ~

  • @richardperry9095
    @richardperry9095 6 років тому

    I found it interesting to see how the bale accumulator handled the bales on the slope.

    • @DLHFarms
      @DLHFarms  6 років тому

      It does pretty good on slopes not perfect but pretty good

  • @Ghostrider304
    @Ghostrider304 5 років тому

    The Big E, or Eastern States Exposition, that’s the State fair for all of New England. BTW- there are 6 states in New England, Maine, New Hampshire, Vermont, Massachusetts, Connecticut, and Rhode Island.

    • @DLHFarms
      @DLHFarms  5 років тому

      Thanks 👍 that's where I went but the name slipped my mind.

  • @NevadaDesertStorm
    @NevadaDesertStorm 5 років тому +6

    damn...i wish i could enjoy that Farm Life u living. But here in Germany there is no way to get that Feeling. You have to go to School again for 3 Years if u wanna Work in a Agriculture Company.
    I think in the US it would be alot easier to get a Job on a Farm without 3 years on a Schoolbench :D
    And btw....Great Video and perfect Camera Work out there. :)

    • @DLHFarms
      @DLHFarms  5 років тому +1

      Thanks Dee! Wow sounds like farming there is like being a Doctor here.

    • @alimughal8570
      @alimughal8570 4 роки тому

      Please like and subscribe my youtube channel ua-cam.com/video/wJKS7CAYT4Y/v-deo.html

  • @camhester4251
    @camhester4251 5 років тому

    we used to have to pick up bails by hand and load on the trailer then stack it in the barn but i was a teen when i did that i don't think i could handle now but you have a nice set up there

    • @DLHFarms
      @DLHFarms  5 років тому +1

      Yep been there done that also.

  • @jamesguralski5156
    @jamesguralski5156 5 років тому

    We always had that heavy clunking noise on all our balers too. You have a very heavy fly wheel and a big plunger on baler that make that noise... If u stop and leave tractor in neutral; you'll still get the bucking from the heavy weight of the fly wheel and plunger....

    • @DLHFarms
      @DLHFarms  5 років тому

      Nope it don't do it hooked to other tractors it also stops doing it when you push the clutch in. The dealer has the rear end torn down on the T5 right now too much play in the ring and pinion gear set

    • @jamesguralski5156
      @jamesguralski5156 5 років тому

      @@DLHFarms glad u found it. Hope it covered by dealer!

    • @DLHFarms
      @DLHFarms  5 років тому

      Its covered, took it to the dealer 1 week before the warranty went out.

    • @jamesguralski5156
      @jamesguralski5156 5 років тому +1

      @@DLHFarms wow. Good timing

  • @shawnfox8002
    @shawnfox8002 6 років тому +3

    I miss baleing hay sometimes but good to see it's going good for you.

    • @DLHFarms
      @DLHFarms  6 років тому

      So far so good. Baled another 1600 hay bales and 2500 straw bales since this.

    • @shawnfox8002
      @shawnfox8002 6 років тому

      So 1600 bales on ten acres not bad at all

    • @DLHFarms
      @DLHFarms  6 років тому

      No no no to that's total since I made this video

  • @billcoley8520
    @billcoley8520 5 років тому

    My father n law had a accumulater that was from Russia, I works the same as your but it isn’t high in the air.
    The bails push iron plates to the spot the bail needs to go, when it gets 8 bails the back door opens and closes with 8 bails ready to put in the barn

  • @kellyconstenius676
    @kellyconstenius676 4 роки тому +1

    Any one else notice when your wife runs the baler. She will look strait forward. No matter what is going on with the pick up.
    She will run right into a big slug with out so much as a slight pause.
    BOOM!!! There goes another sheer pin.
    Word of advise. Dont give her too much crap about it. otherwise she will storm off and leave you to do all the work.
    Oh well, just happy to have her help.
    Sheer pins are a small price to pay for the view ( Tanning opportunity) and not having to go back and pick bales off the ground.
    Thanks Honey.

    • @DLHFarms
      @DLHFarms  4 роки тому +2

      I taught my wife to pay attention and she does good probably better than me haha

  • @andrewhanson8299
    @andrewhanson8299 5 років тому

    I can feel this video, the red arms from all the pokes. The chaff in the eyes and nose. And the weat t shirt from the sweat

  • @jojoc9240
    @jojoc9240 6 років тому +5

    Your good at back in that mess up that's for sure good job

  • @warrenpatton3426
    @warrenpatton3426 6 років тому +1

    Hello from Bristol, hi Dennis. Wow. Looks like a bumper crop of straw ya got. The lime and fertilizer seems to help a lot. It’s good ya got some dry weather to get it up. I believe it’s rained 95% since February. Say, I bet ur new hay barn is almost up by now. Hope it’s gonna be big enough with all the hay you’re getting up. Lol 😂. I wished I was closer to ya, I’d sure like to give ya a hand with some of your chores. I guess the videos will have to be good enough. Awesome footage of everything as usual. I noticed the baler and such didn’t get away from ya like the mower did. Lol. Gonna be 90 + this weekend. Heat index around 100. Gonna be hot and dry till Monday the 2nd. Take her slow buddy and I’ll see ya one the next one. Warren

    • @DLHFarms
      @DLHFarms  6 років тому

      Thanks Warren, I don't have that building up yet unfortunately, but the pad is almost done. Every time I work on it, it starts raining.

  • @culmalachie
    @culmalachie 6 років тому +2

    Well I have to say: one of the best / better vids I've seen on Baler performance , for a long time....a good thick Swath - not the best but I've had to put up with thicker knotted / twisted swathes and used IH and deere balers. 9-11 slices per bale - you making ? I've managed to punch through with 4 - 5 slices to get a spongy bale so it dries better - our hay seldom gets dry enough to bale solid bales which don't go moldy. thanks for posting.

    • @DLHFarms
      @DLHFarms  6 років тому +1

      Have you ever thought about using presevatives to help with baling high moisture hay?

    • @culmalachie
      @culmalachie 6 років тому +2

      Short answer - Yes! - but few of our Customers want / request it... Even for treating moist feed grain ( PropRionic Acid). and from MY POV, the corrosion of the equipment - especially now that small SQ balers are so rare and expensive...
      Huh shouldav left it as SHORT Answr ! Looked into it further this teabreak - googling hay additives UK - poor first results - all geared towards Silage: BECAUSE our climate produces damp air and with dew by 6pm one could only have around 4 hours optimum time. But hay is a Cinderella Line of forage conservation - My Sq bales are small sacked outdoors for a week or two to dry out, but we have taken them indoors to dry over a ventilated floor ( grain drier ) Means of lot of handling but quality is there. Not a believer in Round bales Maybe for Straw but then have to be BIG - but that advantage is negated by transport restrictions - and is there now a 6' x 5' round baler on the UK market? If you're not into Mass baling with ROUND bales, you'll likely be involved with the Large Sq Bales. Such is the way farming has gone here.... ?
      Noted comment about hay TOOO DRY !! ? what's the problem there? Baled straw when tinder dry and loved it - brings up a polish on the bale chamber which DOES get quite HOT from the pressure - Deere 456 with auto pressure regulator.

  • @rickperry1828
    @rickperry1828 6 років тому +1

    That’s one reason why I like NH bailers. You can put it to her and it won’t plug or break shear pins

    • @DLHFarms
      @DLHFarms  6 років тому

      Yep I've sheared some pins but most of the time there is a stick or something in the plunger.

  • @watchgoose
    @watchgoose 5 років тому +2

    THE Massey, THE wife, THE hay

    • @alimughal8570
      @alimughal8570 4 роки тому +1

      Please like and subscribe my youtube channel ua-cam.com/video/wJKS7CAYT4Y/v-deo.html

  • @1995jug
    @1995jug 4 роки тому +2

    Good looking hay, first time in my life i hired someone to bail my hay my tractor is broke down i think it might be cheaper in the long run.

    • @DLHFarms
      @DLHFarms  4 роки тому

      It probably is cheaper if you can get them there when you need them

    • @riazchaudhary2789
      @riazchaudhary2789 4 роки тому

      @@DLHFarms : by

  • @mykee426
    @mykee426 4 роки тому +1

    We still use a hayrack and an old JD baler getting pulled around with an old Minneapolis Moline 670...

  • @deanbrown4512
    @deanbrown4512 6 років тому +2

    I have to back my rig into point land because I have small terraces. Congratulations on ffa contest. Shows your ability

    • @DLHFarms
      @DLHFarms  6 років тому

      Thanks! This rig really isn't that bad to back up.

  • @justindawson731
    @justindawson731 6 років тому +5

    I always wondered how a bale of hay was done

  • @mataiterapreha
    @mataiterapreha 6 років тому +1

    I did notice that clunky pto noise, we have a couple of power command New Hollands that have a direct drive top gear which run off that same shaft that runs from the engine all the way to the pto and they do have a distinct whine when in that top gear. I think it just has to do with the shaft being so long but do keep an eye on it as on one of ours it striped the gear where it's splined onto the shaft

    • @DLHFarms
      @DLHFarms  6 років тому +1

      That's what I think is wrong is to much play in a splined shaft somewhere, it will probably fail eventually.

    • @mataiterapreha
      @mataiterapreha 6 років тому

      DLH Farms hopefully when it's still under warranty!

    • @DLHFarms
      @DLHFarms  6 років тому

      Only 5 months left.

  • @MariaIsabelGreen
    @MariaIsabelGreen 4 роки тому

    hay hay hay it's a beautiful day. I learned a lot from your videos, thank you for sharing

  • @chrisward4206
    @chrisward4206 4 роки тому +1

    Nice video but you should have a flat 8 sledge

    • @DLHFarms
      @DLHFarms  4 роки тому

      10 packs a lot better and faster

  • @genedameier8746
    @genedameier8746 5 років тому

    Just wanted to say "Hey!" Thanks for the different camera angles. That rig reminds me of "PLINKO", a game on "The Price is Right". (I know your to busy to watch TV, but I work nights.) Git-R-Done before the rain. Stay safe.

    • @DLHFarms
      @DLHFarms  5 років тому

      Haha that's funny you said that because that's what my best friend calls it too.

  • @RobertJones-ey9qz
    @RobertJones-ey9qz 6 років тому

    The clunking noise I'm hearing is in time with the baler The pto should be running at 540 rpm or above. (I don't remember the other speed. I have a 60's Oliver.) Good video. Take care and be safe.

    • @DLHFarms
      @DLHFarms  6 років тому

      It's running at 540. The noise is in time with the baler but it's coming from the transmission of the tractor.

  • @johnjacobjinglehimerschmid3555
    @johnjacobjinglehimerschmid3555 5 років тому

    Baled hay couple seasons with a friend down the hwy. Not bad ... 2 on the wagon ... funny friend never let us drive.
    Baled hay with my uncle one season ... he had a throw baler. Talk about a pain in the arse to unload. But wouldn't skip the experience for nothing.

  • @duanebolen8359
    @duanebolen8359 3 роки тому +1

    Is that junk when the plunger compresses the hay that takes power to do that

  • @svetlanarudovsky7459
    @svetlanarudovsky7459 3 роки тому +1

    Yeah you're going to have an early winter get all your harvest in before the end of October they're going to increase the prices on everything yeah and you do know right now for the homeowners on the farmers they've got a grant going start a 2 weeks ago and he'll end in October if you need any assistance apply for the grant but get all your hay in for your cows and go get supplies for 4 months emergency supplies too and don't forget to have a generator for backup or solar panels case of blackouts of storms you know how that goes yeah remember to get some plenty supply of dog food for the dog or your cat or whatever and yourself have a blessed day 🤳🙏🤝💌💞💞

  • @roxannahendrix3036
    @roxannahendrix3036 5 років тому

    That's pretty cool, wish we had that when we were putting up hay. that was a long time ago.

  • @PaulHigginbothamSr
    @PaulHigginbothamSr 4 роки тому

    Seems like it clunked more downhill. Something seems off in the pto but if it's done this since new must just be this model tractor. Can't see it getting worse then must just do it. On that backing up. I would call that a peerowfeshnal. Best I've seen.

    • @DLHFarms
      @DLHFarms  4 роки тому

      Thanks! I fixed the noise when I bought a John Deere 6R haha

  • @ivordavies2976
    @ivordavies2976 6 років тому

    Interesting watching how its done across the pond.. the plunger is noisy is it because it is pushing 4 bales uphill... I am in Mid Wales UK

    • @DLHFarms
      @DLHFarms  6 років тому

      No the noise is coming from the tractor PTO/ transmission unfortunately.

  • @orkidknog4147
    @orkidknog4147 6 років тому

    look a nice bit of hay and plenty of it, im not sure i like how the pto makes the banging noise in heavy crop but it will last till somthing happen i guess,

    • @DLHFarms
      @DLHFarms  6 років тому

      Yeah I don't like it either. It only does it with the square baler. There is excessive play in the transmission some where.

  • @Mtnfarmer
    @Mtnfarmer 6 років тому

    Looks good I am south of you and it is June 24th and I am still trying to get the last of first cutting cut.

    • @DLHFarms
      @DLHFarms  6 років тому

      Yeah I am too, got 20 more acres one more good weather stretch and I can get mine done.

    • @Mtnfarmer
      @Mtnfarmer 6 років тому

      The forecast is looking pretty good toward the end of this week. I too have about 20 acres to cut and it is hurting.

    • @DLHFarms
      @DLHFarms  6 років тому

      Yep that's what I was just looking at was the end of the week. Yeah mines getting ripe.

  • @2000chevy4x4
    @2000chevy4x4 5 років тому +2

    I laughed out loud at the 900 bales guesstimation!
    Edit: haha i thought you had meant round bales!!

    • @DLHFarms
      @DLHFarms  5 років тому

      No, talking about square bales. It made over 800 can't remember exactly.

  • @jwhitley101whitleyfarms9
    @jwhitley101whitleyfarms9 6 років тому

    I wish I had the accumulator but we don't bale to many squares just a few for the horses and for animals that are put in the barn for a few days for calving or other issues so we put 500 on the ground tops and then pick 500 up and put in the barn and then we act like those bales are 100 dollars a piece and only use for barn use only so I can skip the squares the next summer but almost out so I will have to make a field this year I d rather roll it all I need to get hay buster that would fix the problem good video

    • @DLHFarms
      @DLHFarms  6 років тому

      Haybusters are very expensive too.

    • @jwhitley101whitleyfarms9
      @jwhitley101whitleyfarms9 6 років тому +1

      DLH Farms that's why it's not in the barn but it would be nice but we wouldn't need it that much so I 'll just keep going the way I got it for now anyway

  • @j.b.maxwell8300
    @j.b.maxwell8300 6 років тому +3

    Hi Darrel , where do you live, it looks good ground about the same as here in Tasmania Australia great vids we really enjoy them, so natural to watch

    • @DLHFarms
      @DLHFarms  6 років тому

      I live in the mountains of Virginia. The names Dennis by the way 👍

    • @alimughal8570
      @alimughal8570 4 роки тому

      Please like and subscribe my youtube channel ua-cam.com/video/wJKS7CAYT4Y/v-deo.html

  • @kristyjehorek8068
    @kristyjehorek8068 4 роки тому

    The clunk is the hay dogs dropping back into the chamber. The reason is they hold the hay back from going back into the chamber. Bill Jehorek 308 280 2919. Have run one for years.

    • @DLHFarms
      @DLHFarms  4 роки тому

      It's not the baler I know that noise. The noise went away when I got a John Deere tractor.

  • @Kingfisher1215
    @Kingfisher1215 4 роки тому

    10 acres? That would have taken me about two hours to bale. And 900 bales would be about 33.75 tons. At 75 pounds a bale.

  • @jankotze1959
    @jankotze1959 6 років тому +1

    Stunning video, the NH baler just rambling on

  • @jeffreyhatmaker7254
    @jeffreyhatmaker7254 4 роки тому

    I enjoyed your video. I'd be concerned enough about the clunk to get New Holland to loan you and identical model tractor. If the clunk was the same you could probably rest easy.

    • @DLHFarms
      @DLHFarms  4 роки тому +1

      I did one better than that I traded it for a John Deere and haven’t looked back 👍

  • @prjndigo
    @prjndigo 4 роки тому

    the clumping, you probably need a bigger flywheel on the baler

    • @DLHFarms
      @DLHFarms  4 роки тому

      It's not the baler

  • @scottcrabtree3239
    @scottcrabtree3239 5 років тому +2

    Getting some good hay bales, that's for sure!

    • @DLHFarms
      @DLHFarms  5 років тому +1

      Yes they are excellent just sold the last of them

  • @hethinkshesfunny
    @hethinkshesfunny 6 років тому

    I bought a T.5 last year and I am not impressed running the small baler. My T.6050 operates it very well.

    • @DLHFarms
      @DLHFarms  6 років тому +1

      Does yours clunk like mine?

    • @hethinkshesfunny
      @hethinkshesfunny 6 років тому

      DLH Farms hard to tell if it’s as much, but definitely runs clunky and labored. Clutch is also way to jumpy.

    • @DLHFarms
      @DLHFarms  6 років тому +1

      Your clutch can be fine tuned by someone that knows what thier doing. I had the dealer send me all the info on calibration of the transmission and learned how to do it myself so I can keep it smooth.

  • @montetowe1951
    @montetowe1951 5 років тому

    Our baler had a thower so at least did not have to stack on the wagon, only in the barn. 400+ comments at this point so I cannot go through to see if anyone brought up this subject. Not sure why in 2018 (when the video was posted) anyone is still using the small square baler verses the round baler?

    • @joshuaclark8356
      @joshuaclark8356 5 років тому +1

      Horse Hay, feeding inside of the barn etc.....he doesn't hand stack, that's why they have the bale accumulator (ex. 4, 8, 10, 15, 18 bales), he uses a grapple set up to pick the hay up in the bundles and stack it on the trailer/ barn. Typically feed round bales in the pasture. Higher end horse farms, usually do not feed bales in pasture, they only let the animals graze

    • @DLHFarms
      @DLHFarms  5 років тому +1

      Thanks for taking care of that for me Josh