More hay movement

Friday we went to an estate auction and got a few trinkets. One of the best things was an old fashioned counter/clicker! There were two of these and I should have bought them both instead of just one. I can now officially count hay bales and sheep easily. I used this to count the hay as I loaded it up into the barn. I can only throw the hay bales about eight feet high. I have to have help to stack them higher. One person throws them up and the other stacks them higher. I spent two days picking up hay bales and then unloading them into the barn until I had all 170 bales in the barn. I can only get about 30 bales into the back of the pickup. So it takes a few trips for me to get it all loaded and unloaded.

I ended up having to feed about nine bales to the boys in Alcatraz. The bales were too wet. I used to measure the moisture content in the bales but I can pretty much tell by picking them up whether there is too much moisture in the bale. The wet ones just get fed to the boys. They love the green grass and eat them before they spoil.

The next thing I need to do is to get some spray on the neighbor’s field. I need some on ours also so I can do them all at the same time. As fast as the grass is growing I will be getting a second cutting in 6-8 weeks and maybe will get a third cutting in this year. The grass is really growing. We are working on getting water out of our irrigation ditch and onto the field next to Donna’s. This will give us about 3 acres of irrigated land. We are going to pile on the water and try and get the cheatgrass to sprout so we can accelerate killing it. I would like to see it sprout three times this year.

Sunday I did not really want to move bales so I went down and cut on the broken apple branch that was blocking the gate. I cut on it until I had a path for the animals to get through. My hope was that if I opened up a path and locked it open the four alpaca would come into the area near the houses. Otherwise I am going to have to chase them in so they can be sheared. We are going to shear this upcoming weekend.

All three of our bee hives are still alive! We are having to feed them for a short time between flowers blooming. Pretty soon the blackberries will start to bloom and the bees will not need any supplement. But for now all three hives are getting some.

Hay needs a home

I needed to get all the baled hay from the neighbor’s place moved into our barn. The real problem is I needed to move the hay from two years ago out of the way first. We have an overhead walkway in the animal area that I keep “straw” on for the barn floor. We have just started to use the oldest hay for the floor covering instead of buying straw. It works pretty good and keeps our costs down. The only hard part is getting the bales up onto the walkway! I cut a bigger hole from the walkway to the second storage room and just started grabbing bales from the top of the last two rows. As you can see the raccoons are having a fine time in the barn and have created another huge poop pile. They are so annoying. They make a mess of the barn. I will need to get up there in a couple of years, next time the hay room is empty and clean all of that poop off the stacked wood. What I should really do is just remove that wood and stack hay on top of that hallway. The raccoons don’t do that in the other hay room because I store hay on top of the walkway.

I only managed to smash my head twice on the roof beams. Luckily, I did not knock myself out. I only had a cloth tied over my bald head so I ended up with two big abrasions to the top of my head. It is too hot to wear my safety helmet. Honestly, I did not think it would be possible to hit my head while I was on top of the pile. I got the overhead walkway about 80% full and then moved all of the old hay in front of the doorway. It will be the first hay I will be able to pull for feeding. I may even just pull about 15 bales once I have the floor cleaned off so the sheep can spread it around and I don’t have to pull it from the overhead walkway!

There was a lot of sweating involved for this old man to get it all moved around. I still have a pile of netting that will need to be taken out of the barn and tossed into the trash. I gotta get all of this old hay moved around before I can bring any of the new hay from this year into the barn.

I do need to go around and fix my 12v overhead light system. The damn raccoons pulled some of the wires loose. I need to use those zip ties with screw heads so I can anchor the wires in place. This needs to happen this summer as it was very inconvenient not having lights in the hay rooms.

Kubota Days!

I have been trying to buy a new Kubota tractor. I need a replacement for my little John Deere. I had been working with the local dealer and he had wanted to display mine at their Kubota Day sale. If I went down and finalized the sale I got a discount. The tractor was in a crate the first time I saw it. They had welded on the three hooks to the bucket and the rear hydraulic takeoffs were installed. The takeoffs were too small. I had never seen any that small before. I also realized that I had not asked for overhead front/rear facing lights. So those will be added before I finalize the contract. It is easier to just get exactly what you want from the beginning. The dealer has been great to work with Farm Equipment Headquarters (FEH). I bought my other Kubota from them also.

This one has some nice features, since it is under 25Hp it does not have to have any emissions equipment on it. The engine is so simple, it is amazing. It has this luxury seat with springs that should remove most of the bumpy herky jerky movement that wears you out when you sit on it for a few hours. I do realize that most people do not sit on their mini tractors for hours at a time but it takes me 30+ hours to dig out the barn and I usually spend 80 hours haying. I don’t think I will use it for spraying as I would need to add a power switch and plug to the wiring. I already have it on the bigger Kubota and when you get that 50 gallon tank full of water it’s heavy!

There is no clutch! It is all hydraulic, even the pto. You just move the levers. It does have a cruise control, it is a manual lever but it’s there and that is what counts. Hell, it even has the bucket level cheater indicator. I have not had one of those on a tractor in years, they are usually the first casualty of any abuse or tight space kerfluffall.

The tires are not as aggressive, so they should be nicer to my field. It has 4WD because every tractor needs it! A 2WD tractor is worse than a 2WD pickup. I am really looking forward to having it on the farm!

Wild hive now contained

One of our neighbors had a wild honey bee hive living in the walls of an old building. Turns out the bees had been living there for at least 25 years off and on. Which begs the question, how did the next group of bees know that the condo was empty and would be a good place to live?

The Gingerman and I went over with everything we thought we needed except two bins, one for honey and one for wax. The wax is old and dark but it is still wax and we were going to have to remove it anyways. I had to run back to the house and get those bins, we actually had everything else we needed. They are going to tear the building down so access was super easy, we could just pull the siding off a piece at a time.

The bees were surprisingly calm the entire time. We had empty frames so the Gingerman cut the comb out of the walls in sections and I rubber banded it into frames. We were able to get brood, honey and pollen all rubber banded into frames. I had 10 frames banded up and we inserted them into the bottom box. A large number of bees followed those frames into the box but it did not look like we had found the queen. As an FYI do not store rubber bands for any length of time, they degrade and break very easily. I broke about half the bands I attempted to use. The rest of the bag went into the trash when we were finished. Neither one of us are very good at spotting the queen but we figured maybe we got lucky and had moved her when we were scooping bees over into the box. We kept watching the bees hoping they would form a line of scent leading into the box. We even built a little ramp leading up to the box. At one point we had two groups on the wall but they kept hiding in the comb scraps we had left on the wall. So we just started removing every single piece of old comb by scraping it off the wall. We started at the top of the wall and worked our way down. As we got near the bottom we had two distinct groups of bees, one at the top of the wall and one down at the bottom. We scooped the upper bees into the box but never spotted the queen.

The Gingerman is totally out of all of his bee protective gear except for gloves and gauntlets. I opted to keep all of mine on. The Gingerman started to smoke the bees as they were trying to go under the building. He spotted the queen! I tried to reach over awkwardly with the queen clip but when I grabbed I pinched her so I had to quickly open the clip to prevent it from killing her. She flew off! We waited another 30 minutes and the bees started to form another ball of bees down near the bottom of the wall again. It was her, Gingerman spotted the queen again and we got her into a scoop of bees in the queen trap and put her in the top box hanging between some frames. We left the setup, as there was a queen excluder on the bottom of the first box to prevent her from leaving the box, until almost dark.

When we came back it was almost dark and there were no bees flying around. We had to shake the box a little bit to hear them buzzing around inside. We blocked off the entrance and strapped the hive together and put it in the back of the pickup. I had gone home and leveled some concrete blocks out in the barn lot so we had a place away from the other bees for this hive. I wired a couple of blocks to the hive stand so the wind could not blow the boxes over. I was able to just carry the hive boxes to their new location. I did strap the boxes down so the wind could not move them.

I did not get very much honey from the hive, most of it went back to the bees. I am trying to gravity extract it now for the person who let us collect the hive. I think I can get a single jar! It is very good. It may take me a couple of weeks to get it to ooze out of the comb with the help of gravity. I have some new metal mesh filters and they are very fine and the honey is very thick’s so it is going to take some time for it to ooze through. It may even have to warm up some outside. I could put it out on the front porch as long as I covered it so the other bees did not help themselves to it!

Baling done, now real work begins

Well, I did it, I managed to get all the hay baled. It was not a smooth process. I wish it would just happen but it just doesn’t seem like that is possible. I am sure that the key to being a farmer is to expect that stuff will break when you want to use it and stubbornness is a necessity to succeed. I was headed over on Saturday by 0715 to bale with some moisture on the hay so it would be “sticky” enough to bale. I was headed up the last little hill that has a horrible washboarded section when all of sudden I heard a loud clanging and the tractor shifted. I slammed on the brakes and looked behind me. The baler had jumped off the tractor pin hitch and was sideways in the road. I had bent half the pto shaft under the tractor and the hydraulic hose and pull rope had come disconnected.

I ended up using the broken pto shaft as a wheel stop and pushed the baler with the tractor to get it lined up with the road. I had used a small strap to tie the two 3 point arms together so I used those to lift the tongue of the baler so I could put the bent pin back in and limp home. Once I got home I ran to town and got a new PTO shaft. Unfortunately, I picked up a shaft for a 3 point hole auger. Those have one connection that is different so I ended up pulling apart a short one I had and using it on one end and the new one on the other end. It worked great. I got a new bigger pin and drove over to get some baling done at 1030. I was just pulling into the field when it dawned on me that I should check the hydraulic dump on the baler. I managed to shoot hydraulic fluid all over the tractor and myself. I had torn apart the hose and not noticed the connection broken at the baler. So I once again had to drive back to the house and unhook the hose and take the parts into town to see if a new end piece could be attached to old hose. For $25 they were able to repair the hose! I have lots of extra hose so I can break the end off a few more times before it becomes an issue. It was now 1430 and too hot to bale hay. The hay will have to wait till Sunday. I was able to get some of our front hillside weed eated. I also got the water hooked up for the hillside and the lavender and put on timers.

Sunday I was out the door by 0515 with water, breakfast sandwich (cheese, tortilla and precooked sausage patty) and coffee. I was able to finish the top field pretty quickly but when I went to the lower field I started snapping shear bolts. I ended up going back up to the top field and stacking bales to the outside and in a few piles then went over the entire field again picking up the sloppy edges. Once that was done I went back down to the lower field. I really should have turned the lower field a third time. I need to remember that it needs one more than the upper field. I ended up lifting the back half of the round baler and using it like a rower to fluff five rows so I could bale them. I think there are about five bales on the bottom that I will have to leave out of the barn and test for moisture content. It is not hard to tell which ones are wet as they weigh twice what every other bale weighs.

I ended up with a total of 170 bales made. We feed 6 bales/day in the winter so I have one month already done. Now the hard part starts. I have about 100 bales in the second hay area that are 2 years old. They need to be moved onto the overhead platform to be used as bedding. I will then clean out the hay room and get the new hay into this room. I alternate rooms every year and we always feed out of the previous year’s hay. So I will be moving hay most every evening until this gets done.