Tina had invested in this year's hayfield, fertilizer and weedkiller at the proper times and the fields looked great. We have had a 50 / 50 arrangement with a local farmer who would cut/rake/and round bale and leave half behind for us. The key was he lived less than a mile and a half away. No real transport costs for equipment.
Then, just before time for the first cutting, he blew his tractor. The dealer where he bought it went out of business several years ago, and this is peak hay season, tractor dealers are only working on whst "they sold." The fields kept growing. We told him to talk to our guy... He told us our mechanic agreed to work on the tractor when he could work it in.
Went to check the fences last week, hay was over the hood of the UTV. Called our mechanic and he said what he told the farmer was it would be November / December on his tractor IF he could find parts. His tractor was an off brand import, no longer made.
So, it broke her heart, but after talking with a friend of ours, one of the top three go to guys for cutting hay in the area, Miss T hooked up the bush hog and started on our fields, before it was too late. If she waited much longer to cut it, leaving that much laying on the ground would ruin the fields.
* Before anyone asks, our "top three" guy couldn't cut the fields even if he had an opening in his schedule. His equipment is sized for big jobs and won't do smaller hayfields. Ours is beautiful, but the larger north pasture is just ten acres. The middle pasture is probably four, and the open pasture in the orchard, two or three. So, not one bale, but we no longer need it. We tried to get someone to cut it and take the hay...
Sad...
