Hi I’m Mike. Haying is due to start in a just a few days
and to do that we need equipment. Specialized equipment that is only used here
on the ranch for a couple weeks a year. Today we are going to get everything out of
storage, gather it up, go through it and start haying season, 2019 on our Wyoming life. There seems to be two gears on the ranch. Low and go to beat hell. Winter time is almost a slower pace. We feed, we do chores and odds and ends but
nothing is really time dependent. Then we get into calving, which really dictates
a pace of its own, depending on weather, and nutrition levels of the cows and their over
all health. Some years calving can come off without a
hitch, other years you seem to run into issues every time you turn around. But the fact of the matter is that you never
know what’s going to happen, until you get started. Welcome back to our Wyoming life. Hit that subscribe button to follow our story
as we continue on our slice of heaven, a cattle ranch in northeast Wyoming. Each and every video, three times per week
we invite you to come along with us, explore the ranch life and escape the ordinary. Haying season is a great place to start, if
you like tractors, implements, tools, repairs, skinned knuckles, cursing and occasionally
watching a grown man have a temper tantrum, it’s the perfect place to start. Our goal today here on is to get all three
of the haying tractors pulled out, then get the piece of a equipment, be it the mower,
the rake or the baler that they are mainly going to be running attached to them and pulled
out of storage. We are going to get everything out here in
the in the light, then go through it. See if there are any repairs that need made
from last year and get everything ready to go. So lets get started. We have three main tractors here on the ranch
that we use during haying. A John Deere 6410, a John deere 4055 and a
john deere 6420. Today we are going to get started with the
6420. The John Deere 6420 is our main tractor here
on the ranch. It’s the newest one and we used it almost
daily. Through out winter, its our main feeding tractor
but during haying, it becomes our baling tractor. Last year during haying, we lost this tractor
for most of haying season. A hydraulic valve system went bad on it, forcing
us to have to send it back to our local john deere dealer for repairs. Repairs during the busiest season of the year
and of course we didn’t get it back until after haying was done, along with a bill for
nearly 10,000 dollars. Here’s to hoping this workhorse can finish
the game this year. The 6420 is the newest tractor on the ranch,
manufactured back in 2007, and originally purchased for about 44 thousand dollars. Its 4 wheel drive and rated at 110 horsepower
with a 4.5L diesel engine. The fuel tank on it is about 50 gallons, and
cost 150$ to fill up, which we will do every couple of days out in the field. Behind it will be working our John Deere 568
Baler, a round baler that creates bales that are about 1400lbs each. Gathering enough food to feed one cow for
about 45 days, or 45 cows for 1 day. This baler is equipped with a Megawide Pickup,
which allows us to pick up more hay off the ground, increasing baling productivity and
making more bales per hour. Its also a netwrap baler, encasing the finished
bale in a tight netting that will protect it, keeping it dry and of course keeping it
together. The baler is controlled from inside the tractor
with a monitor controller that allows the operator to control bale size, net wrap specifications,
gate opening and closing, pto speed, moisture levels and manage error reports. Now that the baler is out of the way, we can start bringing out tractors
to play, and we are going to start with John Deere 6410, the older version of our 6420
this tractor came to the ranch in 1999. It is also a 4 wheel drive tractor and almost
identical to the 6420 aside from a bit less horsepower and a smaller tank, and an older
transmission. Where the 6420 has an a IVT transmission,
a variable transmission which basically gives you unlimited gears, the 6410 has a 4 speed
power shift transmission, giving you a total of 16 forward gears and one reverse gear. This year, we are assigning the 6410 to the
H&S wheel rake, a 30 foot wide implement that will be used to gather cut hay from the ground,
using these 36 inch wheels to move the hay from the entire width of the tool, toward
the center eventually dropping it all into a windrow which comes out of the back, ready
for our baler to pick up and turn into a bale. But before we
can bale or even rake the hay into a windrow we need to cut it. Cutting this year will be our largest tractor
the ranch and one of our oldest, the 4055. This tractor was purchased in 1990, it’s
a 7.6 L, 6 cylinder diesel, it also has 16 forward gears, along with 6 reverse gears
and about 115 horsepower at the PTO. That PTO will be driving our mower, a Rowse
double 9 sickle mower. Allowing us to cut 18 feet of grass at one
pass. The sickles move back and forth along a guide,
the grass moves into the teeth and by moving them across the guide they act almost like
a big pair of scissors, cutting grass cleanly and very close to the ground, allowing us
to take advantage of even the shortest of grass here on the prairie. At full speed the sickle travels back and
forth more than 2000 times per minute or 33 times per second, allowing us to cut grass
fast and efficiently. And that’s the name of the game when it
comes to cutting grass on the prairie. We have to move fast. Because this is dry land farming we normally
don’t have any issues with wet hay. When we bale, we want the moisture levels
of the grass to be between 12-16 percent. Because of that, we cant make silage, our
grass isn’t wet enough to create the fermentation that makes up silage. In fact, its usually a race to put up hay
that still has enough moisture to not just disintegrate in the baler and turn to dust. Often times we can cut one day, rake that
same day and be baling the next. And if its very dry, you will find many of
us baling in the middle of the night to take advantage of cooler temperatures and higher
moisture levels from the dew. Haying is just another race on the ranch. Trying to out run mother nature or sometimes
even a breakdown. It may be a race, but is all about adaptation. Making it work with what we have. If we lose a tractor some reason, then it
becomes about time management, as we try to get it fixed, while still trying to bring
in the harvest for the cows. Without a successful hay harvest, all this
equipment is a waste, its another year of having it on the ranch, paying for it and
not using it to its full advantage. And as nice as it looks, its all a very expensive
lawn ornament if you don’t use it. They saying is, Make hay while the sun shines,
which really just means to take advantage of the chance to do something while the conditions
are good. Make good use of your time and make the most
of an opportunity while you have a chance. But it really means, get to work, which I
need to do. Thanks for hanging out with me today. Be sure to subscribe and come along this haying
season we’ve got some surprises in store for you, some special guests and the opportunity
to drop you into the drivers seat and let you make a few rounds in the tractor this
year, and a whole lot more Its gonna be a lot of fun, heres to thick
hay, no break downs, and of course a bumper harvest. I’ll see you next time, until then, have
a great week and thanks for joining us in our Wyoming life.