I grew up on a farm and my Dad would bale hay using a Allis Chalmers roto-baler, a round baler. He pulled it with a 1957 Allis Chalmers CA tractor. The local town welder made a hydraulic operated fork that was attached to the tractor and would slide on a shoe on the right side of the tractor. It would stab the bale and then by hydraulic control it would lift the bale up and rearward and the bale would land in the trailer pulled behind. The bales were heavy and hard to walk on when the first row was piled on the floor of the trailer. I piled thousands of them through the years. I still have all of the equipment.
@@skdouglas75 my grandfather had 2 of them. My dad told me they were a pain in the butt to keep working properly. He said there were about a 100 grease points that I'm sure was an exaggeration but he said if you didn't keep up on them it would fly apart.
The only drawback to them is that you have to tie off the bales by hand. If you don’t one end will start expanding and let moisture into the center. Now they do offer a net wrap that hopefully cures this problem. The true advantage is that tractor and baler is not much longer then a conventional round baler without tractor hooked to it. Try turning a big tractor and round baler around in a couple acre patch. These work great for small areas. Areas that a custom baler won’t even think about touching.
I'm sorry but I don't get it. Weighs less than a square bale but you'll have to cut, what, 60 stings to open it up? I will say it's cute but looks hard to stack.
Does the baler have a estimated life? What kind of maintenance is required on this baler? Or this baler vs say a large round baler? New video perhaps? Thank you for your time and consideration!
Probably a decent compromise when compared to small squares or a small utility round bale. A person can handle them but they dont require the room to turn that a larger rig would need. If you stack them in layers at right andle to the last then id guess you can almost stack them like squares.
How is this an improvement on the original small square bails that weighed 40 pounds and up? Being square they are easier to handle, load and stack. Millions of bales have been bailed with old 8n ford tractors and A&B John Deeres. What am I missing?
It's not an improvement. It's made so people with sub compact utility tractors can act like real farmers. Anybody putting up hay for real will buy real equipment. Anybody who only has a few acres or a few head of livestock is better off buying hay.
@@davidvogel6359 Yanmar did repair under warranty, the local dealer after having for 7 months got it fixed and asked if they could test bail, hell yes you can. 2 months go by and I called..... well it made the prettiest bails and then capooy. It blew up again. They decided not to test it this time. We will in a couple of weeks.
@@79xlch wow, not a good recommend if it keeps blowing up. We had a allis chalmers roto baler that ran for years. Ours was particular about the twine we used but it made thousands of bales. One time a big wad of hay went into the bale chamber just as the arm dropped to wrap it with twine. The tractor govenor opened up and the baler groaned but it made a bale that was twice the size of the regular bales. I didn't even try to pick it up just drug it into place on the wagon and it took up the room that two bales usually went into. When I fed it I just drug it out of the electric fence enclosure around the haystack. Never weighed it but it was two in one by size. If Yanmarr can do that then i would be interested, if not i would buy a roto baler. Your experience tells me it can't so no deal. When the dealer is afraid to test it that tells me all i need to know.
@@davidvogel6359 The little bailer was perfect for us, 10 acres for 3 horses. When it let me down I panicked and bought a new MF 1840 square bailer. Now what to do with the little one.
A regular square baler still requires a much larger tractor to operate. Which not everyone has or needs. This is aimed to customers who want to do their own hay that already own a subcompact or compact tractor. It's also for getting into small areas much bigger equipment won't touch. :)
I have bigger windrows in my yard, cut with my cub cadet mower. Lol! These aren’t mini round bales, these were called little round bales 60-70 years ago. I got 2 cents a bale to put these hard to handle bales up back in the mid 70s. They usually required a hand held bale hook on the ends to be able to handle them since there is no way to pick them up by the strings like a square bale, nor handle them with a loader like a big round bale since they are too light to be stabbed with a bale prong. They are hard to stack on the trailer or in the barn too. Like the old saying goes, what was old is new again.
To me, I do not care for round bales. I do though understand the fact of new equipment and sizing your equipment to your operation. To me, using original sized bales is the best way to go. For storage, rectangular bales are far better as they are more compact for storage area, far easier for vertical stacking, will not fall as easy as round bales, and have more accessories (i.e. pull-behind stacker) that makes haying so much easier. Additionally, a rectangular baler doesn't need to have the windrow perfect as it compacts all the hay into a compaction chamber whereas round bales need to have an even row so that all the bales comes out evenly. As for raking, the old style pull behind rakes are great in that you're able to consolidate a larger area into one windrow vs that smaller one you are showing. These are my opinions and observations using both of these methods. What would be interesting is to see is if industry will make a small version of their 1 ton baler, the size of these round bales.....
I called my local Yanmar dealership. Total cost was around 25k. Rake was $4700, cutter $7000 and bailer was $14000. The dealer mentioned to me that they have 1500-2000 discount if you buy all three. The question I have is. Is there a Quick Hitch set for these pieces of equipment.
@@dinglesdingler1211 I called a guy for round bales. 125 for a big one. That is for the acre garden. What about my animals that I want to have for next year? Chickens need something to lay eggs in. What if you want to sell? The guy who I am buying the hay rounds said he has hay from 2-3 yrs ago. What does that tell you. He even told me when I mentioned this. You might have something there. You could sell your hay bales because they are small enough like a square. So the investment, tax write off and money making. I could see paying this off in 5 years
@@American_Heathen Kinda of what I figured. It's a toy for wanna be land Barrons with too much money. For the cost of the equipment, hire it done. If your hay field is too small for the custom guys to mess with it's because they know it's not profitable.
@@jpoppinga8417 That's exactly what these things are. They're toys for those who have too much money and no brains. The amount of money you have tied up in just the equipment alone, not including the tractor is completely insane. $14k+ for the baler, you might as well buy a real baler and get on with it because those off-the wall no-name pieces of equipment aren't going to have any parts support when you need it 5+ years down the road, the company is out of business or onto different stuff completely. Yanmar exists, but for how long are they going to keep supporting this stuff that they don't sell enough of every year to justify parts inventory.
Yanmar tried to repair the bailer was but it broke again after 2 bails. Then it was repaired and did not bail when I brought it home. Yanmar offered to take it to their shop in Georgia and repair and try to sell for me. I asked why I should loose so much money for something that only bailed about 100 bails. I have been in contact with them but now they will not reply or answer my calls. So for a $16,000.00 hay package I have a piece of crap that does not work.
You shouldn't be baling wet alfalfa. Baling hay that still has more than 20% moisture causes mold. Too much moisture in the bale also causes heat within the bale, which can cause combustion.
I just don't get it. You have to sit there waiting for the bale to eject just more lost time as far as I am concerned. You may as well buy a square baler no stopping and they stack well in the barn. I see people using these in fields large enough to use a small square baler and I wonder why round?
Good luck hiring anyone these days. We are looking to get smaller equipment for our 10ac because contractors aren’t reliable on the PNW. Not enough contractors to cut everyone’s fields in the short periods of good weather we get for 1st cut. 2nd cut is easy tho as July/August has lots of dry periods. Plus they charge close to $150/hr now.
@@paybax An hourly rate for custom farming? Everyone around here is per acre or in the case of hay, per bale. Either way a good square baler would do you better then these novelty bales. How you going to handle and stack these bales. Allis Chalmers already tried small rounds. I'll give you a hint. It was a fail.
Yes, people make things called children that can go pick them up and stack them. All those kids that want animals, and all the 4H project stuff, get them out there and put them to work tending to the food that feeds those toy animals they have. Many probably have no idea how any of that stuff is done, the parents pay all the feed bills for those animals the kids want, and the kids have no clue where all that feed comes from...I think it should be full circle...kids have to plant and grow the food just as they do the animals they want....would make a great process for them to learn...far more educational than sitting at a desk in school...lots to be learned out there on the farm/ranch.
Uses too much twine for size of bale. Plus it’s way more expensive than an old new holland hayliner. Which would also be easier to work on and get parts for. It’s cute and clever but not really practical
hahahaha cute. saw them not these but small bailers in Europe they was worth 12,000.00 new. for that kind of money i would buy big used one.1600 to 1800 lb bale. And the bales made from the ones,....... Bailers in Europe,... were more of a round bale.... bigger then 40 lbs. probably 120 maybe 150lbs.
Belive these machines are fantastic and needed badly for the small farmer where few head of cows goats or sheep not need a 1000 to 1500 lb round bale where most goes to waste and the small bale easier to keep in dry storage like barns and not need even more expensive equipment just to transport to the feeding location
@@uncouthboy8028 you are certainly free to have that opinion of me. However, you would be incorrect on everything except for this being a relatively new item. Granted, I am definitely not a genius. But I am not an idiot either.😁 Beyond that, I am a retired farmer. And my parents were also farmers. I have been around haying and hay equipment for six decades. Yes, my previous comment was derogatory. But no self-respective actual farmer would waste hard earned money on those tiny balers.....Yes, I am aware that these balers are designed to be used on slopes where a large tractor and normal baler can't/shouldn't be used (for safety). Other than that, my original comment was honest. In most situations (where slopes are not an issue), these tiny balers (and tiny tractors) would be used by those who only own a few acres... and/or only own 1 to 10 head of livestock or horses..... But Mr. "Uncouth Boy", you just keep on believing what you want. It won't bother me at all.😁
@@willhorting5317 as a multi generation farmer you will appreciate how expensive land has gotten and how the good land doesn't go on market very often. Thus, people are looking to put land into production that would otherwise be fallow. I'm not a city person by any stretch and I'm looking at these for being able to make hay from paddocks. People use all sorts of equipment for all sorts of reasons. A fool runs his mouth.
@@uncouthboy8028 fine. Since you firstly called me an idiot, then secondly called me a fool, this "fool" will type one final comment. Yes, the cost of land is up. On that, I will not disagree. But where I live, in rural Kansas, agricultural properties (either crop or pasture) of 80 or more acres come up for sale often enough. Obviously I have no idea where you live. So I cannot guess what it's like where you live. But considering that you used the term "paddock", I will assume that you are not from Kansas. At least not originally. If I am correct in that assumption, that would possibly explain our different opinions on the use of these tiny machines. Good night.
@@willhorting5317 brother you started the insults, as I do not believe the mockery was made with kindness. I live in an area that can grow great hay but the tracts that are sold are either in the dozens or the hundreds. Looking at these small machines my biggest concern is the speed of operation. It all looks very slow. That may have just been for the camera though. And regardless nobody sells this in my area, although I reckon they'll catch on. No sense in buying equipment you have to drive two hours to get it worked on.
60 years ago I-remember my dad hiring a man with a A.C small round bale machine. I can still remembering him yelling and swearing when the baler miss tied. The bales were easy to handle even for a kid And they stacked nice but tough to get out of the mow
We made a wind row to bale 🤣🤣🤣🤣😮 seriously! At least find some hay to bale up not just what the big baler in the background left behind. Unless of course it is aimed at baling lawn clippings 😂
No thanks give me a rusted old square baler any time. This has so many problems. Just moving the bales is a pain. Two freinds have these one got rid if his after a year and the othe got rid of his in the middle of the first cutting. Just handling was so slow and his helpers were complying of the awkwardness. He went to the barn at their lunch break put on the square baler. Driving into the hayfield his workers were cheering.
You can buy a old AC roto baler for a hell of a lot less. At least that chick driving the tractor is hot. Id do myself a favor and buy a square baler, less money, same weight of a bale, parts are all over and its a hell of a lot faster. At least shes hot though. Something good came of this video. Show her more and that baler less.
I agree, and the time you sit there waiting for the baler to wrap/tie one bale is ridiculous....get a real baler and get on with it. $14k+ just for that toy baler is a joke.
@@jpoppinga8417 That's what most people do where I live, its a lot cheaper, and most people don't use the hay, they just hire someone to come deal with it for them and whoever they hire will take the hay as well for their use or for resale.
@@blessed7fold $10-100k. You can find them used for less than $10k, new full size round balers are over $100k. Then factor in the tractor to run them. Soon you've got 1/2 a million dollars tied up in hay equipment LOL. But people that do that stuff are typically in the hay cutting and baling business, not a little mini farm...they're out cutting and baling several fields. My neighbor does custom baling, and he runs older equipment.
I do the same thing with a one way new holland rake and my allis Chalmers baler and my WD 45 tractor and have way less invested. What the price tag on all that crap and those glorified lawn mowers fucking dumb
I grew up on a farm and my Dad would bale hay using a Allis Chalmers roto-baler, a round baler. He pulled it with a 1957 Allis Chalmers CA tractor. The local town welder made a hydraulic operated fork that was attached to the tractor and would slide on a shoe on the right side of the tractor. It would stab the bale and then by hydraulic control it would lift the bale up and rearward and the bale would land in the trailer pulled behind. The bales were heavy and hard to walk on when the first row was piled on the floor of the trailer. I piled thousands of them through the years. I still have all of the equipment.
You should go to the Historical or Steam pageants and show the kids how they work.
I will be heading to the dealership to look at this bailer. It’s great that they are coming out with attachments that fit the compact tractors
I've had several smaller John Deere tractors and they've used 3 cylinder Yanmar engines. They were very reliable.
I like how they have the little square baler in the background
Imagine - Allis Chalmers did this with their Roto Baler back in the 1950's.
I agree. I grew up in an area with an Allis-Chalmers dealership, some farms had their fields covered with those little "Cigars".
Aint it funny how whats old is new again, just a modernized spin on it.
True but any old farmer I talked to hated those first round balers with a passion. lol
@@skdouglas75 my grandfather had 2 of them. My dad told me they were a pain in the butt to keep working properly. He said there were about a 100 grease points that I'm sure was an exaggeration but he said if you didn't keep up on them it would fly apart.
I was born in 93 and dad still used one up until about 12 years ago
The only drawback to them is that you have to tie off the bales by hand. If you don’t one end will start expanding and let moisture into the center.
Now they do offer a net wrap that hopefully cures this problem.
The true advantage is that tractor and baler is not much longer then a conventional round baler without tractor hooked to it. Try turning a big tractor and round baler around in a couple acre patch. These work great for small areas. Areas that a custom baler won’t even think about touching.
I'm sorry but I don't get it. Weighs less than a square bale but you'll have to cut, what, 60 stings to open it up? I will say it's cute but looks hard to stack.
YMRB32 looks like a good baler , thanks for showing telling about it. See ya next time see ya bye.
Does the baler have a estimated life? What kind of maintenance is required on this baler? Or this baler vs say a large round baler? New video perhaps? Thank you for your time and consideration!
Three weeks and no reply? There is your answer.
Going by how the internals look in this other video I would say you will be lucky if it lasts 3 years.
ruclips.net/video/FkXCZNpfjt8/видео.html
I believe that’s a rebranded IHI. They’re typically don’t last more than a year in the pine straw industry
@@Mtbambenothat video isn’t a yanmar
That little baler is a neat machine . It would be perfect for someone that has a horse or two, or even more .
🤗👍💖💫
For two horses. Buy your hay....
It's useless it's better just to let the grass grow year round and use a mower with a chute /bag then feed it chopped grass
Looks like the center of a normal size round bale lol!! That’s pretty slick set up for some I can see it’s advantages 👍👍
Probably a decent compromise when compared to small squares or a small utility round bale.
A person can handle them but they dont require the room to turn that a larger rig would need.
If you stack them in layers at right andle to the last then id guess you can almost stack them like squares.
Would shed water better than a square bale, probably.
That square baler with the thrower in the background pretty well sums up what I think of this yanmar round baler for $15k
I’d buy a land for that price in my country 😂🤦🏻♂️ you guys are crazy for paying that much money on a fricking baler never mind a fricking tractor
@@bekabeka71 don't group me in that bunch....
@@bekabeka71 $15k for something that your kids will still be using long after you die isn't a bad investment
@@GiantGourd lol
I doubt you have $15k to spend on anything.....
Is there a drawbar kit for this baler and how much does it cost?
Quick question.
Do these mini balers work with garden tractors??
Just asking.
How is this an improvement on the original small square bails that weighed 40 pounds and up? Being square they are easier to handle, load and stack. Millions of bales have been bailed with old 8n ford tractors and A&B John Deeres. What am I missing?
It's not an improvement. It's made so people with sub compact utility tractors can act like real farmers. Anybody putting up hay for real will buy real equipment. Anybody who only has a few acres or a few head of livestock is better off buying hay.
@@jpoppinga8417 But compact tractors can also use the square bailers! I guess from most of the responses here, people just like something new.
Are you picking up anything??
I wonder how long it would take to bale my 150 acre field with this
Is that what you feed miniature horses ??????? 😊
OR you could just go to a fencerow and drag out an Allis Chalmers Roto Baler lol and have a small round bale. Your deal is pretty neat though
Well isn't that quite a old alis chombers rotor baler painted a different color
Since onelonelyfarmer calls small square bales idiot bricks, what would he call these?
Mine went to hell in a hand bag the other day. 13 month old, hoping they will repair under warranty
Oop, probably not what you were expecting when you paid that much money for it.
@@davidvogel6359 Yanmar did repair under warranty, the local dealer after having for 7 months got it fixed and asked if they could test bail, hell yes you can. 2 months go by and I called..... well it made the prettiest bails and then capooy. It blew up again. They decided not to test it this time. We will in a couple of weeks.
@@79xlch wow, not a good recommend if it keeps blowing up. We had a allis chalmers roto baler that ran for years. Ours was particular about the twine we used but it made thousands of bales. One time a big wad of hay went into the bale chamber just as the arm dropped to wrap it with twine. The tractor govenor opened up and the baler groaned but it made a bale that was twice the size of the regular bales. I didn't even try to pick it up just drug it into place on the wagon and it took up the room that two bales usually went into. When I fed it I just drug it out of the electric fence enclosure around the haystack. Never weighed it but it was two in one by size. If Yanmarr can do that then i would be interested, if not i would buy a roto baler. Your experience tells me it can't so no deal. When the dealer is afraid to test it that tells me all i need to know.
@@davidvogel6359 The little bailer was perfect for us, 10 acres for 3 horses. When it let me down I panicked and bought a new MF 1840 square bailer. Now what to do with the little one.
@@79xlch sounds like it needs to be returned to the dealership as a rotten lemon, not even good for lemonade.
Looks like a great product for use in orchards.
Where are the Yanmar hay implements made? What implement was used to cut the hay?
ruclips.net/video/R1ZdUtXVKuc/видео.html
The company is Japanese owned, but has manufacturing facilities in the US.
Last line of the video: "There's also a complimentary disc mower that we use to cut our hay"
@@willhorting5317 then how come all these baler's & other hay equipment being shipped from overseas?
So it drags across the ground when you turn? And is it quick hitch compatible?
The 3-point lifts it off the ground for turns.
@@97TRAKIN So you don't bale the hay when you turn or on the head lands?
Same size as a square bale with twice the twine.
Cool, wish I hade a dealer of these equipment in my area , I've got a JD 1025 an would like getting a total package for doing hay
Where are you from? We have a full set that just came in that are in the shipping crates
Nw Alabama
Why choose this over a regular square baler? Just curious.
A regular square baler still requires a much larger tractor to operate. Which not everyone has or needs. This is aimed to customers who want to do their own hay that already own a subcompact or compact tractor. It's also for getting into small areas much bigger equipment won't touch. :)
A square baler is the way to go. RUclips has plenty of videos of folks pulling full-sized, small-square balers behind subcompact tractors.
I am going to use a AC little round baler this year
quelle avantage de faire des petites rondes ,???
Is this baler made by another manufacturer and just has the Yanmar name on it
There was a baler in this video?
look in the background.....
I have bigger windrows in my yard, cut with my cub cadet mower. Lol!
These aren’t mini round bales, these were called little round bales 60-70 years ago. I got 2 cents a bale to put these hard to handle bales up back in the mid 70s. They usually required a hand held bale hook on the ends to be able to handle them since there is no way to pick them up by the strings like a square bale, nor handle them with a loader like a big round bale since they are too light to be stabbed with a bale prong. They are hard to stack on the trailer or in the barn too.
Like the old saying goes, what was old is new again.
Same here. I hated those 80 pounders that the AC spit out.
Allis-Chalmers Roto baler. My first thoughts when I saw this machine.
Size of square bails.
To me, I do not care for round bales. I do though understand the fact of new equipment and sizing your equipment to your operation. To me, using original sized bales is the best way to go. For storage, rectangular bales are far better as they are more compact for storage area, far easier for vertical stacking, will not fall as easy as round bales, and have more accessories (i.e. pull-behind stacker) that makes haying so much easier. Additionally, a rectangular baler doesn't need to have the windrow perfect as it compacts all the hay into a compaction chamber whereas round bales need to have an even row so that all the bales comes out evenly.
As for raking, the old style pull behind rakes are great in that you're able to consolidate a larger area into one windrow vs that smaller one you are showing.
These are my opinions and observations using both of these methods. What would be interesting is to see is if industry will make a small version of their 1 ton baler, the size of these round bales.....
😊I greet you from Ukraine😊
Where can this be purchased?
الله يعطيك الصحه هل استطيع استيراد وتصدير ال الجزائر واصل ابداعك وبتوفيق
Goes well with smaller cattle...🙂
How much is it?
Mini...Really....thought the idea of doing hay today was to minimize the labour....
How much is the bailer and where you get one?
Baler is between $10k and $20k. Can get you an exact quote. We have in stock in Ohio currently
I've seen some recently (different brand) for less
Très belle vidéo
Très beau tracteur et matériel
Doit être très agréable à conduire et travailler avec
J'adore 😀👍
How much for the package?
I called my local Yanmar dealership. Total cost was around 25k. Rake was $4700, cutter $7000 and bailer was $14000. The dealer mentioned to me that they have 1500-2000 discount if you buy all three. The question I have is. Is there a Quick Hitch set for these pieces of equipment.
you can buy a lot of hay and compost for 25k, and import nutrients onto your soil...
@@dinglesdingler1211 I called a guy for round bales. 125 for a big one. That is for the acre garden. What about my animals that I want to have for next year? Chickens need something to lay eggs in. What if you want to sell? The guy who I am buying the hay rounds said he has hay from 2-3 yrs ago. What does that tell you. He even told me when I mentioned this. You might have something there. You could sell your hay bales because they are small enough like a square. So the investment, tax write off and money making. I could see paying this off in 5 years
@@American_Heathen Kinda of what I figured.
It's a toy for wanna be land Barrons with too much money.
For the cost of the equipment, hire it done. If your hay field is too small for the custom guys to mess with it's because they know it's not profitable.
@@jpoppinga8417 That's exactly what these things are. They're toys for those who have too much money and no brains. The amount of money you have tied up in just the equipment alone, not including the tractor is completely insane. $14k+ for the baler, you might as well buy a real baler and get on with it because those off-the wall no-name pieces of equipment aren't going to have any parts support when you need it 5+ years down the road, the company is out of business or onto different stuff completely. Yanmar exists, but for how long are they going to keep supporting this stuff that they don't sell enough of every year to justify parts inventory.
I need one!
I'm guessing 8k
Yanmar tried to repair the bailer was but it broke again after 2 bails. Then it was repaired and did not bail when I brought it home. Yanmar offered to take it to their shop in Georgia and repair and try to sell for me. I asked why I should loose so much money for something that only bailed about 100 bails. I have been in contact with them but now they will not reply or answer my calls. So for a $16,000.00 hay package I have a piece of crap that does not work.
Save time and $50,000 and go buy a old Ford 8N and a square bailer
My thoughts exacty, or something similar.
Even if you got the yanmar baler and a Ford 8/9/2N... You'd save a lot of money.
I it takes to much wire or string for such small bales
Класний тюкач, скільки коштує і де можна такий купити?👍👍👍
Will the baler work with wet alfalfa?
No
Why the fuck you wanna bale wet alfalfa?
You shouldn't be baling wet alfalfa. Baling hay that still has more than 20% moisture causes mold. Too much moisture in the bale also causes heat within the bale, which can cause combustion.
How much money it?
How can we buy it?
Bellissimo video 🙋♂️🌈💚
Great idea!
You can buy a ford 3000 tractor and used square bailer for half the price of just that tractor.
I need this
I just don't get it. You have to sit there waiting for the bale to eject just more lost time as far as I am concerned. You may as well buy a square baler no stopping and they stack well in the barn. I see people using these in fields large enough to use a small square baler and I wonder why round?
Omg how cute!
Holy crap. Can u make a windrow u can actually see? I had to find a microscope
What's the weight of the bales of hay
he said about 40 lbs
@@Wolfiecolada Thanks Brother
@@Wolfiecolada so its a go on a small farm, nine acres.
The baler can produce bales from 40 to 60 lbs.
Cute equipment but one might be able to buy a lot of hay or hire it done for the cost of the equipment.
You're exactly right.
Good luck hiring anyone these days. We are looking to get smaller equipment for our 10ac because contractors aren’t reliable on the PNW. Not enough contractors to cut everyone’s fields in the short periods of good weather we get for 1st cut. 2nd cut is easy tho as July/August has lots of dry periods. Plus they charge close to $150/hr now.
@@paybax An hourly rate for custom farming? Everyone around here is per acre or in the case of hay, per bale.
Either way a good square baler would do you better then these novelty bales. How you going to handle and stack these bales. Allis Chalmers already tried small rounds. I'll give you a hint. It was a fail.
That is pretty cool.
Where are you located?
Wellington, OH
Awww man, do yal have any sister stores in Texas?
Small Farm innovations
Caldwell Texas is a Dealer.
Awsome! I need to get this for my 4 year old
/[have they made any thing to pick up the mini round bale from the field like they got for the bigger ones
it's called a husband although they're expensive to run with the current prices of steak and beer 😉
@linda Wilson at only 40-60lbs, the "thing" to pick them up, is called a human.
@@Hassle68 the best comment
You can always roll them in your bucket or small dump trailer. Look for a round bail forks
Yes, people make things called children that can go pick them up and stack them. All those kids that want animals, and all the 4H project stuff, get them out there and put them to work tending to the food that feeds those toy animals they have. Many probably have no idea how any of that stuff is done, the parents pay all the feed bills for those animals the kids want, and the kids have no clue where all that feed comes from...I think it should be full circle...kids have to plant and grow the food just as they do the animals they want....would make a great process for them to learn...far more educational than sitting at a desk in school...lots to be learned out there on the farm/ranch.
Looks like there's hay coming out the back as it is making the bale
Probably cost as much as a big bailer
Uses too much twine for size of bale. Plus it’s way more expensive than an old new holland hayliner. Which would also be easier to work on and get parts for. It’s cute and clever but not really practical
More twine than hay.
Very handsame machine
Cute !
hahahaha cute. saw them not these but small bailers in Europe they was worth 12,000.00 new. for that kind of money i would buy big used one.1600 to 1800 lb bale. And the bales made from the ones,....... Bailers in Europe,... were more of a round bale.... bigger then 40 lbs. probably 120 maybe 150lbs.
Nice!
The price of these little attachments will probably scare you, the tractors are expensive enough for what you get.
cool
Хочу такой комплект)))
👍
What a waste of
Time
Nice god bless
Belive these machines are fantastic and needed badly for the small farmer where few head of cows goats or sheep not need a 1000 to 1500 lb round bale where most goes to waste and the small bale easier to keep in dry storage like barns and not need even more expensive equipment just to transport to the feeding location
Except small round balers have already been tried
I would not feel comfortable unless I had two of them. If it breaks, you could lose your entire cutting.
I just gave away a full-size bailer lol
🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣 Implements for city people, who move to the country, and want to pretend to be a "farmer".
"this is new and I'm an idiot so I'm going to insult it"
@@uncouthboy8028 you are certainly free to have that opinion of me. However, you would be incorrect on everything except for this being a relatively new item. Granted, I am definitely not a genius. But I am not an idiot either.😁 Beyond that, I am a retired farmer. And my parents were also farmers. I have been around haying and hay equipment for six decades. Yes, my previous comment was derogatory. But no self-respective actual farmer would waste hard earned money on those tiny balers.....Yes, I am aware that these balers are designed to be used on slopes where a large tractor and normal baler can't/shouldn't be used (for safety). Other than that, my original comment was honest. In most situations (where slopes are not an issue), these tiny balers (and tiny tractors) would be used by those who only own a few acres... and/or only own 1 to 10 head of livestock or horses..... But Mr. "Uncouth Boy", you just keep on believing what you want. It won't bother me at all.😁
@@willhorting5317 as a multi generation farmer you will appreciate how expensive land has gotten and how the good land doesn't go on market very often. Thus, people are looking to put land into production that would otherwise be fallow. I'm not a city person by any stretch and I'm looking at these for being able to make hay from paddocks. People use all sorts of equipment for all sorts of reasons. A fool runs his mouth.
@@uncouthboy8028 fine. Since you firstly called me an idiot, then secondly called me a fool, this "fool" will type one final comment. Yes, the cost of land is up. On that, I will not disagree. But where I live, in rural Kansas, agricultural properties (either crop or pasture) of 80 or more acres come up for sale often enough. Obviously I have no idea where you live. So I cannot guess what it's like where you live. But considering that you used the term "paddock", I will assume that you are not from Kansas. At least not originally. If I am correct in that assumption, that would possibly explain our different opinions on the use of these tiny machines. Good night.
@@willhorting5317 brother you started the insults, as I do not believe the mockery was made with kindness. I live in an area that can grow great hay but the tracts that are sold are either in the dozens or the hundreds. Looking at these small machines my biggest concern is the speed of operation. It all looks very slow. That may have just been for the camera though. And regardless nobody sells this in my area, although I reckon they'll catch on. No sense in buying equipment you have to drive two hours to get it worked on.
Expensive for small bales
Wrzucę tu jakiś polski komentarz 😁
czy podobała Ci się ta technika?
@@Ukrainaperemoga á
Get a AC Roto Baler
Those are reliably unreliable.
60 years ago I-remember my dad hiring a man with a A.C small round bale machine. I can still remembering him yelling and swearing when the baler miss tied.
The bales were easy to handle even for a kid And they stacked nice but tough to get out of the mow
Yep, hauled many of them. Definitely needed a hay hook or two.
I’ll stick with a square baler
We made a wind row to bale 🤣🤣🤣🤣😮 seriously! At least find some hay to bale up not just what the big baler in the background left behind. Unless of course it is aimed at baling lawn clippings 😂
Yep. That guy in the background left one maybe two windrows of hay just so they could play with this little baler.
No thanks give me a rusted old square baler any time. This has so many problems. Just moving the bales is a pain. Two freinds have these one got rid if his after a year and the othe got rid of his in the middle of the first cutting. Just handling was so slow and his helpers were complying of the awkwardness. He went to the barn at their lunch break put on the square baler. Driving into the hayfield his workers were cheering.
You can buy a old AC roto baler for a hell of a lot less. At least that chick driving the tractor is hot. Id do myself a favor and buy a square baler, less money, same weight of a bale, parts are all over and its a hell of a lot faster. At least shes hot though. Something good came of this video. Show her more and that baler less.
Yeah, you have great class Tim.
Awww it made a poopie ! Get a plastic bag
basically useless just use a square baler
What a waste of money toy equipment
I agree, and the time you sit there waiting for the baler to wrap/tie one bale is ridiculous....get a real baler and get on with it. $14k+ just for that toy baler is a joke.
@@jpoppinga8417 That's what most people do where I live, its a lot cheaper, and most people don't use the hay, they just hire someone to come deal with it for them and whoever they hire will take the hay as well for their use or for resale.
You could get a used New Holland square baler cheaper than this and accomplish the same thing.
What does a regular size hay baler cost?
@@blessed7fold $10-100k. You can find them used for less than $10k, new full size round balers are over $100k. Then factor in the tractor to run them. Soon you've got 1/2 a million dollars tied up in hay equipment LOL. But people that do that stuff are typically in the hay cutting and baling business, not a little mini farm...they're out cutting and baling several fields. My neighbor does custom baling, and he runs older equipment.
Well isn’t that cute.
Lmfao huge waste of time.
under skin control has begun
I do the same thing with a one way new holland rake and my allis Chalmers baler and my WD 45 tractor and have way less invested. What the price tag on all that crap and those glorified lawn mowers fucking dumb
Not everyone wants to farm with antiques
@@wellingtonimplement no it's called everybody's too fucking stupid to run one
lol
Haha