3- 5 per acre per year.
Average production of hay is 2- 3 tons per growing season in the U.S. midwest. Average weight of a round bale is 1200 pounds or 0.6 tons. Lots of variables here including length of growing season, rainfall, type of hay produced, and bale size.
This all depends on location, climate, moisture content, plant/soil fertility, health of the forage in the field prior to cutting, and time of year. In good growing years you can get a lot of RB's per acre, but in poorer times when there is drought you often get half to a quarter as many bales/acre.
In a good growing season, around 50 to 100 bales. However this all depends on your location, moisture content, time of harvest, climate, forage quality, etc. that determines how many bales per acre you will get.
Another caveat to this answer: A lot depends on the stand of hay. Is it alfalfa or grass? How thick is the stand of hay? Was it rained on or not? How many times was it raked prior to baling (raking it numerous times knocks the leaves off of alfalfa)? Is it first, second, third or even fourth cutting of said forage?
On average, around 3 to 4 bales, but it all depends on the forage yield at the time you will be taking hay off.
Well fellas is it 10 or 15? Make up ya minds.
80.5
10
15
10
Melons are large, round and contain many seeds.
1, if the roll is large enough!
That all depends on the size and type of bales you have, as well as the forage biomass of that field. Bales come in not just one size, they come in small square, large square, small round and large round bales. Forage biomass is also different from year to year, depending on current seasonal conditions (moisture, sunlight, soil) for your area.
It is not possible to answer the question without some information about the location. A bigha is not a standard unit of measurement and in some parts of the South Asia it can be as many as 2.7 bighas in an acre. In other parts, the bigha is almost 10 times as large and there are only 0.33 in an acre.
How many centimeters are in a acre
613. By the way, that's a really, really low yield for wheat. Less than 5 bushels per acre.
290/50= 5.8 bushles per acre...5.8 X 90 = 522 bushles for 90 acres... no rounding needed...
6 stumps and 4 bails. One on each side of the pitch. 3 are allined and on top of them are 2 bails. This is the same on the other side of the pitch.
A typical house in a city might be on a 1/10th or 1/8th acre lot; most people would consider a 1 acre lot quite large (a football field is a bit more than an acre).
0.2399 of an acre
how many yards are in a acre ?the answer is easy it is 4840 yards .