Some. Most hay, as it grows and matures, is water. Dry it out and much of its weight "goes away" leaving the "dry matter" behind. Over half the weight of living or freshly harvested hay (reaped while green) is water.
3-wire bales can weigh up to 150 lbs and being a woman, with not as much upper body strength as a guy, I can't heft those dang things. 2-wire bales are much more do-able as far as moving and stacking, without having to ask my husband to help.
it ranges depending on breed and how well there taken care of, they need exersise, hay grain, lots of fresh water.
Workin joules = (89) x (distance she moves the force through)in meters
Some things that weigh 50 pounds might include a bale of Timothy hay or the average bag of horse or cow feed. Dog food can be purchased in 50 pound bags and you can also buy a 50 pound weight for your weight lifting machine.
A ton!
For the purpose of calculating joist sizes for Hay Loft, - what is the weight of a cubic foot or cubic metre of baled hay?
It all depends on the width and diameter - a 4ft x 4ft bale with a 50 cubit foot volume weighs 563lbs
Depends on the type of hay and how tightly the hay was baled, as well as how big of flakes the baler was set to.
The duration of Hay Foot is 2880.0 seconds.
Hay Foot was created on 1942-01-02.
A roll of hay is basicly just a big cylinder of hay that measures about 1 1/2 meters high and 2 meters in diameter:]
1000 pounds
I'm just not sure which way you want me to weigh this hay. The scale leaned way over when I went to weigh the hay.
The measurements of a roll of hay can vary but many are either 4 feet by 6 feet or 5 feet by six feet. The measurements will depend on how it is baled, who is baling it, and how tight it is the hay is baled or rolled.
It's a euphemism, like "roll in the hay." Get it?
Depending on the size of the bale and type of fodder in the bale, usually somewhere between 50 and 2,000 pounds.