A square bale of hay will vary in cost according to what type of hay it is, how much it weighs, where it was grown, who is selling it, and many other factors. You can expect to pay from $5.50 and up from there.
Depending on where you buy your hay, what type and even the time of year it seems the average bale of oat is between ten and fifteen dollars. Alfalfa is about the same, some places a little more, some a little less. The grass hays are usually (rye, orchard) a little less than oat and alfalfa. If you live in an area that is hit and miss on quality and supply you can try oat or alfalfa pellets. The quaility is more predictable and supply usually meets demand.
It depends on where you live. In the prairies it's going to be cheaper than somewhere that they have to be shipped in. Usually you'd be looking at between $2 and $10.
Not enough information in question to answer. How much what? Land? Cattle? What size bale? Small round, small square, large round, large rectangular?
It depends where you look, but on average the cost is around $2-$10.
A small square bale of hay weighing 30-60 pounds will vary in cost by type of hay and region. You should however expect to pay no less than $6 for one bale of that size.
I can buy one bale for under $5 locally.
For 1 bale of hay, i believe it is $10 in Canada and the USA
About $13.00 per bale or $230 per ton as of February 1, 2014.
Since the horse eats 3 bales of hay every 6 days, you have to find out how much of a bale the horse eats in 1 day. You divide both by 6, getting that the horse eats 0.5 (1/2) of a bale of a day. You have to multiply this by 32. The answer is about 16 bales of hay. : )
1.5 (1 and a half) tons.A standard or "short" ton is 2000 lbs. Therefore a 1500 lb. bale of hay would be 3/4 of a ton.
About 2 goats, 1 cow, and three horses. Oh, and a bale of hay is a monthly bonus if u do well.
1 ton of hay is about 2 round bales 5' x 5' (diameter x thickness) [1000 lbs/bale] 1 ton of hay is 20 rectangular bales 4' x 2' x 1.5' (length x width x height) [100 lbs/bale] So for the rectangular bales, a stack of hay 4' x 8' x 7.5' (length x width x height) would do it. Not much barn space. Rick
they love alfalfa!! lots of grain, and 1 bale of hay every day. they love treats to!(:
Feeding hay by the flake is a very flawed method and usually results in the horse getting too much or too little forage. You should always feed a horse based on weight. A horse needs 1 to 3% of it's body-weight in food daily, hay should make up from 100% to at the very least 60% of the diet.
A mini can eat 1 to 2 flakes of hay a day and doesn't need grain. It depends on how much pasture you have and how much hay costs where you live.
Depends on the weight of the bales (both the small squares and large round) and whether that bale is comprised of hay or straw. All bales of hay, straw or baleage are sold in terms of weight (in tons or pounds), not size. Not all LRB's are going to be 5x5; a lot of them range from 4x5 to 6x6. And even then it also depends on how densely packed they are, which ultimately affects their weight. However, let's assume your asking about a 5x5 1500 lb LRB and wondering how many SSBs (assuming they are around 75 lbs each) fit into that particular bale or bales with that similar weight. So, 1500 / 75 = 20 bales; thus it is estimated that 20 SSBs will fit into one 5x5 LRB assuming the weights are what they are.
A flake of hay is essentially a "slice" of a bale of hay. When a bale is made in the field by the baler, it's layered with about 10 - 13 "clumps" of hay, compressed, tied with wire or twine, and spit out in the rectangular shape you're used to seeing. When the twine is cut, the hay tends to come apart in those layers, each of which is about 3"-4" thick, which we call "flakes".
if i understand you right, you are asking how many square bales = 1 large round bale, and by large i think you mean 5 wide bales, 5x5, 5x5.25, 5x5.50, 5x6 ect. the answer is 20 - 35 small two wire bales.