Hay...Hay...Hay
Haylee Roderick goes by Hay, Hay Hay, Hayls, and Hay Rod.
Hay Plumb's birth name is Edward Hay-Plumb.
When you cut grass in the meadow, this is called mowing the grass and if the grass is to be used for hay it is called mowing the hay or a 'hay mow'.
Erin Hay was born in 1970.
Miley is not hay, so I doubt she is baled. She is not bald either.
For the purpose of calculating joist sizes for Hay Loft, - what is the weight of a cubic foot or cubic metre of baled hay?
You can feed them at any time once they have been baled.
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.
There is really no such thing as 'too ripe' with hay provided it has been cured and baled correctly. The only time you should avoid feeding hay is if it has been rained on or baled with a high moisture content. You can find out the quality of your hay by having it tested in a lab for nutritional quality and moisture content. You should also check hay before feeding it to horses, looking for mold, excessive dust and foreign bodies such as trash , dead animals, or insects. (Blister beetles are sometimes baled into Alfalfa hay.) If the hay checks out okay, you can feed it the same day it was baled.
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 hay is usually stacked and stored in a barn from which it is taken to feed livestock. Sometimes it is stacked outside and covered with a waterproof tarp to keep it dry. The idea is to keep it dry so that it will not mold.
There are many different types of materials that could be baled. Straw and hay from the field are baled. Also recycling center bale up paper and cardboard.
The leaves, which are the most nutritious part of the alfalfa plant.
The presence of excess moisture promotes mold making the hay unuseable for livestock.
I would not feed it to my animals as if it is mouldy it will have mycotoxins which can kill your stock - though you could still use it on your garden as mulch.
Bulk density = dry weight / volume, then by knowing the dry weight and bulk density we can calculate the volume.