Visit


On Sale Now

cover



Farm-related videos online! Check out the Farm Collector video index on YouTube, the quickest way to find farm-related videos on the Internet. We've done the searching, all you have to do is the watching! Click below for the Farm Collector video index.






An Unending Job:

Putting up hay on Muddy Creek

By Perry Piper

One of farming's most "labor intensive" crops over the years has been hay. Oh, there were certain compensations. One might well savor the unforgettable and delightful aroma of new-mown hay, and a "romp in the hay" was not to be sneezed at either (no pun intended). The mere thought causes this octogenarian to chuckle under his breath, much to the vexation of his partner of some three score years.

Putting up hay seemed to be an unending job when I was growing up on Muddy Creek. Red Top had to be "caught" at just the right time, else it would "head out" and be worthless as feed, and could only be cut for seed. The teamsters in the oil field offered a good market for Timothy for horses, and mules seemed to prefer (and thrive) on this long-stem succulent grass. The Timothy harvest closely followed that of the early-maturing Red Top.

The procedure for harvesting most of the hays was much the same. First came the mowing, using the five-foot horse-drawn mower. Seldom was the day when a pitman rod was not snapped, or a sickle section popped out from the sickle bar, hitting a hidden sprout.

The hay was cured in the hot sun. Then came the raking with the dump rake, pulling the aromatic swaths into windrows and later into "doodles" (or piles).

Balers were not as yet common, so nearly all of the cuttings were handled as loose hay, being either stacked in the field, or else stowed away in the hay loft. For stacking, the site was first prepared by laying down a framework of fence rails. Then the "doodles" would be dragged to the stack by hitching the team to a 20-foot long sapling that had been shoved under the pile of hay. A rope was stretched over the hay and half-hitched around the protuding pole.

Usually the team was guided by a boy -- me - riding one horse with a bridle-mounted "gamble stick" guiding the other. When the doodle reached the stack, the rope was untied and the pole pulled out, and the ream returned for another load.

Stacking required a fair number of "hands." There was the doodle man, who used the boy rider to bring the hay to the stack, and, at the very least, two men were needed on top of the stack, and two or more for pitching the hay up to them.

The war effort that took the surplus men into the service hastened the development of at least three new farm implements, all designed to ease the load, or replace the non-existent "hay hand."

Several versions of commercial hay stackers came onto the market, but each required a second team to raise the arms on which the doodle had been placed and swing it to the top of the stack, where the stackers could easily reach and spread the hay around. Certainly these machines made the job easier, and speeded up the hay stacking, but the amount of labor saved was limited.

The invention that did save labor, as well as make the job lighter, was the mechanical hay loader. With it came the side delivery rake that bunched the mowed hay into continuous windrows that could be moved or turned, to hasten the curing when storm clouds began to build on the western horizon. The loader was designed to be pulled along behind the hay wagon and astraddle the windrows. It had two opposite turning reel-like forks, and shoved the windrowed hay onto a moving conveyor that carried it up some 12 feet, and then dumped it onto the wagon, where two hard-working men, using two-tine pitchforks, built a square and level load. Two-tine forks were preferred: Less effort was required to pull a two-tine fork from the entangled hay.