Moving Hay
Our old hay feeders have fallen apart; a combination of age
and really big cattle. I decided this
time I would make my own and combine the feeder with a sledge the oxen could
move. I built it last week, and today
was the third time I have used it. The
first test run had a glitch. The eye
bolts were not strong enough. So I
bought some ½ inch eye bolts at the local hardware store and tried it
again. Sunday’s feeding went
perfect. We photographed today’s
excursion just in case it would help anyone.
The sledge is eight feet long by five feet wide. I used four 2”x12”x8’ for the runners bolted
together in pairs. I looked at the old hay feeders and the barrier was two feet
high. I thought this was a wise starting point to keep the cattle out of the
hay. It worked. It is double ended with eye bolts at both ends so it can be
pulled in either direction. It has
sideboards to keep the cattle from standing or lying in the hay. I also added
eye bolts on the sides in case I wanted to tie a load onto the sledge.
The way we use the
feeder is to have two oxen take it to the hay yard, roll a bale on the sledge,
pull it back to the pasture, I unhook them and we are done for a half week or
so.
The process starts by calling George and William in to be
yoked. The other cattle are supposed to stay out of the way, they don’t always.
The boys are awfully cooperative about yoking and going to work.
Next I hook the chain to the sledge with clevises.
And I hitch the chain to the yoke using another clevis. I
know we could use other systems, but I've never had a clevis fail.
With the boys hitched we open the gate and tell them to
go. They have no problem getting a five
foot wide sledge through a six foot wide space. This shot also gives you a view
of what the chain looks like without a lot of clutter.
The boys position the sledge next to a bale.
I unhook the chain.
Next I pull the sideboard off the sledge next to the bale.
I drive a barn spike into the bale,
And snag it with the grab hook of a logging chain.
The boys know exactly what they are doing and it takes
minimum direction to get them lined up on the chain and bale.
We didn't get a good picture of it today but this is how we
are hooked to the bale.
In a second or so it is up on the sledge.
I put the sideboard back on.
Pull the spike out and put it and the chain on the next bale.
Tell George and William to go to the other end of the
sledge.
Where, of course we are greeted by my starving cattle.
I unyoke the boys on the spot, giving each a good scratch
and telling how good they did. I put the
yoke and chain away and we are done. I
think the only correction was telling William he could not munch grass once
when he was waiting. There were minimum
commands and a lot of “Good!” The process took about fifteen minutes.
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