So we did some (for us) thinking outside the box. We'd made the initial mistake of raking windrows together that were still too green, and wouldn't dry through. So this morning we dug an old auction sale treasure out of the weeds and decided to give it a try. We'd only tried this thing once before and couldn't get along with it, but I thought this might be it's chance to shine. Father was skeptical :lol: The hay had lots of dew on it this morning so we figured this was our chance to try it and hopefully not lose too many leaves.
Turns out the tedder isn't real fussy with real ropey hay, but as it dried up a bit it worked better. We tried to just move the windrow over while fluffing it but we are short a few too many teeth for this to be effective so we went with full out tedding.
The machine (all plugged up during the experimentation process on real dewey hay):
Starting to get the effect we were looking for:
All spread out to dry:
Putting it back in windrows:
Just about done:
The race is now on:
Always seems to end in a tie:
All done.
Turns out the tedder isn't real fussy with real ropey hay, but as it dried up a bit it worked better. We tried to just move the windrow over while fluffing it but we are short a few too many teeth for this to be effective so we went with full out tedding.
The machine (all plugged up during the experimentation process on real dewey hay):

Starting to get the effect we were looking for:


All spread out to dry:


Putting it back in windrows:

Just about done:

The race is now on:


Always seems to end in a tie:

All done.
