ownedbyaconnie
Well-Known Member
Yep frosburys are £7.70. I always forget rokers do hay!Blimey! Rokers are still £6.50 at present.
Feeling v fortunate that I got a load in last summer and that I'm not feeding hay in daytime.
Yep frosburys are £7.70. I always forget rokers do hay!Blimey! Rokers are still £6.50 at present.
Feeling v fortunate that I got a load in last summer and that I'm not feeding hay in daytime.
Yep frosburys are £7.70. I always forget rokers do hay!
We make hay and sell some. Nearly every year the price of imputs goes up, diesel. machinary parts, that sort of thing. Small bales are made ourselves but have to have a lot of man handling and we are not getting any younger. Large rounds we have to get a contractor to bale and wrap, his prices go up so ours have to as well. We wrap our large bales as the customers we have do not have indoor storage and it enables them to store them outside.If we have a good harvest this year ... will the prices go back down again though ? As, whenever there has been a hike, they never do.
Those who buy it almost never take these factors into account sadly ?We make hay and sell some. Nearly every year the price of imputs goes up, diesel. machinary parts, that sort of thing. Small bales are made ourselves but have to have a lot of man handling and we are not getting any younger. Large rounds we have to get a contractor to bale and wrap, his prices go up so ours have to as well. We wrap our large bales as the customers we have do not have indoor storage and it enables them to store them outside.
So yes once the price has gone up we do not drop it again, it only goes up when it has to. The grass itself is one of the least costly parts of the whole process.
perfectly understand your comments. But last years hay was 32.50 for a round bale. Because there is a shortage, it’s gone upto 50.00. Which we’re having to pay as no choice. As the hay was cut etc 2020 there haven’t been any additional costs. The farmers have hiked the price as they know they will sell it. So.. If when it’s cut again 2021 my query is will it go down to say 40 quid a bale in line with inflation or go up to 60 pounds?We make hay and sell some. Nearly every year the price of imputs goes up, diesel. machinary parts, that sort of thing. Small bales are made ourselves but have to have a lot of man handling and we are not getting any younger. Large rounds we have to get a contractor to bale and wrap, his prices go up so ours have to as well. We wrap our large bales as the customers we have do not have indoor storage and it enables them to store them outside.
So yes once the price has gone up we do not drop it again, it only goes up when it has to. The grass itself is one of the least costly parts of the whole process.
It comes down to a ‘supply and demand’ situation doesn’t it?perfectly understand your comments. But last years hay was 32.50 for a round bale. Because there is a shortage, it’s gone upto 50.00. Which we’re having to pay as no choice. As the hay was cut etc 2020 there haven’t been any additional costs. The farmers have hiked the price as they know they will sell it. So.. If when it’s cut again 2021 my query is will it go down to say 40 quid a bale in line with inflation or go up to 60 pounds?