Grow better hay, protect forage quality, and build a more profitable, drought-resilient hay operation.
Hay Farming in America is a practical guide for farmers, livestock producers, landowners, and beginning hay growers who want to understand how to grow, cut, bale, store, test, feed, and sell quality hay in U.S. conditions.
Hay farming is more than mowing a field and waiting for dry weather. Profit depends on the right forage species, healthy soil, correct fertility, harvest timing, drying management, baling moisture, storage protection, forage testing, livestock nutrition, and knowing which market your hay is truly suited for.
This book walks through the full hay production cycle-from soil test to sale-using plain language, practical numbers, and region-aware guidance for American farms.
Inside, you'll learn how to:
- Understand the American hay industry and why quality drives price
- Choose hay grasses, legumes, and mixtures for your region, soil, climate, and buyers
- Use soil tests, lime, phosphorus, potassium, nitrogen, sulfur, and organic matter to support yield
- Establish a hay stand with better seedbed preparation, seeding timing, and first-year management
- Maintain established fields through fertility, weed control, stand assessment, and renovation
- Understand hay quality, RFV, crude protein, ADF, NDF, TDN, moisture, and forage test reports
- Time cutting for the livestock market you want to serve
- Manage mowing, conditioning, raking, windrows, baling, and moisture risk
- Compare small square bales, round bales, and large rectangular bales
- Reduce storage losses with better barn, tarp, pad, and outdoor storage decisions
- Understand wrapped bale silage as a high-moisture forage option
- Buy, maintain, and size hay equipment more realistically
- Manage irrigated hay production, water efficiency, and drought-year decisions
- Match hay quality to dairy cattle, beef cattle, horses, sheep, goats, and other livestock
- Price hay, write sales agreements, build customer relationships, and manage risk
The book also includes appendices for forage species selection, soil test interpretation, hay quality standards, cutting schedules, storage loss estimates, sample hay sales contracts, USDA and extension resources, and common hay and forage terms.
Written specifically for the United States, this guide recognizes that hay farming in Vermont, Texas, California, Wisconsin, Nebraska, Kentucky, and Idaho all require different decisions. Where region matters, the book explains why.
If you want to produce cleaner, better-tested, more marketable hay-and make smarter decisions before the weather window closes-Hay Farming in America belongs on your farm shelf.