That all depends on the size and type of bales you have, as well as the forage biomass of that field. Bales come in not just one size, they come in small square, large square, small round and large round bales. Forage biomass is also different from year to year, depending on current seasonal conditions (moisture, sunlight, soil) for your area.
It grows to be about 1 meter tall
Vilaayati gavat
I suppose you mean, "a square that has a surface of one acre". An acre has 43,560 square feet; to get the length of a square of that area, take the square root of that. The result is about 208'9".I suppose you mean, "a square that has a surface of one acre". An acre has 43,560 square feet; to get the length of a square of that area, take the square root of that. The result is about 208'9".I suppose you mean, "a square that has a surface of one acre". An acre has 43,560 square feet; to get the length of a square of that area, take the square root of that. The result is about 208'9".I suppose you mean, "a square that has a surface of one acre". An acre has 43,560 square feet; to get the length of a square of that area, take the square root of that. The result is about 208'9".
One cent is equal to one hundredth of an acre. An acre is equal to 43560 square feet. Therefore, 10 acres is equal to 10/100 x 43560 = 4356 square feet.
1 acre = 43,560 feet2sqrt(43,560 ft2) = 208.71 feet (rounded)
The number of bales of hay you can get from an acre of alfalfa depends on multiple variables, such as the rate at which the field was seeded, how well the alfalfa grew, and the size of the bales. It also depends on how long the alfalfa has been planted and if it is the first, second, or third cutting. In general, you should be able to get about 75 100-pound bales per acre at each cutting.
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The number of bales that are produced per acre varies a lot by area, soil conditions, type of cotton, and weather conditions. For instance, in Lubbock, Texas in 2012, cotton production varied from 1/2 bale per acre to 4 bales per acre. The higher yields came from fields that were irrigated.
75-100 bales depending on the type of hay, 1st or 2nd cutting , and the size of the bale.
The amount of Hay Bales that you yield from one acre is dependant on many variables. This includes the rate per acre it was seeded at, the ratio of grass to alfalfa used, and the size of the bale. It is also dependant on how many cuttings are available in one year. Usually land seeded for hay is planted at 20-30lbs per acre. 3 cuttings per year is often the norm, however, depending on the weather it is possible to obtain a fourth cutting (a fith cutting is rare). Hay usually takes the first year to establish itself. Therefor it is likely to only harvest 20-30 bales in the first cutting of the first year. The following cuttings decrease in production. In the 2-4 years, after the hay has been established, the first cutting is the largest and can produce anywhere from 75-100 bales of hay per acre. The second cutting usually yields 50-75 bales, and it continues to decrease from there. Most farmers anticipate a rough yield of about 200-250 bales per year, after the first year, and provided the weather is good. Hay is a five year crop that is harvested anywhere from 3-5 times during the summer months. Pricing is dependant on the quality of hay; pure alfalfa sells the highest, and typically the price decreases from there depending on the ratio of alfalfa in the bale, and the "leafiness of the bale"
Depends on how heavy those bales are, soil quality and your location. As such the question cannot really be answered.
4.0 acre-feet
An acre is 43,560 square feet. Most small square bales would lightly cover at least 2x10 ft, but more likely 2x15 ft . Therefore; 43,560 divided by 30 (if each square bale covers 30 sq/ft as an average) = 1,452 square bales. If the bales are larger (round bales), obviously fewer bales would be required. Large round bales would likely provide at least 10X the coverage so likely in the range of 145 round bales
Generally yes, if it's grass hay the big round bales will be cheapest, then the big square ones and lastly the small square bales will be most expensive. Alfalfa hay will cost more than grass hay of course.
In the US industrial agriculture system, and with good management over multiple cuttings per season, a farmer can reasonably expect to harvest at least 12,000 pounds (six tons) of alfalfa hay per acre per year.
This depends on a few factors: Forage quality, forage biomass in terms of lbs/acre, forage content, hayfield/pasture conditions, and the size/weight of the round bale. Some areas can get get 3 bales per acre, especially if the bales are packed light and small, whereas others may only get 2 or 3 acres per bale.