Hay delivery @ Monday Creek |
This post is in honor of the family who brings hay to my barn every year. Even though my fields are full of beautiful meadow-grass hay, which is baled and stored for winter, I buy hay every year for my Quarter mare. The square bales are much easier to portion than round bales, easier to handle on freezing winter days, and the hay is a better quality for horses – clover, alfalfa, canary grass, and timothy. With plenty of hay in perfect stacks in the barn, we're ready for winter. In appreciation, here’s a short story about the joys of baling hay…
A Hay Baling Tale
The sun hung low in the sky, casting a warm golden hue
over the rolling fields. It was hay baling season—the time when the air smelled
of freshly cut grass and the rhythmic hum of tractors echoed through the
countryside.
Ethan wiped the sweat from his brow as he guided the
tractor, pulling the hay baler behind him. His calloused hands gripped the
steering wheel, and he squinted against the bright sunlight. The baler’s
mechanical arms chewed through the rows of hay, compressing them into neat
rectangular bales.
Beside him, his younger brother, Jake, rode shotgun.
Jake was the talkative one, always full of questions. “Why do we bale hay,
Ethan?” he asked, his voice carrying over the engine’s rumble.
Ethan chuckled. “Well, Jake, hay is like gold for our
livestock. It’s their winter food—keeps 'em warm and fed when the snow blankets
the ground.”
They worked in tandem—the baler spitting out bales, and
Ethan stacking them onto the wagon. The sun climbed higher, and the heat
intensified. Sweat soaked through Ethan’s shirt, but he pressed on. There was a
rhythm to it—the steady clunk of bales hitting the wagon, the smell of dried
grass, and the distant song of a meadowlark.
As the wagon filled, Jake hopped down. “Ethan,” he
said, wiping his dusty hands on his jeans, “do you think we’ll ever leave this
farm?”
Ethan paused, leaning against the wagon. He looked out
at the expanse of green, the distant hills, and the red barn waiting for their
harvest. “Maybe,” he said softly. “But this land—it’s in our blood. Our
ancestors worked it, and so will our children.”
They finished loading the wagon, and Ethan climbed back
onto the tractor. The baler chewed through the last row, and he glanced at
Jake. “Ready?”
Jake nodded, and they headed back to the barn. The
wagon creaked under the weight of the bales, and dust billowed around them. As
they approached the barn, their father stood waiting, his weathered face
breaking into a smile.
“Good work, boys,” he said, clapping Ethan on the
shoulder. “We’ll stack these in the loft, and come winter, our animals will
thank us.”
Together, they unloaded the bales, the sweet scent of
hay filling the air. Ethan watched Jake—he was growing stronger, more capable.
Maybe one day, he’d take over the farm.
As the sun dipped below the horizon, casting long
shadows, Ethan leaned against the barn. He listened to the crickets and felt
the ache in his muscles. The hay baling season was hard work, but it was also a
reminder of their legacy—the ties that bound them to this land.
And so, beneath the summer sun, they stacked bales
high, bridging the gap between generations. The barn stood as a silent witness,
its wooden beams echoing stories of resilience, love, and the simple beauty of
hard labor.
Stacking hay @ Monday Creek |
1 comment:
Sweet story!
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