Vargas
Member
I'm newer to raising rabbits, and not wanting anything to do with pellets or non organic hay, I needed a cheap way to come up with some hay.
My lawn is mainly bermuda, with a bunch of weeds in it. Conventional lawn mowers cut grass too fine to easily rake for hay. I came by a reel mower. The ones that only spin when pushed. I let my lawn grow a little longer than normal, then mow it with the reel mower. I do not use a bag, I simply leave the cut grass on the lawn to dry for about a week depending on how hot it is. Since this is not as thick as one would allow alfalfa to grow, I don't need to move the grass around for drying. I leave it completely alone for a week, then rake it and store it. Free hay
I am probably going to plant fescue grass in a portion of my lawn so I have grass all year long. I like part of it as the bermuda and mixed weeds so the hay is varied.
I was wondering who else had techniques they use to convert lawn grass into hay? I and I'm sure others would love the input.
My lawn is mainly bermuda, with a bunch of weeds in it. Conventional lawn mowers cut grass too fine to easily rake for hay. I came by a reel mower. The ones that only spin when pushed. I let my lawn grow a little longer than normal, then mow it with the reel mower. I do not use a bag, I simply leave the cut grass on the lawn to dry for about a week depending on how hot it is. Since this is not as thick as one would allow alfalfa to grow, I don't need to move the grass around for drying. I leave it completely alone for a week, then rake it and store it. Free hay
I am probably going to plant fescue grass in a portion of my lawn so I have grass all year long. I like part of it as the bermuda and mixed weeds so the hay is varied.
I was wondering who else had techniques they use to convert lawn grass into hay? I and I'm sure others would love the input.