overshot hay stacker brands
According to the dictionary, the jayhawk is a fictitious bird. But the Jayhawk at the Wykoff, Minn., home of Marv Grabau swoops through the air, bearing a 600-pound load of hay.
Marv’s Jayhawk is an overshot hay stacker, a piece of horse-drawn farm equipment patented in 1915. Manufactured by the F. Wyatt Mfg. Co. (which evolved into what is today the Hesston Corp.) in Salina, Kan., the long and leggy Jayhawk is a clutch-driven creature that stumps almost every onlooker. Measuring 12 feet wide, 30 feet long and 12 feet high with an 80-inch rear axle, the Jayhawk has a “head” (or “sweep”) originally used to lift hay into bins or cribs. “The head trips like a trip bucket on a tractor,” Marv says. “When it gets up so high, there’s a lever that dumps the load.” The sweep could hold approximately 600 pounds of loose hay as it swept overhead.
The Jayhawk dates to an era when cut hay was left in the fields, and later mounded for storage. “You had your hay windrowed with the old-fashioned dump rake,” Marv explains. “This sweep, or head, would push up, and when the sweep or head was full, you’d go over to a basket or crib – sometimes they had a crib, sometimes they didn’t – and stack it up inside. This particular stacker is 12 feet high, so you could get stacks of hay approximately 12 feet high. Then you’d pack it down and form a top on it like a bread loaf to help it shed water. You just kept moving around in the field, making these stacks until you were done.”
Last August, Marv loaded the stacker onto a trailer and hauled it to Spring Valley, Minn., for the annual Laura Ingalls Wilder Fest tractor show. An unwieldy critter, the Jayhawk fought the process. “It took me three hours just to load it onto the trailer and tie it down, plus the hauling time to town,” Marv says. But it was worth the trouble. “The Jayhawk was the center of attention,” he recalls. “They had about 95 tractors there and 34 implements, and this one drew the most curiosity.
Although the Jayhawk is a deceptively simple conglomeration of steel and cables, chains and wood, Marv invested nearly 40 hours in its restoration. He had to find new rear wheels because the original ones had been removed to allow a tractor to push the stacker. “When they converted it for use with a tractor, it was just a convenience,” he says. “I don’t know if they hooked it to a loader-type tractor or not. A mechanical lift on the front of a tractor is like a fifth wheel on a truck. That’s why they had to get rid of the rear wheels.”
Marv used two tractors with trip buckets to hold the raised sweep up as he worked to loosen the gears. “I had no one to show me how,” he says, “so it was all experimental.” Replacing the 8-foot wood tines on the head involved study and patience, as well as a search for the metal “teeth” that cover the ends of the tines. “The teeth keep the head from digging into the ground and breaking the tines,” he says. “They’re factory metal.” When Marv got the stacker, it had just four tines on it. He needed eight more, and found exactly that number in Waverly, Iowa. The formidable-looking tines now stand supported by a hay bin Marv built to accompany the stacker in the field.
The Jayhawk’s glory days ended in the middle part of the last century when mechanized implements and changing haying methods made the hay stacker obsolete. “After the 1915 horse-drawn model,” Marv says, “it was called a ‘Stackhand’ farm stacker. It was the same as this, only it was self-propelled, more or less. The reason they didn’t (sell well in the north) was that the weather here is so humid that hay rots more easily, so it was better to have it in a hay mow.”
Hay loaders and balers served farmers in a slightly different capacity than the Jayhawk. “The hay loader was the other thing that would’ve come after the hay stacker,” Marv says. “I’ve got a dump rake and the old side-delivery rake here, and the horse mower. I have a chain of command of haying pieces.” Several other restoration projects await, but for now, Marv is simply pleased to be able to display his haying equipment, including the flightless Jayhawk.
TWIN FALLS • Remnants of old wooden haystackers still scatter the Magic Valley landscape. But many people today wouldn’t know one if they saw it in a field.
The most labor-intensive method was to hand pitch the loose hay to the top of the stack. Men would carry pitchforks full of hay to the top, climbing the stack as it grew.
An overshot hay stacker — sometimes called a jayhawk — held a 600-pound load of hay on a “sweep bucket” that would lift and dump the hay onto the stack. The most common method used locally was the gin pole stacker — which resembled a partially disassembled tepee — that would lift, swing and lower a load of hay into place on the stack.
An alternate system my father developed for use building stacks on a farm in Grand Forks County, North Dakota, employed a hydraulic hay stacker mounted on a tractor (in our case, a 1941 John Deere A).
On a fine summer day more than 165 years ago, a rancher in the Flint Hills of Kansas hitched a team to an overshot hay stacker and, with his hired men, went to work stacking hay.
I thought I should thank everyone for responding to my letter (Farm Collector, July 2002) concerning a hay stacker. I received one letter and two phone calls.
In 1900 the company was moved to Ottumwa, Iowa, where Dain produced harvesting equipment including sickle mowers, hay loaders, hay stackers and side-delivery rakes, as well as other pieces of farm equipment such as pump jacks, farm mixers, feed mills, corn cutters and hay presses.
Happy ThrowBack Thursday! Today, we feature an image from the Montana Historical Society, captioned: "Overshot haystacker, N Bar Ranch, Fergus County, Montana." (No date.) Do yo...
Since 1934 farmers have chosen Westendorf as their reliable, American made, loader choice. Why? -- We have compact tractor loaders, general farm use tractor loaders, heavy duty loaders, and high lift loaders for stacking hay. Westendorf"s full line ...
Since 1934 farmers have chosen Westendorf as their reliable, American made, loader choice. Why? -- We have compact tractor loaders, general farm use tractor loaders, heavy duty loaders, and high lift loaders for stacking hay. Westendorf"s full line ...
If saving time, hay and money are important to you than our hay tarps are the right choice. Winkler Canvas hay tarps are the easiest and most cost effective way to cover your hay. ...
The HAY CAP brand covers are innovative & simple covers made for large square bales of hay that can be applied safely at ground level. The covered bales are then stacked into place on the top of the stack as you build it. Folds butt together, ...
If moisture seeping up from below the hay stack is going to be a problem them a ground cover is essential. Some simple examples of these are used grain bags or silage plastic. ...
The HAY CAP brand covers are innovative & simple covers made for large square bales of hay that can be applied safely at ground level. The covered bales are then stacked into place on the top of the stack as you build it. Folds butt together, ...
Our Hay Tarps (hay covers) are specially designed for all temporary and long-term applications. The tie down methods can either be eyelets, handles or weights; we can customize into the most useful method to you. ...
After the baling process, hay is stacked and awaits sale. Testing at this stage is vital for the same reasons that stood prior to the baling process. With a hand-held electronic probe tester, such as the AgraTronix ...
An effective way to move or stack hay bales is with these economical Dirt Dog 3-PT Bale Spears for handling round bales up to 2000 lbs. The units feature a main tapered spear 42” long and 2 welded balance ...
CROPACK PE tarpaulin is used for covering hay and straw stacks, it is water proof and tear resistant, perfect for protecting hay in Rain, hail ,stormy conditions. It also can be used over silage ...
Norden Mfg (formerly Kuhns Mfg) is a close-knit family business, with several family members in key positions in the company. Norden Mfg has been providing quality square bale handling products to hay growers around the world for over 18 years. ...
Norden Mfg (formerly Kuhns Mfg) is a close-knit family business, with several family members in key positions in the company. Norden Mfg has been providing quality square bale handling products to hay growers around the world for over 18 years. ...
As a family business located in the center of the Austrian hay region, we construct and sell quality machines for agriculture since 1987, which are exported worldwide for some time. Our own research and development have led to innovations in recent ...
As a family business located in the center of the Austrian hay region, we construct and sell quality machines for agriculture since 1987, which are exported worldwide for some time. Our own research and development have led to innovations in recent ...
Tenpack P/L is a wholly Australian owned and managed company whose director has had a lifetimes experience in the small bale business. As a third generation small bale hay producer, Tim Bickley knows first hand what is expected in the industry and ...
Tenpack P/L is a wholly Australian owned and managed company whose director has had a lifetimes experience in the small bale business. As a third generation small bale hay producer, Tim Bickley knows first hand what is expected in the industry and ...
The Hay Sled is similar to the 10 Ton Stack Mover specifications, however the Hay Sled is for single row stacks. It can load transport and unload up to 5 round bales. The axles ...
"Rowse Tough" rakes, mowers, scrapers and bale haulers are all built for years of dependability and low maintenance costs. With dealers in 32 states and Canada, we’ve been providing quality haying equipment to satisfied customers for more than 50 ...
Ideal for making big windrows for large round balers. No matter what your haying system, with a Rowse Rake you can make the size of windrow you need to fit your system – even in light or uneven hay – for ...
"Rowse Tough" rakes, mowers, scrapers and bale haulers are all built for years of dependability and low maintenance costs. With dealers in 32 states and Canada, we’ve been providing quality haying equipment to satisfied customers for more than 50 ...
Jadan Enterprises is a long established family business in Cowra with over 20 years experience in the hay handling industry. Since 1990, we have been providing high-performance hay handling systems that are specifically designed for the farming ...
Jadan Enterprises is a long established family business in Cowra with over 20 years experience in the hay handling industry. Since 1990, we have been providing high-performance hay handling systems that are specifically designed for the farming ...
DuraTech Industries (Haybuster) history by constantly developing products to meet new challenges for the industries and customers served. Internal staffing increases and manufacturing asset investments are ever-present and ongoing, as the commitment ...
DuraTech Industries (Haybuster) history by constantly developing products to meet new challenges for the industries and customers served. Internal staffing increases and manufacturing asset investments are ever-present and ongoing, as the commitment ...