We're paying £2.50-£3 a bail in the east midlands.


Have also got 6 acres of knee high grass as ponies are too fat and stuck on a starvation patch.:shrug:
Our normal Hay supplier is not selling us any, despite me offering £5 now, (it was £3, 4 months ago), he wants to hang on and see the price rise, needless to say he's lost us as customers.
Now managed to source 300 bales for £4 each which should just cover us for this winter.
unfortunately supply and demand brings out the greed in some people
Nope just us farmers cashing in but we all have to make a living, and this year the ball is in our court for once.
He won't have lost any customers because people with horses will always want hay.:shrug: and if we have a hard winter then who know what it will be per bale.
Nope just us farmers cashing in but we all have to make a living, and this year the ball is in our court for once.![]()










We'll have to agree to disagree!what about the people already struggling to finance the ownership of a horse in this already costly economy we're in at the moment? should they, if the cost of hay rises and theyre effectively being priced out of running a horse, be expected to sell up?
We are paying £4 - £5 a bale at the moment here in Manchester. Have previously been getting rebaled stuff from last years round bales at £3.50, but very dusty and poor quality. Horse now diagnosed with COPD so dusty hay is a no no!
what about the people already struggling to finance the ownership of a horse in this already costly economy we're in at the moment? should they, if the cost of hay rises and theyre effectively being priced out of running a horse, be expected to sell up?
its just economics, get over it
yeild is low, when demand is high so are prices, you have a bad year
when yeild is high, demand is low, so are prices, the farmer has a bad year
what about the people already struggling to finance the ownership of a horse in this already costly economy we're in at the moment? should they, if the cost of hay rises and theyre effectively being priced out of running a horse, be expected to sell up?
I've been there. A horse is about the most expensive hobby you can have, motorsport or buying pro spec DSLR equipment is peanuts in comparison.... Absolutely a luxury item that no-one should consider owning unless they are loaded and can cope with sudden huge expenses (see vets bills, or new saddles, or dramatic failure of the transmission on the Land Rover while towing etc etc).
I learned this the hard way, being involved with someone that bounced our joint account and her sole account along the overdraft limit every month. The reason, a three day eventer in training and everything that goes with it.
Now I can remember haymaking the first year a friend had a 7 acre field. I don't know how many small bales you get from an acre but it felt like hundreds after four of us collected and stacked them one evening. We could barely stand at the end. I think it was about £1.50/bale then, Hard to imagine it would be worth thousands now!
Stacking and Making bales has to be the most exhausting job!I've been there. A horse is about the most expensive hobby you can have, motorsport or buying pro spec DSLR equipment is peanuts in comparison.... Absolutely a luxury item that no-one should consider owning unless they are loaded and can cope with sudden huge expenses (see vets bills, or new saddles, or dramatic failure of the transmission on the Land Rover while towing etc etc).
I learned this the hard way, being involved with someone that bounced our joint account and her sole account along the overdraft limit every month. The reason, a three day eventer in training and everything that goes with it.
Now I can remember haymaking the first year a friend had a 7 acre field. I don't know how many small bales you get from an acre but it felt like hundreds after four of us collected and stacked them one evening. We could barely stand at the end. I think it was about £1.50/bale then, Hard to imagine it would be worth thousands now!
I thought hay wasn't so scarce in the North or West Country, maybe they're hoarding it too? Presume you've tried soaking your dusty hay?

And yes I soak my hay, hes laminitic also so every little helps! Was not fun in the snow last winter... I lost a full net for three weeks as it was frozen solid inside the bin![]()
I'd already forgotten about all that lugging barrels of water about to fill the troughs, seems along time ago in this heat I've been there. A horse is about the most expensive hobby you can have, motorsport or buying pro spec DSLR equipment is peanuts in comparison.... Absolutely a luxury item that no-one should consider owning unless they are loaded and can cope with sudden huge expenses (see vets bills, or new saddles, or dramatic failure of the transmission on the Land Rover while towing etc etc).
I learned this the hard way, being involved with someone that bounced our joint account and her sole account along the overdraft limit every month. The reason, a three day eventer in training and everything that goes with it.
Now I can remember haymaking the first year a friend had a 7 acre field. I don't know how many small bales you get from an acre but it felt like hundreds after four of us collected and stacked them one evening. We could barely stand at the end. I think it was about £1.50/bale then, Hard to imagine it would be worth thousands now!
I've been there. A horse is about the most expensive hobby you can have, motorsport or buying pro spec DSLR equipment is peanuts in comparison....
I always find it amazing when people bring morality into economics and free market. What's pricing got to do with morality - its all about supply and demand.
I always find it amazing when people bring morality into economics and free market. What's pricing got to do with morality - its all about supply and demand.
(I am not a horse owner or lover -in fact I have got nothing to do with horses, ever. But if bales sell at 5 quids, either have the money to buy it, or dont bother having horses. Tomorrow, they might go upto 10, or fall back to 2 quids. Its the same for anything else in life)
It's a bit different when the market is being manipulated and holding back on supply in order to create demand and increase prices is just that.
Sorry, no it is not manipulation of the market. The person holding back on supply is taking a risk - a legitimate business decision. As long he is not doing it via a cartel ( say such as OPEC, and something which is illegal in UK); he is as much exposed to loss as he is to profit at a later date. Its an entirely legitimate business practise. One can never be forced to sell his produce immediately. And how immediate is 'immediate' anyways.
This sort of logic is the slippery slope of communism via the wonderland of socialism.![]()
1. I think you missed my point there
2. Either way, horse owners are going to get extremely ****ed off if they are told that their supplier won't sell them any hay for six months so they can double the price.
3. I can guarantee that most will have sourced their hay long before then
4. so it may be a legitimate business practice, but not a very wise one IMHO.
Point-wise response, to avoid misunderstanding
1. Sorry about missing your point. I believed you were dis-agreeing with my assertion that free market has nothing to do with morality. ( Just curious, what was your point?)
2. Horse owners have every right to get ****ed off. Doesn't make them right or morally superior though. And there is no guarantee that prices will double in 6 months, unless all sellers gang up together - form a cartel - which isn't the case here. Conversely, horse owners were equally free to stock up when the prices were low, if they could foresee the market movement.
3. That would be a smart move. Why would they crib then, if they have done that? They outfoxed the sellers - good on them. However, if they haven't, bringing up morality is a false premise.
4. Wise or not, only time will tell. If it isn't wise, the seller will suffer. If it is wise, they will make money. The point is, and as I said in my first post - it amazes me when people bring up the morality argument into what is essentially a free market decision.
Ujjwal, I think we've gone a little off track here, but I appreciate your opinions.
Just a shame they weren't running the banks for the last ten years!
As to the anti farmer comments, I've yet to meet a really rich farmer. Most are struggling on really low incomes.