CLITHERALL, MINN. – Once in a while, on a summer afternoon, my husband will ask if our young son and I are ready to help with the small square hay bales.
Hardly anybody makes small square bales anymore. Their day is over. Square balers have gone the way of the typewriter and the rotary dial phone, replaced by the big round bales that occupy Minnesota’s shorn hay fields like an old master scene.
“Big rounds,” we cleverly call them. Weighing 1,000 pounds or more, they are cut and baled and hauled off the field by one person — an accomplishment unthinkable before 1971, when the first big round baler was introduced. It was one of the breakthrough inventions that revolutionized American farming.
Big rounds make sense in industrial agriculture. My husband bales those, too. But baling big rounds is a solitary task, a commentary on the isolation gripping America today, and my heart is with the small squares that we gather by hand, inefficiently, but together, as a family.
My husband makes small squares the old school way, leaving the bales scattered across acres of ground, and alongside our son, we heft them up and sling them onto the hay rack for stacking. This is how it used to be done when farm families had eight or 10 or 12 kids and labor was plentiful, back when hay baling and straw baling and mucking calf pens added muscles to farm kids in time for fall football.
Then family sizes shrunk and farms grew. Farmers stopped calling themselves farmers and became agricultural producers and if they still baled small squares, they used equipment that spit them directly from the baler onto a rack and dropped them inside a shed.
Big rounds end up at sizable livestock operations, mostly. But sometimes someone without a tractor needs small bales they can throw to their horses. That’s when my husband will attach the small square baler to his tractor and rumble through the hay field, chunking out small square after small square.
Then it’s time for our son and me to climb on the hay rack. The weather-worn wooden slats shift beneath us and we dig our fingers between them to hang on while going up a hill. With every bounce and every turn, the slats squeak against the wooden braces.