Can You Still Harvest Quality Hay After a Rain Delay? Here’s How
🌾 Introduction
You’ve cut your hay, the forecast looked perfect, and then—rain. Every hay farmer faces this challenge. But don’t panic: with the right approach, harvesting hay after a rain delay can still yield marketable, high-quality feed.
Let’s look at how to manage rained-on hay effectively, minimize nutrient loss, and avoid mold or spoilage.

🌧️ 1. What Happens When Hay Gets Rained On?
Rain affects hay in three major ways:
- Leaches nutrients, especially sugars and soluble proteins.
- Re-wets stems, lengthening drying time.
- Encourages microbial growth, increasing mold risk.
The extent of damage depends on how mature the crop was at cutting, the rain amount, and drying stage when it occurred.
💡 Quick rule: the earlier in the drying process the rain hits, the more likely you can recover the hay.
🌤️ 2. Let It Dry — But Smartly
After the rain stops, allow the hay to fully dry before raking or tedding. Turning wet hay too soon can trap moisture underneath.
- Use a tedder to fluff and spread the hay for airflow.
- Rake only when the hay surface feels crisp.
- Avoid excessive raking—it breaks leaves and reduces feed value.
In humid regions, consider using hay preservatives or dehumidified barn dryers to save borderline batches.
🔍 3. Test Moisture Before Baling
Moisture control becomes even more critical after rain. Baling damp hay leads to heating and mold.
Use these safe thresholds:
- Small square bales: under 18% moisture
- Large round bales: under 16%
- Treated hay: up to 22% (if using propionic acid-based preservatives)
Always check several bales from different spots in the field using a reliable moisture probe.
🚜 4. Salvaging Nutrient Value
If the hay’s outer layers are bleached or discolored, remove surface bales before stacking for sale or feeding.
Mix slightly lower-quality hay into livestock feed blends rather than selling as premium-grade.
You can also repurpose rained-on hay as mulch, compost, or bedding—nothing goes to waste.
🧠 5. Prevention Tips for Next Time
- Watch multi-day forecasts, not just single-day predictions.
- Cut smaller field sections if rain is likely.
- Invest in quick-dry conditioners and high-capacity tedders for faster recovery.
🌍 External Reference
For in-depth hay weather management, visit Penn State Extension’s Forage Rain Damage Guide
🧩 Conclusion
Rain delays are frustrating—but with smart drying, careful moisture management, and good timing, harvesting hay after a rain delay doesn’t have to ruin your season. A few proactive steps can preserve both hay quality and farm profits.

