The Complete Guide to Hay Storage: Protecting Your Most Valuable Feed

Hay is one of the most expensive inputs on livestock operations. Protecting it from weather, rodents, and spoilage isn’t optional — it’s essential.

Here’s how to keep your hay dry, clean, and nutritionally sound all season long.

1. Store Hay on a Foundation That Drains

Hay sitting on soil or concrete wicks moisture upward.

Use:

  • gravel pads

  • pallets

  • railroad ties

  • airflow platforms

Airflow underneath hay reduces mold dramatically.

2. Use Tarps or Covers — But Allow Ventilation

A tight wrap traps moisture.
A breathable tarp or pole-barn roof works far better.

3. Stack Smart for Airflow

Avoid:

  • stacking bales against outside walls

  • overly tight stacks

  • wet hay mixed with dry hay

Leave a few inches of space between rows so air can circulate.

4. Monitor for Rodent Tunnels and Nesting

Hay is prime real estate for rodents in winter:

  • nesting material

  • warmth

  • grain contamination from baler pickup

Check for tunnels, shredded material, and droppings.

5. Use Cameras to Protect Hay Bales at Night

People think cameras are only for barns, but hay yards are one of the BEST places for monitoring.

With Barn Owl cameras you can:

  • watch for raccoons, skunks, and possums tunneling into stacks

  • catch livestock breaking into hay

  • monitor equipment thieves

  • detect moisture drip points under shelters

  • document storm damage or high winds

 

Your hay is valuable — protect it with visibility.