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Big Bale Feeder

Product Details

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★ ★ ★ ★ ★ (66) Read reviews »

Great way to feed round and square bales while reducing wasted hay. It pays for itself in 1 year!

We’ve added a 3/8" reinforcement rod above and below the feeding holes for extra support against large, pushing rams or ewes.

Note: We sell wire panels, hinges and snap clips individually. This way you can design according to your situation or need. See “Customization” section below for more information.

Not for use with cattle, horses or horned animals.

⚠ California Residents: Proposition 65 Information

  • Big Bale Wire Panel

    Item #938120 | Weight 19.00 lbs
    In Stock
    $80.75
  • Big Bale Wire Panel, pack of 6

    Item #9381201 | Weight 114.00 lbs
    In Stock
    $484.50
  • Wire Panel Hinge, 48" tall

    Item #965401 | Weight 0.40 lbs
    In Stock
    $6.25
  • Snap Clip, Zinc Plated

    Item #965405 | Weight 0.20 lbs
    In Stock
    $2.25
  • Snap Clip, Stainless Steel

    Item #965406 | Weight 0.20 lbs
    In Stock
    $16.00
Videos & Data
Accessories
Reviews (66)
Big Bale Feeder Play
Big Bale Feeder
Connecting Panels with Wire Hinges Play
Connecting Panels with Wire Hinges

Instructions/Diagrams:

  • Big Bale Feeder Instructions [990 KB]

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Customization

How many panels, hinges and clips are needed for a round bale?

4 ft dia. bale:
5 panels, 4 connector hinges, 2 snap clips
5 ft dia. bale:
6 panels, 5 connector hinges, 2 snap clips
6 ft dia. bale:
7 panels, 6 connector hinges, 2 snap clips


Specs

Wire Panel:

  • Hot-dip galvanized steel
  • 48" tall x 40" long
  • 4 - 8" x 12" eating holes with 1/4" reinforcement rods top and bottom
  • 3/8" dia support rods (outer rods & 4 vertical internal rods)
  • 1/4" dia rods elsewhere
  • 4 head-holes per panel


Benefits

Can pay for itself in 1 year… Calculating the lost $$ due to wasted hay provides a picture of the relative value of a Big Bale Hay Feeder. Assume 40 ewes eat 5 lbs of hay for 165 days. Assume hay costs $190/ton (9¢/lb).

Big Bale Feeder—10% wastage, $297 wasted hay.

Other feeders—25% wastage, $750 wasted hay.

The $453 difference pays for a Premier Big Bale Feeder feeder—in only 1 year!

  • Reinforced, double rod eating holes for pushy rams and ewes
  • Folds flat—easy to store and move
  • Adult sheep can’t get inside it
  • More durable than feeders made with cheap farmstore wire panels
  • Adapts to most round or square bale sizes­
  • Ships FREE via Ground service when ordering more than one panel. Most need 5–7 panels.

Shepherd’s Choice™ Management Tip

Due to weather variability during the haying season, producers may be feeding poorer quality hay during the winter months. As a result, late gestation and lactating ewes will need more protein in the grain mix. One can use soybean, dry distillers grains or corn gluten feed. The hay may also have less energy per pound—grain feeding levels may need to be increased by a half- to full-pound per day. Lastly, if your hay is mostly grass, consider feeding at least 1% limestone in the grain mix to improve calcium levels.

Looking for ration advice? We can help customize a feed ration for your situation.
—Dan Morrical, Ph.D., Small Ruminant Nutritionist


How to Use

Average of 40 ewes per 6 panel feeder is advised. (Too many ewes will cause fighting for access.) 1200 lb hay bale should last about 5 days.

1. Panels are easy to carry and store

1. Panels are easy to carry and store

They can be carried or dragged short distances by hand (6 panels weigh 108 lbs) or transported by ATV. Unlike most other big bale feeders, Premier’s wire panel feeders stack flat.
2. Joining panels with wire hinges

2. Joining panels with wire hinges

Join all panels with wire connector hinges (see inset). For 6 panels you will need 5 hinges. We rarely remove the hinges after joining the panels.
3. Adding a large round bale

3. Adding a large round bale

Use a tractor or loader to place a round bale on either of its flat ends. Remove all twine, plastic or netting. Be careful to prevent the “freed” hay from unwinding. Remove any outer spoiled hay with a pitchfork and scatter it as bedding.
4. Wrap panels around bale and close with snap clips

4. Wrap panels around bale and close with snap clips

Wrap the panel “system” around the bale. Connect the last opening with snap clips (see inset).
Set up the feeder so the horizontal rods face "out". When feeding, rams and ewes will push into the welds, reducing wear and tear on the panels.

Tip: To eliminate risk of sheep tipping over an empty feeder and thereby injuring themselves, drive a single steel post into the ground and secure 1 corner of the bale feeder to it. The post can stay in place all winter. Having noted that we rarely do this. We simply allow the sheep to tip the feeder over. Our last injury was 4 years ago—and we use 20 feeders all winter long.


Precautions

What NOT to do with Big Bale Feeders:

  1. Don’t use them for cattle or horses.
  2. Don’t use them with horned sheep or goats. We have tried this and know that they may get their heads caught and die.
  3. Don’t place bales on their curved (rolling) side. Bales may mushroom and collapse upon a feeding ewe.
  4. Don’t lift the feeder with the tractor loader. This puts unnecessary stress on the welds.
  5. Don’t let panels freeze to the ground.
  6. Don’t feed more than 40-50 ewes per feeder. Too many ewes per feeder may cause them to fight for access—which can result in poor-doing (or even dead) sheep.

Listed below are recommended optional components or related items. Your particular situation may require alternative recommendations. Please call and talk to our consultants if there are any questions at 800-282-6631.

  • Wire Panel Hinge, 48" tall
    Wire Panels and Accessories

    Wire Panel Hinge, 48" tall

    Item #965401 - In Stock

    Provides a strong, reliable connection that is also a 360° hinge. Use to easily attach wire livestock panels and gates together.

    $6.25
  • Snap Clip, Zinc Plated
    Handling Equipment

    Snap Clip, Zinc Plated

    Item #965405 - In Stock

    Use to connect wire panels and hang poultry waterers and feeders.

    $2.25
  • Snap Clip, Stainless Steel
    Handling Equipment

    Snap Clip, Stainless Steel

    Item #965406 - In Stock

    Use to connect wire panels and hang poultry waterers and feeders.

    $16.00
  • PortaTrough™ 3
    PortaTroughs

    PortaTrough™ 3

    Item #938010 - In Stock

    Easy to clean 3 ft livestock feeders used to provide grain, minerals, salt or water. Stackable for easy movement and storage.

    $55.75
  • PortaTrough™ 5
    PortaTroughs

    PortaTrough™ 5

    Item #938000 - In Stock

    Portable 5 ft feeder withstands all weather and animal conditions. Stackable for easy movement and storage.

    $97.75
  • Livestock Scratching Brush (red/blue), large
    2025 New Products

    Livestock Scratching Brush (red/blue), large

    Item #293100 - In Stock

    Stiff bristled scratching post for sheep, goats, horses and cattle. Helps animals stay clean and removes irritants, like parasites.

    $53.75
Average Rating: ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ 4.6 out of 5
Number of reviews: 66 customers reviewed this product.
Recommended: 61 out of 66 said they would recommend this product to a friend.

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field tested badge
We had a hay waste problem with our old feeders so we came up with a solution. We don’t know what we would use to feed our sheep with if we didn’t have these Big Bale Feeders. We recommend not lifting them with the forks of a tractor. Once the sheep clean up a bale, we move the feeder to a different spot to prevent waste buildup in a single area. We love these feeders.
Big Bale Feeder
★ ★ ★ ★ ★
March 13, 2025

Christine K from Massachusetts

Great feeder! Hay waste was so much less!

Big Bale Feeder
★ ★ ★ ★ ★
February 25, 2025

Martha P from Virginia

These hay panels are well made, sturdy, and easy to set up and remove, so that placing each new bale in a different place in the pasture is not a pain. That allows the waste (yes there is some, but mostly ewes spitting out the coarser stems) to be distributed in a way to increase soil health.

Big Bale Feeder
★ ★ ★ ★ ★
December 26, 2024

George R from Kentucky

Though kind of expensive, I highly recommend this big bale feeder. Easy to set up, it saves a lot of hay that would otherwise be wasted.

Big Bale Feeder
★ ★ ★ ★ ★
September 26, 2024

Heather L from Wisconsin

Bale feeder works great for large sheep that agressively destroy feeders.

Big Bale Feeder
★ ★ ★ ★ ★
August 4, 2024

Michael & Sheri C from Iowa

This is the best way to feed sheep when you have to be gone. It closes in on the bale as they eat the hay. Very sturdy wire panels. Love it!

1 2 3 4 … 14 Next »

About Conductivity

Conductivity measures the amount of electrical current a material can carry. The opposite measure is known as resistance.

Tinned Copper Superconductor

Many of Premier’s electric net fences feature a green and white superconductor that has both stainless steel and tinned copper filaments for optimal conductivity.

These “premium” nets are 10 times more conductive (38 ohms per 1000') than “basic” nets offered by our competitors. This enables the electric pulse to travel much farther and be less affected by weed contact.

Customers who are unhappy with netting are often those who’ve chosen nets from China or their farmstore equivalents.

Types of Line Posts

Line posts are built into the net. Three options are available.*

Line Posts Compared
  1. Single Spike (SS)
    The best choice, unless your soils are always soft or very hard.
  2. Double Spike (DS)
    Posts allow you to push in the spikes with your foot. When soil is hard or rocky, double spikes are more difficult to install and remove.
  3. Drivable Posts (DP)
    Allows use of a mallet or dead blow hammer for installing posts in dry, hard or rocky soil. Features a “spike stop” for extra support and internal fiberglass ribs for added strength.

Tip: To insert a line post into frozen or hard soil, use a power tool to drill pilot holes.

* Not all fences have all line post options.

About Positive/Negative (Pos/Neg) Nets

Is your area dry?

Conventional electrified fence systems rely on soil moisture to be effective. However, not all areas have the required moisture.

Dry soil increases resistance—a weaker, less effective pulse occurs that does not deter animals.

To overcome this, Pos/Neg nets* are wired to allow the use of every other horizontal strand as an extension of the ground terminal. Because half the strands are connected to the ground terminal or ground rod, reliance on soil moisture is reduced. A PowerLink must be purchased separately to make the secondary ground connection.

How it works…

In order to receive a shock, the animal must touch both a positive (hot) and negative (grounded) strand at the same time. This will deliver more pain to the animal than an all hot net (Pos/Pos) because moisture in the soil is not required to complete the circuit.

Pos/Neg fences can be converted to Pos/Pos in moist conditions. Remember, all fences must be kept free of vegetation.

* Not all fences have Pos/Neg options.

Line Post Spacing

“Plus” nets—6'8" spacings between built-in line posts*

Line Post Spacing

Standard nets—10' or 12' spacings between built-in line posts*

* Spacings are approximate.
Distance between built-in line posts may vary by product.

Essential Energizer Advice

  • Buy a larger energizer than necessary. When the fence pleases, most folks will buy more fence—and need additional output.
  • Use a low-impedance intermittent pulse energizer.
  • Use a fence tester to check the voltage often.
  • Use enough ground rod(s)—included with our energizer kits.
  • Don’t allow your lead acid battery to discharge below 40%.
  • Use insulated wire that is designed for electric fences.
  • Always connect the fence to an energizer, not an outlet.
  • Visit this link for answers to other common energizer questions.

Two Basic Types

  1. All-in-one Solar
    • Solar units are very portable.
    • Because they need a battery, these units are more costly to purchase and operate than plug-in units.
    • Batteries are less effective in cold temperatures (deplete faster).
    • Most farmstore solar units are too weak, in joules of output, to properly energize netting. That’s why we designed our own.
  2. Plug-in & Battery
    • Least cost to purchase and operate per joule of output.
    • Best for fences exposed to heavy vegetation.
    • Cold temperatures do not affect performance.
    • Recommended for whole-farm systems, but can be complex to install. Higher output requires more ground rods, underground cables, multiple output terminals, etc.

Shipping Zones

Map of Shipping Zones
Dan Morrical

Dr. Dan Morrical, Ph.D.
Premier 1 Supplies

Dan Morrical joined the Iowa State University staff in 1984 as Extension Sheep Specialist after completing his doctorate degree at New Mexico State University. He held the rank of Full Professor as of July 1, 1995 and retired from full-time teaching in 2017.

While at Iowa State University, Dr. Dan Morrical was responsible for educational programs in all areas of sheep production, ranging from nutrition, genetics, marketing and management. Research areas focused on applied projects in the areas of nutrition, forage utilization, genetics, out-of-season breeding and lamb survival.

Dr. Morrical has been heavily involved in providing educational resources to the sheep industry. He has authored over 30 extension fact sheets, ration balancing software programs, grazing videos and co-authored the nutrition chapter of the SID Handbook with Dr. Margaret Benson from Washington State University.

Dr. Morrical now serves as Premier’s on-staff small ruminant nutritionist and sheep production advisor. Most recently, he’s introduced a line of “GOLD FORMULA” mineral premixes under The Shepherd’s Choice® brand, aimed to maximize hoof health and immunity.

Braided vs. Twisted

Braiding instead of twisting the horizontals increases the frequency of metal filaments on the outside of the strand.

Braided vs. Twisted Electric Net Fences

What’s the benefit?

  1. More metal is exposed on the outside of the strand. This enables improved animal to conductor contact. The electric pulse is better able to travel from the fence and into the animal, resulting in a memorable shock.
  2. A tighter, braided weave results in fewer snags when carried or pulled through pastures, reducing frustration.

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California Proposition 65 Warning

⚠ WARNING: This product can expose you to chemicals including Lead, which is known to the State of California to cause cancer and birth defects or other reproductive harm. For more information go to www.P65Warnings.ca.gov.