Here in California, the water supply is obviously a concern as well. The grower I regularly deal with was very concerned at the start of the year, and I doubt last week’s atmospheric river storm did much to calm him down. After all, this is harvest season right now, not replanting season.
All hay is irrigation intensive, but my understanding has long been that premium quality alfalfa hay is especially so. The fields around here used to be flood-irrigated, but as the cost of water has risen over the past 10-15 years, I have seen that practice curtailed drastically. You lose too much water to evaporation. That implies heavy investment in more precise irrigation systems.
I know nothing about farming but there's a global manufacturing shortage right now that is making new parts and new machines scarce, which puts a lot of pressure on the used parts market. I'm guessing there's not much special here and that it's just participating in the global trend.
All hay is irrigation intensive, but my understanding has long been that premium quality alfalfa hay is especially so. The fields around here used to be flood-irrigated, but as the cost of water has risen over the past 10-15 years, I have seen that practice curtailed drastically. You lose too much water to evaporation. That implies heavy investment in more precise irrigation systems.