Flip, I can't imagine having hay fields being very rough after 10 years of fertilizing, cutting, raking, baling, and removing hay!
I have one relatively new (2 years) field that is rougher than a cob, The guy that buys my rounds even commented about driving out for me to load them was it's 'like a washboard'. Hopefully it will settle down after a fashion but as of last year it was wicked.
Normally, I don't spear a round in the rear spear (don't even put it on usually) when marshalling bales but in this field it's mandatory. I need one out back to counter the roughness with one on the front and 2 on the front is out of the question.
Hopefully it will settle down but I'm not holding my breath because it's heavy ground. Heavy ground don't usually subside quickly. Around here, all the prime ground is either row cropped or is in produce. Only substandard ground is in forage.
Tis what it is and it a share crop field anyway, like most of what I run forage on are. My owned ground is smooth as a baby's behind because I fitted it prior to initial seeding.
This particular field I had some issues with initially. Seems as though the renter of the house on the parcel decided ti have a nag so they wired off a paddock by the house and proceeded to feed small squares they bought somewhere but in typical renter fashion they never bothered to properly dispose of the poly twine so there were piles of twine hidden in the grass (it's mostly bhrome grass) and I 'found' them. The disc bine cut right over them, no issue, The rake windrowed it. again no issue but when I round baled the forage, my pickup fingers on my round baler 'found' the twine and wadded it up in the pickup. I had to remove the wind guards and some teeth and physically cut the poly out. What a miserable job. Think 'hopefully' I got it all, no issues last year on last cut.
I did have some poly under the turtles on the disc bine but I check them regularly. Nothing worse than poly on bearings and seals, eats them right up. Nasty stuff when not disposed of properly.
My preference is sisal but when you store over winter (small squares), sisal don't work. Mice love the stuff.
In as much as I run very little small squares, all my rounds are in 54 over the edge net, but when I do run small squares, I twine in sisal. I really despise poly.