1. You can't finish mowing within your quality window.
In high-moisture regions, letting cut crop sit too long risks quality loss. In drier climates like the western U.S., crops can dry out before baling is complete. Either way, the clock is working against you.
Wyatt Gigot of MG Hay Farms and Thunderstruck Farms in Garden City, Kansas, knows this pressure firsthand. His operation runs 10,000 irrigated acres, aiming for five cuttings of alfalfa during the growing season, spread across 30-day intervals. They also double-crop triticale in the spring and sorghum in the fall. With that kind of calendar, they need a faster cure and dry down time that keeps their season on track.
When Gigot switched to disc mowers from a self-propelled machine, smaller windrows meant faster dry-down, more consistent hay quality and fewer input costs. One disc mower replaced two self-propelled swathers, sparing two operators and reducing fuel costs in the process. "It was an absolute no brainer in our eyes to make the change," Gigot says.
Based on CLAAS data, most operations can cut 250 acres in about 28.5 hours with a single 13-foot mower. A double mower brings that down to 16 hours, and a 30-foot triple mower down to 11.2 hours. For peak efficiency, a 35-foot mower reduces time invested to 9.5 hours, nearly one-third of the time of a single mower. Fewer passes also mean less fuel burned and less soil compaction.
Ask yourself:
• How many acres do I need to cover each day?
• What’s the return on investment or ROI of cutting my acres in one day versus two, from both a quality and time-savings perspective?
• What size tractor am I working with?
Your region, cutting windows and crop type all shape when a single mower stops being enough. A mid-sized forage operation in Kansas (average 27 inches of rainfall per year) will pencil out very differently than the same operation in Pennsylvania (average 42 inches). If you can't complete mowing within the timeframe your crop quality demands, it's time to look at a double or triple mower.
Debating between a double or triple mower? Daily acreage goals, target completion time and available tractor horsepower are the deciding factors. Triple mowers require more horsepower, but tractors with a front hitch and PTO capability are worth exploring — in many markets, they offer a path to added capacity. CLAAS AXION tractors are well-suited for triple mower configurations and pull double duty across a range of farm tasks. Additionally, the CLAAS ARION is a great fit for double mowers and offers flexibility for various tasks around the farm like loader work and baling.




