After a day of multitasking in the tractor cab cutting hay, Jared Swiontek would feel every acre.
The combination of manually navigating the disc mower across rolling, puzzle-piece shaped fields of 60 acres or less while dodging rocks or gopher holes took a physical and mental toll.
“Cutting hay, even on a small farm, is more challenging than people realize,” says Swiontek, who farms about 600 acres in Fergus Falls, Minnesota. “Steering the tractor, running hydraulics on the mower and looking for obstacles at 8 miles per hour all day is exhausting.”
That all changed when Swiontek added precision guidance.
In 2025, he upgraded mowers to a New Holland 313 Plus Discbine. At the same time, he invested in Topcon’s Value Line auto steer system and had it installed on their New Holland T8010 front-wheel assist tractor.
“We had never utilized precision ag technology on the farm, because we weren’t sure the payback would justify the price,” he says. “But we wanted to take full advantage of the capability upgrades on our mower, so we were motivated to invest in a precision guidance system that made sense for our size.”
He also needed to maximize limited labor capacity. Swiontek farms with his father, Tim, but also works full-time as a seed advisor for Beck’s Hybrids.
In addition to 250 acres of hayland, the farm grows corn and soybeans. Their alfalfa or alfalfa-grass mix is cut three times per year, with the majority round baled as wet haylage feedstock for 70 cow-calf pairs and backgrounding 150-200 feeder cattle.
“We have a pretty active farm, and my dad is 65 years old. As he gets older, it’s going to get harder for us to accomplish as much in a day unless we make things easier,” Swiontek says. “We needed a solution that allowed us to be more productive and efficient.”
While mid-size and large farms have long capitalized on the simplicity and functionality of auto-steer, smaller haying operations are finding an affordable, reliable entry point into precision guidance.