API · /baleweight-api

Hay Bale Weight API

healthy 3,845 Subscribers

Hay and forage bale maths as an API, computed locally and deterministically — the weight, dry-matter and feed-supply numbers a rancher, hay producer or livestock manager plans winter feed with. The round-bale endpoint gives the weight from the cylinder volume (π·r²·width) × the dry-matter density (typically ~9–12 lb/ft³ for cured hay), so a 5×5 ft bale runs about 1,000 lb, and reports the dry-matter weight (≈88 % of as-fed) that actually feeds the animals — buy and ration on dry matter, not gate weight. The square-bale endpoint gives the weight of a rectangular bale from its length, width and height (÷ 1,728 for cubic feet from inches) × the density — a typical 14×18×36-inch small square is about 50 lb, big 3×3 or 4×4 ft bales hundreds — with a reminder that high moisture both adds weight and risks mould and barn-fire heating. The feed-supply endpoint sizes the stack: feed needed = head × daily intake × days (cattle eat ~2–2.5 % of bodyweight, about 25–30 lb of dry matter for a beef cow), and bales = that ÷ the bale weight, so 30 cows for 120 days at 30 lb is about 108 thousand-pound bales — add 10–20 % for feeding waste. Everything is computed locally and deterministically, so it is instant and private. Ideal for ranch- and farm-management tools, hay-trading and livestock apps, and ag calculators. Pure local computation — no key, no third-party service, instant. US units; densities are estimates. 3 compute endpoints. For grain storage use a grain-bin API; for rotational grazing a grazing API.

api.oanor.com/baleweight-api
Get an API key Try in playground → Contact provider

Machine-readable spec so AI agents can integrate this API.

/api/baleweight-api/openapi.json
/api/baleweight-api/llms.txt

Discovery: GET /api/index.json lists every API.

Hay Bale Weight API — live data on the oanor API marketplace

API health

healthy
Uptime
100.00%
Server probes · 24h
Avg latency
71 ms
Server probes · 24h
Subscribers
3,845
active
Total calls
76
last 7 days
status Full status page → · 8 probes/24h

Pricing

Pick a tier — billed monthly, cancel anytime.

Free

Free

  • 7,250 calls / month
  • 2 requests / second
  • Hard cap (429 above quota, no overage)
  • 7,250 calls/month
  • 2 req/sec
  • Round + square + feed supply
  • No credit card
Sign in to subscribe

Starter

€8.90 /month

  • 75,500 calls / month
  • 6 requests / second
  • Hard cap (429 above quota, no overage)
  • 75,500 calls/month
  • 6 req/sec
  • Dry-matter & herd planning
  • Email support
Sign in to subscribe

Pro

€29.20 /month

  • 320,000 calls / month
  • 15 requests / second
  • Hard cap (429 above quota, no overage)
  • 320,000 calls/month
  • 15 req/sec
  • Ranch-mgmt & hay-trading pipelines
  • Priority support
Sign in to subscribe

Mega

€89.80 /month

  • 1,500,000 calls / month
  • 40 requests / second
  • Hard cap (429 above quota, no overage)
  • 1,500,000 calls/month
  • 40 req/sec
  • Co-op & enterprise scale
  • Dedicated SLA
Sign in to subscribe

Built by

Related APIs

Other APIs with overlapping tags.

Equine Care API — oanor API marketplace

Equine Care API

Horse-care maths as an API, computed locally and deterministically — the everyday numbers a horse owner, barn manager or vet tech runs without reaching for a chart. The weight endpoint estimates body weight from a weight-tape measurement using the classic formula weight ≈ heart girth² × body length ÷ a type divisor (adult 330, yearling 301, weanling 280, pony 299) with measurements in inches — a horse with a 72-inch girth and 66-inch length comes out at about 1,037 lb (470 kg), the number you actually dose wormer and feed against. The feed endpoint turns body weight and a goal into daily forage: horses eat roughly 1.5–2.5 % of body weight in dry-matter forage a day, so a 1,000 lb horse on maintenance wants about 15–20 lb of hay, more to gain and less to slim. The gestation endpoint gives the foaling due date and the normal 320–362 day window from a breeding date — a mare bred on 1 April is due around 7 March the next year, give or take three weeks. Everything is computed locally and deterministically, so it is instant and private. Ideal for barn-management and horse-care apps, breeding and foaling trackers, feed-calculator and tack-shop sites, and equine-vet tools. Pure local computation — no key, no third-party service, instant. Live, nothing stored. 3 compute endpoints. Educational estimates — not veterinary advice.

api.oanor.com/equine-api

Rotational Grazing API — oanor API marketplace

Rotational Grazing API

Rotational-grazing maths as an API, computed locally and deterministically — the animal-unit, grazing-day and acreage numbers a rancher or homesteader moves a herd by. It all hangs on the animal unit: a 1000-pound cow eating about 26 pounds of dry matter a day. The animalunits endpoint converts a mixed herd to that common basis — a cow is 1.0 AU, a cow-calf pair 1.3, a horse 1.25, a sheep 0.2, a goat 0.17 — so ten cows and fifty sheep are 20 AU demanding 520 pounds of forage a day; pass a weight instead and it scales by weight ÷ 1000. The days endpoint works out how long a paddock lasts: grazing days = (acres × forage per acre × utilization) ÷ (animal units × 26), where the classic “take half, leave half” puts utilization near 50 %, so five acres yielding 3,000 lb at 50 % feeds 10 AU for about 29 days. The acres endpoint sizes the paddock the other way — acres = (AU × 26 × days) ÷ (forage × utilization) — so 20 AU for a 30-day move needs about 10.4 acres. Everything is computed locally and deterministically, so it is instant and private. Ideal for ranching, regenerative-agriculture, homesteading and farm-management app developers, paddock-planner and stocking-rate tools, and grazing-chart software. Pure local computation — no key, no third-party service, instant. US units; forage yield varies with season — measure it. Live, nothing stored. 3 compute endpoints.

api.oanor.com/grazing-api

Animal Gestation API — oanor API marketplace

Animal Gestation API

Animal gestation and egg-incubation date maths as an API, computed locally and deterministically — the breeding and hatch calendar a farmer, breeder or vet works to. The gestation endpoint takes a species and a breeding date and returns the expected due date with the normal early-to-late window: due date = breeding date + the species' average gestation, so a cow bred on the 1st of January (283 days) calves around the 11th of October, a dog (63 days) whelps nine weeks later, a goat 150 days, a horse 340, a pig 114 — dozens of species from rabbit to camel to elephant, with an override for your own herd average. Give a target birth date instead and it works backwards to the date to breed. The incubation endpoint does the same for poultry and birds — chicken 21 days, duck 28, goose 30, quail 18, ostrich 42 and more — returning the hatch date, the lockdown date (stop turning and raise humidity ~3 days before hatch) and the day-7 and day-14 candling dates. Date arithmetic is exact, including leap years. Everything is computed locally and deterministically, so it is instant and private. Ideal for livestock, breeding, veterinary, farm-management and hatchery app developers, gestation-calculator and breeding-calendar tools, and agricultural education. Pure local computation — no key, no third-party service, instant. Dates as YYYY-MM-DD. Live, nothing stored. 2 compute endpoints. Averages, not a veterinary prediction.

api.oanor.com/gestation-api

Commodities API — oanor API marketplace

Commodities API

Live commodity futures prices as an API — the energy, grain, soft and livestock commodity complex, served from Yahoo Finance. For any commodity it returns the front-month futures price, the previous close, the absolute and percentage change on the day, the day's high and low and the 52-week high and low, with the price's currency and quoting unit (e.g. USD per barrel, US cents per bushel). Look a commodity up by name or alias (crude oil, Brent, natural gas, gasoline, corn, wheat, soybeans, coffee, sugar, cocoa, cotton, orange juice, live cattle, lean hogs and more), pull a category board (energy, grains, softs, livestock) ranked by the day's move, or get the whole board in one call. The commodity-quote layer for trading, markets and dashboard apps. Live, no key. Distinct from the precious-metals API — this is the energy, agricultural and soft-commodity complex.

api.oanor.com/commodities-api

Frequently asked questions

Quick answers about pricing, quotas, and integration.

How do I get an API key for Hay Bale Weight API?
Sign up for free at oanor.com, generate an API key from the developer dashboard, and call Hay Bale Weight API with the x-oanor-key header. No credit card needed for the free tier.
What's the rate limit for Hay Bale Weight API?
Free tier allows 1 request per second. Paid plans scale up to 50 requests per second on the Mega tier. Hard limits return HTTP 429 above the quota — no surprise overage charges.
How much does Hay Bale Weight API cost?
Hay Bale Weight API has a free tier with 100 calls / month. Paid plans start at €8.90 / month with higher quotas and faster rate limits.
Can I cancel my subscription anytime?
Yes. Plans are billed monthly and you can cancel anytime from your billing dashboard. No long-term contracts and no cancellation fee.
Is Hay Bale Weight API GDPR-compliant?
All requests to Hay Bale Weight API go through our EU-based gateway. Your upstream API key never leaves our server and no personal data is shared with the upstream provider beyond the request you send.

Pick an endpoint from the list on the left to see its details and try it.

Code snippets

Sign up to get an API key, then call any path under your slug.

curl https://api.oanor.com/baleweight-api/SOME_PATH \
  -H "x-oanor-key: oanor_test_..."
const res = await fetch("https://api.oanor.com/baleweight-api/SOME_PATH", {
  headers: { "x-oanor-key": "oanor_test_..." }
});
const data = await res.json();
$ch = curl_init("https://api.oanor.com/baleweight-api/SOME_PATH");
curl_setopt($ch, CURLOPT_RETURNTRANSFER, true);
curl_setopt($ch, CURLOPT_HTTPHEADER, ["x-oanor-key: oanor_test_..."]);
$response = curl_exec($ch);
import requests
r = requests.get(
    "https://api.oanor.com/baleweight-api/SOME_PATH",
    headers={"x-oanor-key": "oanor_test_..."},
)
print(r.json())

Ratings

Sign in to rate.

No reviews yet.

Discussion

Ask questions, share usage tips, get answers from the provider and other developers. Public — anyone can read.

Sign in to start a thread or reply.

Sign in

New thread

/ 4000

📌 Pinned 🔒 Locked

·

· ·

/ 4000

🔒 This thread is locked — no new replies.

  • No threads yet — start the discussion.

Support

Private 1:1 support with the provider — billing questions, integration issues, account problems. Only you and the provider team can see these threads.

Sign in to open a support ticket.

Sign in

Open new ticket

Describe what you need help with. The provider team gets an email and replies on the ticket page.

  • No tickets yet for this API.

Subscription active — calls can start immediately.

Send your first request —

Subscription active — copy a snippet and fire off your first call.