It will depend on the size of the bale. Bales come in different sizes, but most will cover somewhere between 20 square feet to 120 square feet at about 2.5 to 3 inches deep. Ask that question when purchasing your bales since the size does vary considerably and some bales are machined compressed and some are hand compressed. For that reason, just looking at a bale and comparing the sizes does not always tell you how many square feet a particular bale will cover.
How many square feet will a ton of salt cover?
9 square feet.
If that is 2' x 4' it would cover 800 square feet. If it is 2" x 4" it would cover about 5.5 square feet.
190
That is like asking how high is up. The size of bales of straw varies widely. I can take a 30 lbs bale and cover a 10 by 12 stall for birthing just fine.
It will depend on the size of the bale. Bales come in different sizes, but most will cover somewhere between 20 square feet to 120 square feet at about 2.5 to 3 inches deep. Ask that question when purchasing your bales since the size does vary considerably and some bales are machined compressed and some are hand compressed. For that reason, just looking at a bale and comparing the sizes does not always tell you how many square feet a particular bale will cover.
That really depends on the size and weight of the bale, as well as the depth of the cover. One large round bale of hay can be unrolled for at least 20 or 30 yards with a depth of 8 inches, where as a small square will only cover 5 square feet of area if all the flakes were put together in a square or rectangle.
I would guess about 70-80 bales
Tiles that are two feet on a side cover 4 square feet. 378 of them cover 1512 square feet.
A bundle of Shingles will cover roughly 33 square feet. A square of Shingles (3 Bundles) will cover 100 square feet.
"Square feet" aren't things that are used to cover area."35 square feet" is an amount of area that you have to cover with something.
How many square feet will a ton of salt cover?
Three square feet would cover one square yard or 36 square inches.
9 square feet.
The fertilizer will cover a square plot 20 feet by 20 feet.
Exactly 10 square feet!