Shellharbour City Council is preparing to donate more hay bales to struggling farmers.
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Thirty-six bales will be donated in the coming days.
The farmers, two from Albion Park and one from Marulan, didn't receive any hay in the last round of local farmer supplies.
One recipient will be Joe Malanga, a stud and beef cattle farmer at Calderwood.
Mr Malanga said he would receive about ten bales.
"In winter there's not much grass around because we don't normally have a lot of growth, so this will be something to feed the cows," he said.
"At the moment things haven't been too bad because we've had a fair bit of rain. We're recovering from the past two years when it's been very dry, been no grass around and hay's been very expensive to procure.
"It depends on how the season goes, but this will keep us going for a little while."
It's not the first time council has produced hay for drought-affected farmers.
Council produced its first hay bales for farmers in 2018.
Since then, several hundred bales grown in Shellharbour City have been transported to NSW and Queensland.
Previous bales were distributed by Buy a Bale, run by Australian charity Rural Aid.
However, due to the COVID-19 pandemic, the organisation is unable to distribute the most recent batch.
Shellharbour Mayor Marianne Saliba said while council's focus was on keeping the community and staff safe during the pandemic, council is still thinking of the broader community.
"Even though our city has also been affected by drought over the past few years, we are fortunate to have received some coastal rainfall that produces favourable growing conditions for grass," she said.
"We have large parcels of land where mowing can be temporarily suspended to allow grass to grow at suitable locations.
"Council has the ability to produce hay on land it manages at a reasonable cost. With many areas of the country still affected by drought, we will continue to produce hay for farmers while there is a need."