That's going to be way too wet. The best thing you can do is let it drop right where you mow sit for a good 8 hrs, then be slick and come back with a merger and baler train for one pass, two functions, or a merger then blow it into a wagon to be ensiled. Even mowing into tight windrows loses a bunch of the nutritional value and it has to dry longer. The only time I do anything is when the growth exceeds what the livestock can keep up with. Then I go in with everything set as high as it will go, instead of letting it go to seed and losing tons of forage per acre. Luckily, what you will have to feed out is more than covered by what you took off the rest of the year, but I STILL mob the cattle through out the paddocks for the benefits they leave behind. If you want to raise good cattle and improve your ground? Go burn your cow barns down. You'll thank me for it in 5 years. Don't forget to let the cows out 1st of course.
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What moisture did that end up at? Seems to me it would be too wet to put up well...
Is it for a green feed system do you feed the bales to animals straight away.?
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I Guess its possible to make okay silage if they dry that bale to less than 60% moisture before wrapping it.
Way too wet ... Moisture must be around 65% for quality silage
That's a mighty job especially if the rain is on the way
Nice set up.
That's going to be way too wet. The best thing you can do is let it drop right where you mow sit for a good 8 hrs, then be slick and come back with a merger and baler train for one pass, two functions, or a merger then blow it into a wagon to be ensiled. Even mowing into tight windrows loses a bunch of the nutritional value and it has to dry longer.
The only time I do anything is when the growth exceeds what the livestock can keep up with. Then I go in with everything set as high as it will go, instead of letting it go to seed and losing tons of forage per acre. Luckily, what you will have to feed out is more than covered by what you took off the rest of the year, but I STILL mob the cattle through out the paddocks for the benefits they leave behind.
If you want to raise good cattle and improve your ground? Go burn your cow barns down. You'll thank me for it in 5 years. Don't forget to let the cows out 1st of course.
Are you zero grazing
Looked like chef Ramsey in the field
Need some drydown
Chef Ramsey is going to say it's tasteless and soggy, along with too fibrous.
Thats very dangerous for your animals
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What moisture did that end up at? Seems to me it would be too wet to put up well...
I'm guessing it wouldn't be used as animal feed. Probably bedding. Or Maybe feed it to cows that same day. Kinda like transporting grass
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It's a blooming crop, woody stems!