14 June 2014 #1 A ash768w New User Joined 14 June 2014 Messages 5 Visit site Can anyone help? I have cut my grass for haylage and was going to row and Bale today but it has rained overnight. Will it now be no good for haylage?
Can anyone help? I have cut my grass for haylage and was going to row and Bale today but it has rained overnight. Will it now be no good for haylage?
14 June 2014 #2 E Exploding Chestnuts Well-Known Member Joined 22 June 2013 Messages 8,436 Visit site It ill be fine, it starts to spoil if it has been fluffed up and then gets rained on, but will be fine, assuming you let it dry out a bit.
It ill be fine, it starts to spoil if it has been fluffed up and then gets rained on, but will be fine, assuming you let it dry out a bit.
14 June 2014 #3 A ash768w New User Joined 14 June 2014 Messages 5 Visit site It's been spread out but not rowed. Does that matter?
14 June 2014 #4 E Exploding Chestnuts Well-Known Member Joined 22 June 2013 Messages 8,436 Visit site oh dear, not much else you can do with it anyway ,,,,,,,,, do you have someone who can look at it and tell you when to bale, I would do it asap., that is to say when sun has dried it a bit.
oh dear, not much else you can do with it anyway ,,,,,,,,, do you have someone who can look at it and tell you when to bale, I would do it asap., that is to say when sun has dried it a bit.
14 June 2014 #5 E Exploding Chestnuts Well-Known Member Joined 22 June 2013 Messages 8,436 Visit site http://www.uwex.edu/ces/forage/pubs/drying_forage.pdf They talk about chopping haylage, in the UK this would create silage for cattle feeding, other than that the basics are the same Last edited: 14 June 2014
http://www.uwex.edu/ces/forage/pubs/drying_forage.pdf They talk about chopping haylage, in the UK this would create silage for cattle feeding, other than that the basics are the same
14 June 2014 #6 E Exploding Chestnuts Well-Known Member Joined 22 June 2013 Messages 8,436 Visit site ash768w said: It's been spread out but not rowed. Does that matter? Click to expand... you mean turned? when cut it forms swaths, combining swaths forms a windrow, the windrow is baled asap, before it rains! Last edited: 14 June 2014
ash768w said: It's been spread out but not rowed. Does that matter? Click to expand... you mean turned? when cut it forms swaths, combining swaths forms a windrow, the windrow is baled asap, before it rains!
14 June 2014 #8 A ash768w New User Joined 14 June 2014 Messages 5 Visit site It's been turned but not rowed for baling
15 June 2014 #9 M Micky Well-Known Member Joined 11 July 2013 Messages 1,664 Location Top of the world Visit site Hay has to be very dry to bale, haylage not so much so a bit of rain shouldnt harm it
15 June 2014 #10 A ash768w New User Joined 14 June 2014 Messages 5 Visit site Great thanks. There's a fine line between haylage and silage isn't there?
15 June 2014 #11 M Micky Well-Known Member Joined 11 July 2013 Messages 1,664 Location Top of the world Visit site Silage is generally for cows, too rich for horses, haylage is a fairly recent'thing', I stick with hay personally ( haylage too rich for my lad)
Silage is generally for cows, too rich for horses, haylage is a fairly recent'thing', I stick with hay personally ( haylage too rich for my lad)