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Cattle Boards
Grasses, Pastures & Hay
Baleage vs dry hay
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<blockquote data-quote="ddd75" data-source="post: 1425247" data-attributes="member: 23575"><p>a lot of people are trying it around here.. and a lot of people don't know how to do it. they are making a recipe for disaster.</p><p></p><p>hard on the equipment.. hard on the fields (baling wet, rolling equipment on wet ground).. </p><p></p><p>I don't see the benefit when you consider all the equipment, and expense of bags, just to feed the same nutrition you could feed from the barn. also.. a raccoon or groundhog could ruin a lot of bales or some of a bag if you have a lot around. </p><p></p><p>I bought some individually wrapped bales from a guy (they weren't fermented properly, had yellow, pink, and blue molds growing in them) anyway. he lost a lot to animals ripping them open. didn't matter beacuse they all needed burnt.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="ddd75, post: 1425247, member: 23575"] a lot of people are trying it around here.. and a lot of people don't know how to do it. they are making a recipe for disaster. hard on the equipment.. hard on the fields (baling wet, rolling equipment on wet ground).. I don't see the benefit when you consider all the equipment, and expense of bags, just to feed the same nutrition you could feed from the barn. also.. a raccoon or groundhog could ruin a lot of bales or some of a bag if you have a lot around. I bought some individually wrapped bales from a guy (they weren't fermented properly, had yellow, pink, and blue molds growing in them) anyway. he lost a lot to animals ripping them open. didn't matter beacuse they all needed burnt. [/QUOTE]
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Baleage vs dry hay
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