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Cattle Boards
Grasses, Pastures & Hay
Baling Green Hay
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<blockquote data-quote="T &amp;amp; B farms" data-source="post: 1579058" data-attributes="member: 34352"><p>We bale close to 1000 silage bales a year. Like has been said, baling them wet and wrapping them does not add feed value to them. For us it allows us to get hay put up at the right time for quality. Another positive is there is no waste with balage that is put up right. No flat spot on the bottom of rotten hay. </p><p></p><p>All our dry hay is baled 5'x68" and they will weigh 16-1800 lbs. </p><p>On silage hay, I bale them 5'x 50-55" and at 65% moisture they will usually weigh 2000-2200.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="T & B farms, post: 1579058, member: 34352"] We bale close to 1000 silage bales a year. Like has been said, baling them wet and wrapping them does not add feed value to them. For us it allows us to get hay put up at the right time for quality. Another positive is there is no waste with balage that is put up right. No flat spot on the bottom of rotten hay. All our dry hay is baled 5’x68” and they will weigh 16-1800 lbs. On silage hay, I bale them 5’x 50-55” and at 65% moisture they will usually weigh 2000-2200. [/QUOTE]
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