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Cattle Boards
Grasses, Pastures & Hay
Been unrolling hay
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<blockquote data-quote="bird dog" data-source="post: 1570043" data-attributes="member: 5381"><p>Now that it has warmed up and the grass is taking off, you really can see the benefits of unrolling. I really like unrolling Rye grass hay in bad spots for reseeding purposes. I have a hay meadow that is mostly Bermuda that I graze all spring and then bale later in the summer. Last year it wasn't baled until July but even that hay has enough seeds in it that you get some growth in early spring. </p><p></p><p>The spots where hay was unrolled last year have come up again. This is nowhere like plowing and seeding but just streaks of green in otherwise dull pastures. Its a shame that mud can be an issue for a whole lot of the members on this forum but I encourage everyone I talk to to unroll every chance you get. The really nice thing is there is nothing to clean up come spring. The second is you just don't need as many hay rings because with unrolling, there is nothing to tear up.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="bird dog, post: 1570043, member: 5381"] Now that it has warmed up and the grass is taking off, you really can see the benefits of unrolling. I really like unrolling Rye grass hay in bad spots for reseeding purposes. I have a hay meadow that is mostly Bermuda that I graze all spring and then bale later in the summer. Last year it wasn't baled until July but even that hay has enough seeds in it that you get some growth in early spring. The spots where hay was unrolled last year have come up again. This is nowhere like plowing and seeding but just streaks of green in otherwise dull pastures. Its a shame that mud can be an issue for a whole lot of the members on this forum but I encourage everyone I talk to to unroll every chance you get. The really nice thing is there is nothing to clean up come spring. The second is you just don't need as many hay rings because with unrolling, there is nothing to tear up. [/QUOTE]
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Been unrolling hay
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