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Hay--feeding round bales
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<blockquote data-quote="Stocker Steve" data-source="post: 959388" data-attributes="member: 1715"><p>Depends -- on a dry ridge grass takes years to fill in, but on a damp area with quack grass or other sod formers you should have grass the following summer.</p><p>I bale feed in semi permenent meadows during the winter when we have free cement. Less wind and more sod formers. I do use bale rings and cross fences which can be a pain at times..</p><p>I bale feed in selected better drained paddock(s) during the spring and then they get renovated. My renovation paddocks yielded 40% more corn this year compared to conventional corn on corn ground.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Stocker Steve, post: 959388, member: 1715"] Depends -- on a dry ridge grass takes years to fill in, but on a damp area with quack grass or other sod formers you should have grass the following summer. I bale feed in semi permenent meadows during the winter when we have free cement. Less wind and more sod formers. I do use bale rings and cross fences which can be a pain at times.. I bale feed in selected better drained paddock(s) during the spring and then they get renovated. My renovation paddocks yielded 40% more corn this year compared to conventional corn on corn ground. [/QUOTE]
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