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Cattle Boards
Grasses, Pastures & Hay
Let the unrolling begin..
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<blockquote data-quote="CalumetFarms" data-source="post: 1716693" data-attributes="member: 36925"><p>I have a question, this is the first year I'm trying unrolling, it seemed simple enough. </p><p>When I start unrolling the first layer or two shed off fine, then the bale stops peeling off and becomes basically a hard slick cylinder. </p><p>I get out and hack through it some, another layer or so comes off then it does it again (that will get old quick). </p><p>If I turn sharp, making the bale skid sideways against the ground, it helps loosen it up temporarily. The slower I go seems better, so I'm in B3 or B4. </p><p>I'm going forward or backward because these twine bales are difficult to identify direction until I see which way works, or doesn't. </p><p>My bales are real tight, but these have a fair bit of clover, seems to be kind of matted. </p><p>[ATTACH=full]10664[/ATTACH]</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="CalumetFarms, post: 1716693, member: 36925"] I have a question, this is the first year I'm trying unrolling, it seemed simple enough. When I start unrolling the first layer or two shed off fine, then the bale stops peeling off and becomes basically a hard slick cylinder. I get out and hack through it some, another layer or so comes off then it does it again (that will get old quick). If I turn sharp, making the bale skid sideways against the ground, it helps loosen it up temporarily. The slower I go seems better, so I'm in B3 or B4. I'm going forward or backward because these twine bales are difficult to identify direction until I see which way works, or doesn't. My bales are real tight, but these have a fair bit of clover, seems to be kind of matted. [ATTACH type="full"]10664[/ATTACH] [/QUOTE]
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Let the unrolling begin..
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