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Cattle Boards
Grasses, Pastures & Hay
Quality of hay cut late
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<blockquote data-quote="TexasBred" data-source="post: 1430703" data-attributes="member: 6897"><p>Again, location and weather has a lot to do with it. Ideal time between cuttings for coastal is actually around 21 days. Fertilized hay will grow plenty in that time and you'll have prime hay. Maybe not the volume you want but much better quality than hay cut long past prime. Once lignin begins to develop within the cell walls digestibility drops dramatically and quickly.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="TexasBred, post: 1430703, member: 6897"] Again, location and weather has a lot to do with it. Ideal time between cuttings for coastal is actually around 21 days. Fertilized hay will grow plenty in that time and you'll have prime hay. Maybe not the volume you want but much better quality than hay cut long past prime. Once lignin begins to develop within the cell walls digestibility drops dramatically and quickly. [/QUOTE]
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Quality of hay cut late
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