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Spring time on grass
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<blockquote data-quote="Jeanne - Simme Valley" data-source="post: 1504592" data-attributes="member: 968"><p>HaHa - moisture is not usually a problem in Upstate NY. Baleage is made heavily around here, because it is a rare occasion to get 3 days of sunshine in a row for drying hay in June. July - you generally will get a string of sunshine, but by then it is too mature. Ask me, that is what I fed all winter and I have very thin cows right now. Look at the 2-yr old in the 4th picture with her heifer Fre-Anna.</p><p>Dairy farmers will start putting up haylage any time now (green chop) - if not already started. We will stay green & lush through Sept/Oct. The snow usually comes before we run out of green growing pastures.</p><p>The ground is designed to receive moisture quite regularly. We can get a pretty good rain, and the next day farmers could be out disc-ing.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Jeanne - Simme Valley, post: 1504592, member: 968"] HaHa - moisture is not usually a problem in Upstate NY. Baleage is made heavily around here, because it is a rare occasion to get 3 days of sunshine in a row for drying hay in June. July - you generally will get a string of sunshine, but by then it is too mature. Ask me, that is what I fed all winter and I have very thin cows right now. Look at the 2-yr old in the 4th picture with her heifer Fre-Anna. Dairy farmers will start putting up haylage any time now (green chop) - if not already started. We will stay green & lush through Sept/Oct. The snow usually comes before we run out of green growing pastures. The ground is designed to receive moisture quite regularly. We can get a pretty good rain, and the next day farmers could be out disc-ing. [/QUOTE]
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