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Vermeer 504r Classic Baler
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<blockquote data-quote="504RP" data-source="post: 1751588" data-attributes="member: 40335"><p>I accidentally entered my reply to jltrent before I was finished saying what I had to say about silage balers.</p><p></p><p>So as I was saying I personally have never wrapped any hay for silage but plan on doing it some day. But I feel that even if you don't wrap the hay baled by a silage baler. You still benefit a lot and benefit more than you would with hay baled by a standard round baler.</p><p></p><p>Because cattle will clean up chopped hay a whole lot better than unchopped hay. Especially if you feed the hay in good round bale skirted feeders.</p><p></p><p>The combination of feeding chopped hay in skirted hay ring feeders really cuts down on waste. In my opinion feeding chopped hay also helps cattle digest the hay better, and they benefit more from the nutrients in the hay. </p><p>Especially since cattle rely more on regurgitating, chewing their cud process to absorb nutrients from the hay.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="504RP, post: 1751588, member: 40335"] I accidentally entered my reply to jltrent before I was finished saying what I had to say about silage balers. So as I was saying I personally have never wrapped any hay for silage but plan on doing it some day. But I feel that even if you don’t wrap the hay baled by a silage baler. You still benefit a lot and benefit more than you would with hay baled by a standard round baler. Because cattle will clean up chopped hay a whole lot better than unchopped hay. Especially if you feed the hay in good round bale skirted feeders. The combination of feeding chopped hay in skirted hay ring feeders really cuts down on waste. In my opinion feeding chopped hay also helps cattle digest the hay better, and they benefit more from the nutrients in the hay. Especially since cattle rely more on regurgitating, chewing their cud process to absorb nutrients from the hay. [/QUOTE]
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