Thursday, May 19, 2011

Delaware County Scissor Cut Results 5/17/11

The old timers always said, “a cold wet May, means a barn full of hay”. I guess I’m almost an old timer now, and I say a cold wet May is depressing.

Most farmers we talk to are itching to get started early this year to make high quality forage, and know that the rainy weather is making it harder to achieve this goal. Our data from this week unfortunately confirms this. All of the fields we sampled rapidly increased in NDF over the past week, and a number of fields were beginning to show heads.

Read our entire report and see the field by field results. Click Here


Friday, May 13, 2011

Scissor Cut results 5/10/2011

We are monitoring 48 hay fields in Delaware County for NDF content to predict optimum first cutting timing. Haying time is almost here.

Highlights of Week 2

  • NDF has increased slowly in the past week, but observations indicate grass has begun stem elongation and fiber will increase rapidly in the next week
  • This week’s tests suggest harvest should begin next week!. (right on the long term average)
  • Corn planting and hay harvest will conflict on most farms this year. Make plans park the corn planter when hay is ready and complete harvest of core acres before finishing corn planting.

Click Here to see our full report and site by site results

Friday, May 6, 2011

Is 2011 the Year to Wide Swath?



Forage quality has never been more important than right now. With record feed prices, higher forage rations are not just desirable, they are the key to thriving in the dairy business.

Timely harvest is the most critical step in achieving forage quality. Check out my previous post and stay tuned to our scissor cut sample results to hit the optimum harvest window. The rainy weather this spring may have you worried, though. How will you squeeze in enough good days to get that great stuff in the silo? Wide swathing may be just what you need.

The graph above shows results from Tom Kilcer in 2010. With a full swath mowed at 9:00 am, hay was ready to chop by mid afternoon, with tedding right after mowing it was ready by 11:30. In 2004, a very wet May, we measured drying rates in very challenging drying conditions. Grass mowed into a wide swath dried about 1% point per hour, if tedded right after mowing it dried at 2% points per hour, in a windrow it did not dry at all.

If the weather is really challenging, or your mower won't make a swath of at least 90% of the cutter bar width, try tedding for silage harvest. It means another trip over the filed, but great quality hay in the silo may be priceless come next winter.

Wide swathing can turn a one day weather window into grass in th silo. If the present weather trend continues, one day windows may be all we get.

Wide swathing is still worth doing even if we have great weather. The rapid dry down saves sugars, yielding higher energy silages. Silage at the correct moisture has lower soluble protein, helping more forage fit in a ration.

2011 may just the right time to give wide swath haylage a try.

Dale Dewing

Scissor Cuts 5/3/11


We just finished our first week of Scissor Cut samples for 2011.




For as cold and wet as it has been, hay was taller and more advanced than we thought it might be. Fields were 2-4 inches shorter than the multi-year average, and very nearly the same in NDF.










Dale Dewing