Loading...
The Rural Voice, 2006-01, Page 21Everett Thomas talks to a producer attending Forage Focus 2005. cent bloom and succeeding harvests at a six to seven week interval. With modern higher -producing herds, today's recommended management sees the first cut at the late bud stage with succeeding harvests at 30-35 days. This doesn't result in higher yields of tonnage of forage, even if it results in a fourth cut, he said. It may even result in a shorter life for the alfalfa stand. "However, the goal of alfalfa production on dairy farms is milk per acre, not tons of alfalfa per acre," Thomas said. "The goal of alfalfa management at Miner Institute is to never have our alfalfa come into bloom, from seeding to plow -down." Jf you don't need the feed, don't take a fall harvest, Thomas recommended. You'll have a bigger yield the next spring. Thomas emphasized the importance of windrow management in producing top quality hay. Forage crops start to lose sugars as soon as you mow them, he said. The objective is to get the crop into storage as quickly as you can after cutting to save the most sugars. "From stem to silo in a day is not an unreasonable objective," he said. But if you put the hay into a tight windrow you'll end up with the top of the windrow being too dry and the bottom too wet, Thomas said. The fastest way to remove moisture from just -mowed hay is through the somata of the plant. Wide windrows are exposed to more sun which keeps the stomata open longer, allowing quicker loss of moisture. Tests conducted on wide versus narrow windrows showed it took 7.4 hours to dry a wide windrow, but 14.9 hours for a narrow windrow. In a trial to see the value of wide versus narrow windrows in milk production, Thomas said that the wide windrows resulted in an extra 295 pounds of milk from a ton of forage. That meant $33,000 on 275 acres, he said. "If there's one change you're going to make this year that will put more dollars in the bank it's to spread out the windrow," he said. Thomas gave a second session on corn silage at Forage Focus. He noted that with only 9-10 per cent of corn in the U.S. being chopped for silage, not nearly as much seed company money goes into research for silage corn hybrids as for grain corn. There are a few silage -only hybrids sold and generally the companies provide information on fibre digestibility, with an increasing number including NDF digestibility ratings for their hybrids, Thomas said, and while this is useful in choosing one company's best hybrid, but there's little data comparing one company's seed against another's. However, corn silage trials at some universities are beginning to provide a more comprehensive evaluation of the influence of hybrid selection on corn silage quality, Thomas said. Leafy corn hybrids are usually intended for silage, though a few are advertised as dual-purpose for either UNDP Grant Robertson SEND OTTAWA AN MP THEY CAN'T IGNORE! Grant understands farm issues because he and his family live them every day. " 1 want to make sure that our children not only have a chance to farm but that they can make a good living doing it. Farmers standing together is important." 4NDP Join Grant's Campaign 57 Albert St., Clinton, ON NOM 1L0 (519) 482-8600 1-866-768-3637 toll free www.grantrobertson.ca Authorized by the official agent tor Grant Robertson JANUARY 2006 17