chetlenox
Silver Member
Just because I've been enjoying all the good hay discussion so far this season, I'll give a quick synopsis of our Coastal Bermuda cutting this week.
The weather has been warm, sunny, and windy. Last Saturday was 4.5 weeks since the first cutting, so we pulled the trigger and cut. This is the second time I've used our new Frontier SB1107 sickle-bar cutter, and I'm still not spectacularly happy with the cut. It's still a little too high for my taste (remaining grass ~2-3 inches) and cutting a little ragged (not a uniform height). The skid-stops are set as low as possible, but I want to try a little more "forward tilt" on the entire unit to get the blades closer to the ground. I couldn't do it this time because my toplink was already set as small as possible, so I need to get a shorter toplink. I'm hoping that helps with my slightly ragged cut as well. Overall though, this was a little thing, for the most part the cut is fine. Heck, I've heard it's better on the grass to leave it a hair long anyway.
Raking went fine. The old mid-70s rebuilt (a month ago) New Holland 256 hay-rake did great.
Yesterday evening we took a look at how the hay was curing and with all the warm weather and sun, it was time to bale. So we baled 182 bales, sold ~70 or so out of the field, and put the rest in the top of the barn. This is the lightest cutting we've had so far since moving here, which is a little aggravating considering I spent a fortune on fertilizer 3-4 weeks ago. But the truth is we just haven't gotten that much rain, only about an inch-and-a-half since the first cutting. Without the water, the grass doesn't grow. Our typical yields have been 400-600 bales in the past, and we had 505 1st cutting this year.
We definitely won't have the damp hay issue we had with the 1st cutting this year. Not only did the hay cure quickly, but we baled a little lighter (~45 lbs) and stacked all the hay on the well-ventilated side of the barn. My new handheld moisture meter isn't in yet, so I didn't get a chance to use it, so I'll try that next cutting.
So now I'm going to put ~75 lbs/acre of nitrogen down and start doing a little rain dance. I'll attach some pictures from last night for entertainment value... Especially the rat snake that was in the wrong place at the wrong time and got "baled"!
Chet.
The weather has been warm, sunny, and windy. Last Saturday was 4.5 weeks since the first cutting, so we pulled the trigger and cut. This is the second time I've used our new Frontier SB1107 sickle-bar cutter, and I'm still not spectacularly happy with the cut. It's still a little too high for my taste (remaining grass ~2-3 inches) and cutting a little ragged (not a uniform height). The skid-stops are set as low as possible, but I want to try a little more "forward tilt" on the entire unit to get the blades closer to the ground. I couldn't do it this time because my toplink was already set as small as possible, so I need to get a shorter toplink. I'm hoping that helps with my slightly ragged cut as well. Overall though, this was a little thing, for the most part the cut is fine. Heck, I've heard it's better on the grass to leave it a hair long anyway.
Raking went fine. The old mid-70s rebuilt (a month ago) New Holland 256 hay-rake did great.
Yesterday evening we took a look at how the hay was curing and with all the warm weather and sun, it was time to bale. So we baled 182 bales, sold ~70 or so out of the field, and put the rest in the top of the barn. This is the lightest cutting we've had so far since moving here, which is a little aggravating considering I spent a fortune on fertilizer 3-4 weeks ago. But the truth is we just haven't gotten that much rain, only about an inch-and-a-half since the first cutting. Without the water, the grass doesn't grow. Our typical yields have been 400-600 bales in the past, and we had 505 1st cutting this year.
We definitely won't have the damp hay issue we had with the 1st cutting this year. Not only did the hay cure quickly, but we baled a little lighter (~45 lbs) and stacked all the hay on the well-ventilated side of the barn. My new handheld moisture meter isn't in yet, so I didn't get a chance to use it, so I'll try that next cutting.
So now I'm going to put ~75 lbs/acre of nitrogen down and start doing a little rain dance. I'll attach some pictures from last night for entertainment value... Especially the rat snake that was in the wrong place at the wrong time and got "baled"!
Chet.





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