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Monday, 25 October 2010

Combining forage maize



Roy Prouse Contractors combining Ixxes forage maize at Launceston, at about 53% MC and 3.5t/ac on the combine, far from ideal, but the field needed clearing for the following winter wheat crop that was being drilled right behind.







What happens when you combine maize when it isn't ready, blocked seives! Because of the variability in ripening, some grain was fit, other still milky resulting in this lovely porridge mix at the back end of the machine. Cleaning this will be a nightmare!







Thursday, 21 October 2010

Combining Lorado at Bude


Never let it be said that Lorado is a short variety!



Lovely cornish autumn afternoon.

It's all happening!!!

Maize foraging is in progress, most of it is off, although a lot I think has been cut before it was fully fit, but the weather has been kind and the general feeling has been 'get it while you can'.


Lorado, the only early grain variety out there surprised us all by being ready as early as the 11th of October in some fields, the bulk being ready by the end of the week of the 16th, yields have been very promising, (even though the population was slightly higher than it should have been) at around an average of 5ton/ac at 32% moisture content. Very satisfactory.
Here are some pictures and video of the crop coming in.


Friday, 1 October 2010

World Food Situation.

http://www.telegraph.co.uk/finance/china-business/8019004/Global-food-risk-from-China-Russia-pincer.html

I know it's in the press at the moment, but this article poses some very interesting questions for british farmers, particularly livestock farmers feeding concentrates and bought in forages.

Having now had rain late so most farmers in the southwest have ample third cut silage, but little good quality first and second cuts left (there are exceptions of course), what do you do now going into winter with the burden of higher input costs in feed terms?

Do you feed for maintenance and low productivity in order to reduce imported feed costs by utilising what you've got on farm (praying that it will be enough to see you through till April in case we have another winter like last year), or do you de-stock to reduce the overall demand, or both, or do you take the risk of buying in expensive forage in the hope that end prices (and margins) will rise on the back of commodity price rises this autumn, with the associated cramping of cashflow?

Given the economic situation, will demand for meat and meat related products reduce if these prices rise substantially going forward? Reading between the lines of this article, it's looking like intervention to prevent price spikes may not be so forthcoming given what followed last time round in 2007/2008.