Silage Management

Good Silage Making Top Tips:

  • Cut grass just before heading day during good weather, if possible. Always leave 3" of stem so that the next crop re-grows quickly. Wilt or spread out to about 28% D.M.
  • Ensile fast and compact evenly. Roll thoroughly before sheeting and get weight on sheet straight away. If an overnight break is needed try to drag a sheet over the pit to stop the compacted forage springing up and incorporating air. Air always causes waste.
  • Try to make an extra cut, aiming for 5 - 6 week intervals. It may seem expensive on harvesting but there are many litres more per cow per day in young early cut silage. This is how to make sure you save £'s on your feed bills.

Silage can contain very valuable protein to the cow when fermented quickly in the absence of yeast and mould spores. Treatment with Optimize significantly improves the concentration of true protein in you silage.

Remember:

The best grass contains more nutrients. This means it is even more important to use a reliable inoculant. The more efficiently preserved protein and FME will then make more milk from the crop you have grown, saving £1000's on feed bills.

Treatment with Optimize significantly improves the concentration of true protein in your silage.

 

Tips for Harvesting

11 tips to win the "Bacterial War", which are the key to successful silage making.

Whether you are looking for high yields per cow, or to maximise silage intakes and get high yields from forage, your cows need grass silage to be palatable with high levels of quality nutrients - and that depends upon your skill and management of the crop.

  • Concentrate on good ryegrass based swards: Secondary grasses and old pastures have lower yields and sugars, so modify the fertiliser applied if you have to ensile these.
  • Do not use excess nitrogen: That dark green colour is excess nitrogen that reduces sugar levels. It increases the time and difficulty to get the silage pH to drop and eventually produces toxic and unpalatable by-products. The maximum N is 75-1 05 units per acre depending on the sward and soil fertility for most dairy farms, unless following cereals.
  • Make full allowance for the nutrient N.P.K value of all slurry applied: and it must be included in the maximum Nitrogen recommended. Avoid contaminating the grass with slurry i.e late applications to bare pasture or leafy swards.
  • Cut dry… Eight inches of wet grass, cut at 9 am, and bundled into a swath, does not wilt effectively. It is essential to mow when the crop is dry, with no dew or rain on it, i.e. after 12 noon. Make the swath as wide as possible or ted as soon as possible.
  • Cut high: Leave at least three inches of aftermath, and leave the base rubbish in the sward bottom.
  • If raking or tedding, set well to avoid ground contact, especially if you have applied slurry and F.Y.M: Soil and slurry are perfect inoculants of the wrong spoilage bacteria. Slurry/soil on wheels in the clamp achieves the same. Do not rake large swaths too far in front of the forager.
  • Wilt quickly to concentrate sugar: The faster the better, do not wilt for more than 24 hours. 27% dry matter is a good target - essential to reach at least this, if there is a problem such as high N, contamination or low sugars.
  • Fill fast, but evenly, no air pockets, roll as you fill but minimise length of time exposed to air: i.e. "Dorset Wedge" if possible. Young, leafy grass should aim to be chopped to 2 inches then clamped in thin layers.  Roll more extensively if dry i.e. over 35%.
  • Roll for 2 hours maximum in the evening, sheet down every night: It takes just 20 minutes to use up oxygen in a silo, then a lactic fermentation starts if no more air is getting in.
  • Don't roll next morning: It squeezes out carbon dioxide, sucks in fresh air, and restarts the butyric fermentation instead.

Completely seal the silo, and weight down shoulder and top sheets as soon as possible: Lactic acid fermentations do not start until all air has gone - and no more is getting in. Side walls should be sealed before starting.

What is the pay-off for attention to silage detail?

  • Palatable, very low ammonia, high intake, high performance silage.
  • More silage

 

 True Protein Bar Chart

good_silage_making.jpg

*Courtesy of N.I. Grasslands Research Institute

Graph shows the variation in protein availability depending on silage fermentation

 

 

 

chopping grass