ALSO CONTRACT C MADDEN AND SON FOR CONTRACTING
In a silage pit or as bales
No, horses should not be fed silage. Silage is a fermented feed stuff and single compartmeted stomaced animals can not digest it properly. Horses fed silage can become very ill, colic and even die. Silage is meant for ruminant animals.
The farmer fed silage to the pigs.
pH of silage should be in between 4.2-4.8
Protein average in corn silage is 6-9%.
Silage fermentation helps in the lowering of the forage to a certain point.
If the silage is exposed to any amount of oxygen, there is high potential for spoilage. When silage is spoiled, it cannot be used for livestock. Thus silage cannot be stored just anywhere, it must be stored in such a way that no oxygen is able to get into it. That enables the anaerobic bacteria to do their job and keep the silage as unspoiled as possible.
Yes but make sure it is good quality that it is not mouldy or anything and be careful of listeriosis
Silage died in the year 1971. He is therefore not able to perform this year.
silage
no
It's called silage, and it's not pickled, but fermented. In order to make silage, you have to have the feed compressed enough so that you're sure no air pockets are in the feed, then cover it up with plastic, not allowing any spaces under the plastic or even holes in the plastic. You could weigh it down with tires, bales or anything else heavy that can be spared to keep the silage on. Then leave it be for a few weeks to ferment before you feed it to cattle. The best plants for silage is barley, grass (with very little legumes), wheat, corn, and oats.