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Green Chopping in CT (pic)

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Matt from CT

07-06-2006 14:48:45




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Crew from Miller's Fairvue Farm in Woodstock, CT making green chop (? or grass silage...I'm not sure the difference!) on Paine Hill Road in Woodstock the Friday before Memorial Day back in May...sorry it took me so long to remember to download the photos from my camera!

The harvester is a Class 860. Not sure what the Deere was which was combining the rows ahead of the Class.

If I've read the history of the area right, these fields have been owned by the May family since a few years after the settlement of Woodstock...in 1686. Miller now keeps his dry cows here -- he's one of the largest dairymen in the state, with the milkers and calfs at his main farm next to the Woodstock Fairgrounds on Route 171; his heifers are down on another farm in Putnam.

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Dan-IA

07-07-2006 10:06:11




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 Re: Green Chopping in CT (pic) in reply to Matt from CT, 07-06-2006 14:48:45  
Now tell me why they don't make combines like that?

I've long dreamed of retrofitting a 510 Massey with a blower spout and removing the grain tank in favor of a wagon to be pulled behind, though I've been told I'd need a much heavier transmission to pull a loaded wagon through a field.

It just strikes me that "don't pack the ground" is a religion among farmers out here, and carrying the grain onboard the machine violates that very same rule.

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JMS/MN

07-06-2006 17:16:51




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 Re: Green Chopping in CT (pic) in reply to Matt from CT, 07-06-2006 14:48:45  
Green chopping is chopping the standing crop, and usually fed to the animals immediately. If it is ensiled, it is too wet and makes feed that seems like it already went through the cow. Stinky and sour. These guys are making silage (haylage) from hay that was cut, windrowed, wilted. Too wet to bale, but probably 50-65% moisture, depending on the storage structure being used- Harvestore, stave silo, bag.

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Matt from CT

07-06-2006 17:43:25




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 Thanks! in reply to JMS/MN, 07-06-2006 17:16:51  
I wasn't positive the difference.

The haylage I've seen around has been stored in piles (think bunker silos...without the bunker) under plastic sheeting. The dairy down the road from me did use bags for a few years, but went back to piles.



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David in England

07-06-2006 15:06:39




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 Re: Green Chopping in CT (pic) in reply to Matt from CT, 07-06-2006 14:48:45  
Hi, Nice photos of Claas self propelled, these are number 1 sellers now in England with JD & NH hard on their heels. Its a HP race.
Interesting to see the SP towing the silage trailer behind - here they run 14 ton tandem axle tipping trailers alongside the harvester pulled by tractors. I'll try to get photos when they start 2nd cutting - if it rains we may get some more grass but the re-growth so far looks thin and stalky. Thanks for the photos. David

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Chad Franke

07-07-2006 06:16:14




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 Re: Green Chopping in CT (pic) in reply to David in England, 07-06-2006 15:06:39  
Don't see those dump wagons much here anymore, except the small farmers. Out around Kersey, almost all the corn is for silage for the big feedlot. They run semi trucks with end dumps, with overload permits to get ...some of the Claas choppers are running 12 row heads, fill the semi trailer in around 2 minutes (if I remember right)... When one starts to get full, another is along side, operator flips the spout up and throws over the first truck into the second, another pulls up between...2-3 big 4wd tractors with blades spreading and packing in bunkers...

It's an impressive site to see 12 rows of 8-10 foot tall corn disappear at the rate it does...

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Chad Franke

07-07-2006 06:16:13




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 Re: Green Chopping in CT (pic) in reply to David in England, 07-06-2006 15:06:39  
Don't see those dump wagons much here anymore, except the small farmers. Out around Kersey, almost all the corn is for silage for the big feedlot. They run semi trucks with end dumps, with overload permits to get ...some of the Claas choppers are running 12 row heads, fill the semi trailer in around 2 minutes (if I remember right)... When one starts to get full, another is along side, operator flips the spout up and throws over the first truck into the second, another pulls up between...2-3 big 4wd tractors with blades spreading and packing in bunkers...

It's an impressive site to see 12 rows of 8-10 foot tall corn disappear at the rate it does...

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Matt from CT

07-06-2006 16:03:55




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 Re: Green Chopping in CT (pic) in reply to David in England, 07-06-2006 15:06:39  
Tow-behind trailers for silage became standard practice around here about 15 to 20 years ago.

When I was young, it was all dump trucks being driven alongside the harvester (usually a tractor pulled unit). During High School in the mid 80s you saw the transition to even the small farmers going with "chop wagons" as they're called around here. It's now the exception to see a truck driving alongside. Part of it is loss blowing over the truck; but also the lack of manpower to keep a truck always alongside.

Another common variation is to have one guy running a harvester / wagon, and one truck driver...and *two* trucks -- driver drops off an empty truck, and heads back with the full one. The harvester dumps into the empty truck when they're ready and goes back to harvesting.

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Jonfarmer

07-06-2006 15:54:16




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 Re: Green Chopping in CT (pic) in reply to David in England, 07-06-2006 15:06:39  
Thats a very common scene here in Vermont to see the small high dump wagons used. Around here, they only use the high dump wagons when it is too wet to run the big 14yd dumptrucks alongside the harvester, and in that case, the trucks will be waiting for the highdump at the head of the field. When it's real wet, they'll pull the highdump with a tractor. Yor right about the horsepower race, Claas is going to have one out pretty soon with 2 motors working together on it, making 1,000hp total, quite impressive.

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Matt from CT

07-06-2006 14:50:13




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 Du'oh... in reply to Matt from CT, 07-06-2006 14:48:45  
It's a Claas harvester...and I knew how to spell it when I did the last post :)



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