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Soy Bean Round Bales ?

Printed From: Unofficial Allis
Category: Other Topics
Forum Name: Shops, Barns, Varmints, and Trucks
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URL: https://www.allischalmers.com/forum/forum_posts.asp?TID=174884
Printed Date: 14 May 2024 at 5:35am
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Topic: Soy Bean Round Bales ?
Posted By: FREEDGUY
Subject: Soy Bean Round Bales ?
Date Posted: 02 Oct 2020 at 5:34pm
What would be the use of SB round bales in a non-livestock area ?



Replies:
Posted By: jaybmiller
Date Posted: 02 Oct 2020 at 6:21pm
might make great fuel for a big 'whole house' stove ???


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3 D-14s,A-C forklift, B-112
Kubota BX23S lil' TOOT( The Other Orange Tractor)

Never burn your bridges, unless you can walk on water


Posted By: FREEDGUY
Date Posted: 02 Oct 2020 at 6:29pm
Jay, I thought about that but the only style of those burners are the stinky wood burning boiler set-ups "here" LOLLOL. For a roughly 50 acre field, there are ALOT of 5' round bales Smile


Posted By: jaybmiller
Date Posted: 02 Oct 2020 at 6:58pm
hmm. ok.. how about walls for 'alternative' houses ?? I've seen 'straw bale' houses on TV....


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3 D-14s,A-C forklift, B-112
Kubota BX23S lil' TOOT( The Other Orange Tractor)

Never burn your bridges, unless you can walk on water


Posted By: Tbone95
Date Posted: 03 Oct 2020 at 7:35am
Before or after combining?

Before, still would have to be sold as feed. Added to a mixer / grinder/ processor with other ingredients for livestock feed.

After combining, bedding, mulch, any place you might use straw, even roadside where they cover the bare spots i suppose. I suppose fuel is a possibility but holy crap that would go up fast and hot!


Posted By: NEVER green
Date Posted: 03 Oct 2020 at 9:40am
  Its livestock bedding,some producers think its the best.    To lots of truckers and producers whats a few hundred miles.


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2-8050 1-7080 6080 D-19 modelE & A 7040   R50       


Posted By: FREEDGUY
Date Posted: 03 Oct 2020 at 5:53pm
Originally posted by Tbone95 Tbone95 wrote:

Before or after combining?

Before, still would have to be sold as feed. Added to a mixer / grinder/ processor with other ingredients for livestock feed.

After combining, bedding, mulch, any place you might use straw, even roadside where they cover the bare spots i suppose. I suppose fuel is a possibility but holy crap that would go up fast and hot!
 
These bales were rolled AFTER harvest. Again, there's NO livestock  produced within 30 miles of this parcel Wink


Posted By: shameless dude
Date Posted: 03 Oct 2020 at 10:26pm
around here they grind it in with other stuff for cattle feed. high protein additive.


Posted By: HD6GTOM
Date Posted: 03 Oct 2020 at 10:47pm
Back in the 1960's when foxtail first moved in, dad had a field of beans taken over by foxtail. We small round baled beans/foxtail and fed them to stock cows. Everybody said it couldn't be done. Dad bought a new sprayer that winter. Dont know what to do with them without cows.


Posted By: Tbone95
Date Posted: 04 Oct 2020 at 7:40am
Originally posted by FREEDGUY FREEDGUY wrote:

Originally posted by Tbone95 Tbone95 wrote:

Before or after combining?

Before, still would have to be sold as feed. Added to a mixer / grinder/ processor with other ingredients for livestock feed.

After combining, bedding, mulch, any place you might use straw, even roadside where they cover the bare spots i suppose. I suppose fuel is a possibility but holy crap that would go up fast and hot!
 
These bales were rolled AFTER harvest. Again, there's NO livestock  produced within 30 miles of this parcel Wink

30 miles?!?!?!?!

Ever seen bales on a flat bed?    All it takes is a buyer. 30 miles means nothing.


Posted By: steve(ill)
Date Posted: 04 Oct 2020 at 7:58am
Several years ago they were bailing hay in Illinois and sending to South Dakota to feed cattle during a deep snow storm.

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Like them all, but love the "B"s.


Posted By: DMiller
Date Posted: 04 Oct 2020 at 8:25am
Our renter baled Soy crop on another place where once fed to the livestock they only ate small pieces leaving the bulk lay, softer leaves and pods they ate, stems got filtered out and left to rot.  Determined NOT worth the effort.


Posted By: Dakota Dave
Date Posted: 04 Oct 2020 at 9:59am
Local here bales 20,000 4x8 straw bales every year most go the Iowa and Wisconsin. Some go all the way to the east coast. The places that buy them send there own trucks he loads them out of the shed all winter. If there is value shipping isn't he a problem


Posted By: Kansas99
Date Posted: 04 Oct 2020 at 10:04am
They do work better tub ground and mixed in a wet ration or finish ration for the scratch.  I've fed just about anything but a ground tree mixed with WDG and sorghum silage they will do a better job cleaning it up, now ground or whole soy stubble by its self there would be a lot of waste, but in the field its all waste.


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"LET"S GO BRANDON!!"


Posted By: DMiller
Date Posted: 04 Oct 2020 at 11:56am
Very true, as to Straw here, the typical Wheat planted here is very short stalked, not much as to straw for recovery, most just burn down the stubble and replant over it.  Landscapers been whining for years as to Straw availability and costs.


Posted By: TimCNY
Date Posted: 04 Oct 2020 at 7:18pm
Back in the 70s and 80s we used to sell hay to a few farms in MD and FL. They paid for it and sent tractor trailers to pick it up. Never understood why and never asked - was always told to never look a gift horse in the mouth. We were glad to get almost double per bale (small squares) from them over the best price we could get locally. It paid us to sell our hay and buy from neighbors.

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Posted By: shameless dude
Date Posted: 05 Oct 2020 at 1:23am
it's really hard on the baler belts to bale it up. wears them out real fast.


Posted By: jaybmiller
Date Posted: 05 Oct 2020 at 5:35am
Ok, dumb idea...
why not stop at the farm that has the bales and ask them ?

heck, while getting gas the other day I asked the 'semi delivery guy' about his towed car. He drives new semi to buyers, uses car to get home.Asked if auto or std. He said std and getting harder to find as most new cars are all automatics. Then asked , Ok, what mods to automatics. he said just an extra tranny oil cooler, keeps them from handgrenading.




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3 D-14s,A-C forklift, B-112
Kubota BX23S lil' TOOT( The Other Orange Tractor)

Never burn your bridges, unless you can walk on water


Posted By: klinemar
Date Posted: 05 Oct 2020 at 7:05am
Corn Stalks,Peanut Vines and Soybean Stems are all death to a Round Baler. Think of all the dirt going into the baler! Not to mention what the stems and stalks do to the belts. In 2012 I custom baled CRP land for hay because of the drought. I said never again as it took years off of my baler running over rough ground and the material baled. I traded balers in 2014!


Posted By: Lonn
Date Posted: 05 Oct 2020 at 8:09am
Originally posted by FREEDGUY FREEDGUY wrote:

What would be the use of SB round bales in a non-livestock area ?
Why do you ask? Do you have some that you don't know what to do with them?


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Posted By: FREEDGUY
Date Posted: 05 Oct 2020 at 7:08pm
Originally posted by Tbone95 Tbone95 wrote:

Originally posted by FREEDGUY FREEDGUY wrote:

Originally posted by Tbone95 Tbone95 wrote:

Before or after combining?

Before, still would have to be sold as feed. Added to a mixer / grinder/ processor with other ingredients for livestock feed.

After combining, bedding, mulch, any place you might use straw, even roadside where they cover the bare spots i suppose. I suppose fuel is a possibility but holy crap that would go up fast and hot!
 
These bales were rolled AFTER harvest. Again, there's NO livestock  produced within 30 miles of this parcel Wink

30 miles?!?!?!?!

Ever seen bales on a flat bed?    All it takes is a buyer. 30 miles means nothing. 
Once again Bone, your post is pointless SmileSmile. Yes, I've seen THOUSANDS of big squares and round bales on flatbeds, NEVER seen soy bales on them or at local hay/straw sales WinkWink


Posted By: caledonian
Date Posted: 05 Oct 2020 at 7:19pm
With the dry weather in parts of the country hay is short and expensive.                    They can be used in cattle rations If ground as filler to stretch hay supply and keep the gut working. Trucking is a non issue. 55000 lbs loads no problem. They will be a lot cheaper than alfalfa so you can afford some freight. I've baled them. No issues.


Posted By: FREEDGUY
Date Posted: 05 Oct 2020 at 7:23pm
Thanks cale, there's cornstalks baled in this area but this is the first I've seen soy fodder wrapped up, I just couldn't imagine any feed value from a soybean stalk Embarrassed.


Posted By: Tbone95
Date Posted: 06 Oct 2020 at 7:29am
Originally posted by FREEDGUY FREEDGUY wrote:

Originally posted by Tbone95 Tbone95 wrote:

Originally posted by FREEDGUY FREEDGUY wrote:

Originally posted by Tbone95 Tbone95 wrote:

Before or after combining?

Before, still would have to be sold as feed. Added to a mixer / grinder/ processor with other ingredients for livestock feed.

After combining, bedding, mulch, any place you might use straw, even roadside where they cover the bare spots i suppose. I suppose fuel is a possibility but holy crap that would go up fast and hot!
 
These bales were rolled AFTER harvest. Again, there's NO livestock  produced within 30 miles of this parcel Wink

30 miles?!?!?!?!

Ever seen bales on a flat bed?    All it takes is a buyer. 30 miles means nothing. 

Once again Bone, your post is pointless SmileSmile. Yes, I've seen THOUSANDS of big squares and round bales on flatbeds, NEVER seen soy bales on them or at local hay/straw sales WinkWink

You a combative drunk tonight or what?

You ask this question. I said it was either feed or used as straw would be used such as bedding or any other use for straw. But yet you're amazed that it's 30 MILES from any livestock. Myself and many others pointed out that hay, straw, whatever gets trucked all over the country, so 30 miles means nothing.

Maybe they're going to power a rocket ship to Mars with it instead or some other amazing exotic use? Oh please stop in ask and tell us!

Your first step is admitting you have a problem.



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