by ep | Jun 2, 2026 | Uncategorized
Quality & Storage Guide Mould on silage bales is not just a cosmetic problem — it signals dry matter loss, reduced feed value, and potential mycotoxin contamination that can affect livestock health. Every case of bale mould is preventable, and every case has a...
by ep | Jun 2, 2026 | Uncategorized
Quality & Storage Guide Silage bale spoilage is preventable — almost every case of aerobic deterioration, mould, or clostridial fermentation can be traced to specific management decisions made during baling, wrapping, or storage. This guide identifies every...
by ep | Jun 2, 2026 | forage balers
Quality & Storage Guide Opening a silage bale and discovering it has spoiled is one of the most frustrating outcomes in livestock farming — feed you invested in, stored, and were counting on turns out to be unfit for purpose. Knowing how to read the smell, colour,...
by ep | Jun 2, 2026 | Uncategorized
Storage & Quality Guide The quality of silage bale storage determines whether the fermentation the silage baler and wrapper worked hard to establish is preserved until feed-out — or progressively undone by oxygen ingress, UV degradation, and mechanical damage....
by ep | Jun 2, 2026 | Uncategorized
System Comparison Guide The choice between wrapped bale silage and pit or bunker silage is ultimately a whole-farm system decision — it affects capital allocation, infrastructure requirements, labour organisation, feed management, and business flexibility in ways that...