rambler
Veteran Member
- Joined
- Jul 6, 2003
- Messages
- 1,994
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- MN
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- Ford 960, 7700, TW20, 1720; IHC H, 300; Ollie S77
Doc, I'm in southern Minnesota. About 1/3 or less are straight combining oats & wheat these days, most are still windrowing it with a swather.
a swather is a different machine than a moco or haybine. I've had this dicussion with the Nebraska fellow on ytmag, so I understand. /forums/images/graemlins/smile.gif A swather gently cuts & draps the crop to the middle, laying it down in a nice fan shap, the previous stems keeping the heads up & centered.
A haybine or moco does none of that, it just flings the material back into the shroud where it gets soved into a windrow.
With the rolls jacked apart, then there is less fling to the material, & he won't get a good windrow. Even so he will loose a lot of kernals. With the rolls closed, he will loose most of the kernals.
either way, he will not get a good, well-formed windrow that dries the heads. it will be mashed up mess - good for drying the _whole_ stem, but that's not what we want - we want a dry seed head that is easy to pickup.
I think there is no chance of getting good results here.
I have baled oats haylage, and I'v e baled mature oats regrowth. I've used my 1209 to cut it. no way I'd get any useful grain.
I've swathed & combined with a dummy header all my life. Up here we get a lot of summer rain. The oats matures & dies, but it doesn't dry out well. In the very humid air. Then we get rains, and the weeds come. About the time the oats gets dry enough, the rain & summer storms knock it down, and the bad weeds grow through. And then you have a miserable mess that you can't do anything with.
As well, up here the straw baled into small squares is worth about as much as the oats itself per acre. So, you want it swathed short to the ground, if you pick up some weed mass so what, let it dry 3-4 days, combine it, rake it, & bale it. Only way to make money at all on those grain crops up here. Need to be quick about it, or you lose both crops.
So yea, there is alot of swathing & dummy headers up this way. We suffer very different weather conditions than you do.
--->Paul
a swather is a different machine than a moco or haybine. I've had this dicussion with the Nebraska fellow on ytmag, so I understand. /forums/images/graemlins/smile.gif A swather gently cuts & draps the crop to the middle, laying it down in a nice fan shap, the previous stems keeping the heads up & centered.
A haybine or moco does none of that, it just flings the material back into the shroud where it gets soved into a windrow.
With the rolls jacked apart, then there is less fling to the material, & he won't get a good windrow. Even so he will loose a lot of kernals. With the rolls closed, he will loose most of the kernals.
either way, he will not get a good, well-formed windrow that dries the heads. it will be mashed up mess - good for drying the _whole_ stem, but that's not what we want - we want a dry seed head that is easy to pickup.
I think there is no chance of getting good results here.
I have baled oats haylage, and I'v e baled mature oats regrowth. I've used my 1209 to cut it. no way I'd get any useful grain.
I've swathed & combined with a dummy header all my life. Up here we get a lot of summer rain. The oats matures & dies, but it doesn't dry out well. In the very humid air. Then we get rains, and the weeds come. About the time the oats gets dry enough, the rain & summer storms knock it down, and the bad weeds grow through. And then you have a miserable mess that you can't do anything with.
As well, up here the straw baled into small squares is worth about as much as the oats itself per acre. So, you want it swathed short to the ground, if you pick up some weed mass so what, let it dry 3-4 days, combine it, rake it, & bale it. Only way to make money at all on those grain crops up here. Need to be quick about it, or you lose both crops.
So yea, there is alot of swathing & dummy headers up this way. We suffer very different weather conditions than you do.
--->Paul