Top Banner
Les Vough Hay Marketing Consultant Maryland Department of Agriculture and Forage Crops Extension Specialist Emeritus University of Maryland What To Look For In Evaluating Hay
28

Les Vough Hay Marketing Consultant Maryland Department of Agriculture and Forage Crops Extension Specialist Emeritus University of Maryland What To Look.

Dec 22, 2015

Download

Documents

Welcome message from author
This document is posted to help you gain knowledge. Please leave a comment to let me know what you think about it! Share it to your friends and learn new things together.
Transcript
Page 1: Les Vough Hay Marketing Consultant Maryland Department of Agriculture and Forage Crops Extension Specialist Emeritus University of Maryland What To Look.

Les Vough

Hay Marketing Consultant

Maryland Department of Agriculture

and

Forage Crops Extension Specialist Emeritus

University of Maryland

What To Look For

In Evaluating Hay

Page 2: Les Vough Hay Marketing Consultant Maryland Department of Agriculture and Forage Crops Extension Specialist Emeritus University of Maryland What To Look.

Forage Quality

Generally means same thing as

feeding value.

Depends on the availability of the

nutrients consumed and the quantity

of forages voluntarily consumed.

Page 3: Les Vough Hay Marketing Consultant Maryland Department of Agriculture and Forage Crops Extension Specialist Emeritus University of Maryland What To Look.

Estimating Forage Quality Visually

Visual estimates of forage

quality are based on factors known to influence

feeding value and animal performance.

Page 4: Les Vough Hay Marketing Consultant Maryland Department of Agriculture and Forage Crops Extension Specialist Emeritus University of Maryland What To Look.

Factors Known To Influence Hay Quality And Animal Performance

1. Stage of Maturity

2. Leafiness

3. Color

4. Odor and Condition

5. Foreign Material

Page 5: Les Vough Hay Marketing Consultant Maryland Department of Agriculture and Forage Crops Extension Specialist Emeritus University of Maryland What To Look.

Factors Known To Influence Hay Quality And Animal Performance

1. Stage of Maturity

Page 6: Les Vough Hay Marketing Consultant Maryland Department of Agriculture and Forage Crops Extension Specialist Emeritus University of Maryland What To Look.
Page 7: Les Vough Hay Marketing Consultant Maryland Department of Agriculture and Forage Crops Extension Specialist Emeritus University of Maryland What To Look.
Page 8: Les Vough Hay Marketing Consultant Maryland Department of Agriculture and Forage Crops Extension Specialist Emeritus University of Maryland What To Look.
Page 9: Les Vough Hay Marketing Consultant Maryland Department of Agriculture and Forage Crops Extension Specialist Emeritus University of Maryland What To Look.

Stage of Maturity

Where greatest progress can be made on many farms.

Most important single factor affecting forage quality.

Page 10: Les Vough Hay Marketing Consultant Maryland Department of Agriculture and Forage Crops Extension Specialist Emeritus University of Maryland What To Look.

Factors Known To Influence Hay Quality And Animal Performance

1. Stage of Maturity

2. Leafiness

Page 11: Les Vough Hay Marketing Consultant Maryland Department of Agriculture and Forage Crops Extension Specialist Emeritus University of Maryland What To Look.

Leaves

Most valuable part of hay

Contain 90% of protein

Page 12: Les Vough Hay Marketing Consultant Maryland Department of Agriculture and Forage Crops Extension Specialist Emeritus University of Maryland What To Look.

Leafiness

Can vary from 65-70% for very leafy alfalfa

hay to only 10-15% for very stemmy hay.

Page 13: Les Vough Hay Marketing Consultant Maryland Department of Agriculture and Forage Crops Extension Specialist Emeritus University of Maryland What To Look.
Page 14: Les Vough Hay Marketing Consultant Maryland Department of Agriculture and Forage Crops Extension Specialist Emeritus University of Maryland What To Look.
Page 15: Les Vough Hay Marketing Consultant Maryland Department of Agriculture and Forage Crops Extension Specialist Emeritus University of Maryland What To Look.

Factors Known To Influence Hay Quality And Animal Performance

1. Stage of Maturity

2. Leafiness

3. Color

Page 16: Les Vough Hay Marketing Consultant Maryland Department of Agriculture and Forage Crops Extension Specialist Emeritus University of Maryland What To Look.

Color

Can be deceiving.

Humans emphasize it – animals colorblind.

If hay is off-color, what type of damage and

how extensive?

Page 17: Les Vough Hay Marketing Consultant Maryland Department of Agriculture and Forage Crops Extension Specialist Emeritus University of Maryland What To Look.

Color Indication of

Bright green Rapid & proper curing

Golden/yellow Sun-bleaching or

over-mature grass

Brown/black Rain damage

Brown/black Heat damage w/ musty odor

Page 18: Les Vough Hay Marketing Consultant Maryland Department of Agriculture and Forage Crops Extension Specialist Emeritus University of Maryland What To Look.

Factors Known To Influence Hay Quality And Animal Performance

1. Stage of Maturity

2. Leafiness

3. Color

4. Odor and Condition

Page 19: Les Vough Hay Marketing Consultant Maryland Department of Agriculture and Forage Crops Extension Specialist Emeritus University of Maryland What To Look.

Factors Known To Influence Hay Quality And Animal Performance

1. Stage of Maturity

2. Leafiness

3. Color

4. Odor and Condition

5. Foreign Material

Page 20: Les Vough Hay Marketing Consultant Maryland Department of Agriculture and Forage Crops Extension Specialist Emeritus University of Maryland What To Look.

Foreign Material

Non-injurious

(weeds, straw, cornstalks,

sticks, etc.)

Injurious

(poisonous plants, wire,

glass, etc.)

Page 21: Les Vough Hay Marketing Consultant Maryland Department of Agriculture and Forage Crops Extension Specialist Emeritus University of Maryland What To Look.

Score Sheet for Visually Evaluating Hay

Factor Possible Score

Stage of Maturity 30

Leafiness 20

Color 20

Odor and Condition 20

Foreign Material 10

Total 100

Page 22: Les Vough Hay Marketing Consultant Maryland Department of Agriculture and Forage Crops Extension Specialist Emeritus University of Maryland What To Look.

Forage Quality

Plays a key role in the productivity

and profitability of nearly every

livestock enterprise and thus forage

testing is an essential management

practice.

Page 23: Les Vough Hay Marketing Consultant Maryland Department of Agriculture and Forage Crops Extension Specialist Emeritus University of Maryland What To Look.

Combining visual inspection

and chemical analysis greatly improve the

accuracy of the predicted nutritive value

of hay.

Page 24: Les Vough Hay Marketing Consultant Maryland Department of Agriculture and Forage Crops Extension Specialist Emeritus University of Maryland What To Look.
Page 25: Les Vough Hay Marketing Consultant Maryland Department of Agriculture and Forage Crops Extension Specialist Emeritus University of Maryland What To Look.

Comparison of Chemical Analysis and Visual Inspection

Factor Chemical Visual

Maturity Good Fair

Leafiness Fair Good

Color Poor Good

Odor & Condition Poor Good

Foreign Material Poor Good

Page 26: Les Vough Hay Marketing Consultant Maryland Department of Agriculture and Forage Crops Extension Specialist Emeritus University of Maryland What To Look.

Forage Testing

Separate samples should be taken

for each cutting and each field as

quality will depend upon harvesting

dates, weather conditions, fertilization

practices and insect damage.

Page 27: Les Vough Hay Marketing Consultant Maryland Department of Agriculture and Forage Crops Extension Specialist Emeritus University of Maryland What To Look.

http://www.agnr.umd.edu/MCE/Publications/PDFs/FS644.pdf

http://www.agnr.umd.edu/MCE/Publications/ Publication.cfm?ID=110

Page 28: Les Vough Hay Marketing Consultant Maryland Department of Agriculture and Forage Crops Extension Specialist Emeritus University of Maryland What To Look.

The End ----

Questions?