Harvesting summer annual forages | Western Livestock Journal
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Harvesting summer annual forages

Ben Beckman, Nebraska Extension educator
Jul. 26, 2024 2 minutes read
Harvesting summer annual forages

Native warm-season annual grasses can ensure good forage supplies during drought.

Harley Naumann

Putting up good-quality hay from summer annual grasses like sorghum-sudan hybrids, pearl millet and forage sorghums can be tricky. Here are some tips to help make sure these hays are of good quality and dry, so it won’t heat or mold.

Nearly all problems making good summer annual grass or cane hay are caused by their stems. Stems are low in protein and energy, slow to dry, and the lower stems could contain potentially toxic nitrates.

There usually is a wide range of spring and early summer planting dates for these annuals, but cutting early before plants become excessively tall is important. When cut at about 4 feet in height, stems are smaller, eaten more readily and the hay contains more protein and energy. Also, there is less plant volume. So, with smaller stems and fewer of them, the hay will dry quicker. Although you will have less tonnage when cutting early, you are creating more days for regrowth and a good second cutting.

Regardless of when you harvest though, cut it high, leaving 8 to 10 inches of stubble. Tall stubble pays off three ways: it helps plants begin regrowth quicker, it holds hay off the ground so air can help dry underneath and it keeps many nitrates out in the field stubble rather than harvesting them all in your hay.

And finally, always crimp the hay. Even when stems are small, the waxy coating on the stems causes slow drying. But if you break open these stems by crimping, water will be able to escape and evaporate more quickly.

So cut it early, cut it high, crimp the stems and they will dry. — Ben Beckman, Nebraska Extension

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