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Cupboard



Member Since: 21 Mar 2014
Location: Suffolk
Posts: 2971

United Kingdom 2011 Defender 110 Puma 2.4 HT Corris Grey
I don't know if you can grow lucerne where you are, but it's a crop that works extremely well for us. Good protein for the cows and means we've been able to stop importing soya.
Post #550579 23rd Jul 2016 8:43am
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Flyingfocrs



Member Since: 12 Jan 2015
Location: Deepest darkest Aberdeenshire
Posts: 155

Scotland 2011 Defender 110 Puma 2.4 USW Santorini Black
We haven't even started yet.
Hay we do for horses.
One neighbour has done his already but we'll be stacking and burning half of it as it got rained on every day before it was baled so it's trash.
The rest of us are just sick of seeing rain on every single forecast or we'll be baling and then burning it as it will never be dry enough.
Expect price of hay will be high up here in North Scotland this year, we really struggled to get a gap in the weather last year and didn't bale until August last year so wasn't the best hay but we got just about enough to see us over the winter.

We are small scale though, neighbours little Yanmar and small round bales on my ground and he does big bales on his with an old Case and Fordy.
Post #550583 23rd Jul 2016 8:49am
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Captain Speaking



Member Since: 23 Jan 2012
Location: Oxfordshire
Posts: 159

2008 Defender 90 Puma 2.4 CSW Tonga Green
Quote:
How wide is the comb on that Header?


Pickles: it's only about 30ft...looks bigger!
Post #550760 24th Jul 2016 8:20am
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defender9



Member Since: 12 Mar 2016
Location: Fylde Coast
Posts: 1629

United Kingdom 2015 Defender 90 Puma 2.2 SW Keswick Green
Fascinating stuff, enjoying reading this thread. As a small boy I used to go out with a farmer friend of my Dads on his grey Fergie (think that's why I always hankered after one). Modern tractors make a Fergie look like a toy Smile
Post #550766 24th Jul 2016 8:38am
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Honcho



Member Since: 08 Mar 2014
Location: ^^^
Posts: 49

Ireland 
Captain Speaking wrote:
Quote:
What is it that normally makes them catch fire? Just blockage abd heat build up?


Last year's straw and the odd bird's nest! We always cleaned ours out thoroughly straight after harvest to make sure they were thoroughly dry before any ice could form in the winter. Beware pressure-washing a combine when it's minus 5 Laughing


I used to work for a large tillage contractor and we always put the combines away dry straight from the last cut. We would only wash them out right before they went for the service before next years harvest.
They use three class lexion on tracks.
Post #550774 24th Jul 2016 8:53am
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Captain Speaking



Member Since: 23 Jan 2012
Location: Oxfordshire
Posts: 159

2008 Defender 90 Puma 2.4 CSW Tonga Green
Quote:
Modern tractors make a Fergie look like a toy


Yes....POWERRRRRRRRR! Laughing



Click image to enlarge
Post #550778 24th Jul 2016 9:04am
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Pickles



Member Since: 26 May 2013
Location: Melbourne
Posts: 3784

Australia 2013 Defender 90 Puma 2.2 CSW Keswick Green
How much "power"is that?
We.ve got 700HP+ in Aussie, but I can still remember the days when a blue Fordson Major was the gun machine,...I read the other day that it had a T model Ford engine!!!
Pickles.
Post #550796 24th Jul 2016 10:00am
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custom90



Member Since: 21 Jan 2010
Location: South West, England.
Posts: 20367

United Kingdom 
^^^^ You've probably got more powerful over there due to land size over there.
Over here there are some powerful machines but you'll rarely if ever see them because they aren't commonly used with their huge price tag and of course fuel use.
Post #550818 24th Jul 2016 11:25am
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Cupboard



Member Since: 21 Mar 2014
Location: Suffolk
Posts: 2971

United Kingdom 2011 Defender 110 Puma 2.4 HT Corris Grey
Honcho wrote:
Captain Speaking wrote:
Quote:
What is it that normally makes them catch fire? Just blockage abd heat build up?


Last year's straw and the odd bird's nest! We always cleaned ours out thoroughly straight after harvest to make sure they were thoroughly dry before any ice could form in the winter. Beware pressure-washing a combine when it's minus 5 Laughing


I used to work for a large tillage contractor and we always put the combines away dry straight from the last cut. We would only wash them out right before they went for the service before next years harvest.
They use three class lexion on tracks.


We've stopped high pressure washing certain areas of our muck spreader because it was forcing its way past seals and filling gearboxes up with water.

Combine gets blown down after harvest (and during actually) then a water wash at the end before it's put away.
Our big issue is that one of the farms we harvest doesn't have enough storage space and are usually running really late (we can't harvest it all at once then it starts to rain so it gets put back and back) so we end up starting the maize harvest before their winter wheat is all in.

Power... our biggest tractor is 200hp out of something like a 7l straight 6. The forager is a 12l straight 6 doing 500hp. A big farm tractor on a large estate round us might be heading on for about 400hp, that's the top end of wheeled tractors or one with tracks. A Case Quadtrac is up to about 700hp if you get the big ones but they're pretty unusual.
Post #550871 24th Jul 2016 2:32pm
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Venomator



Member Since: 25 Aug 2014
Location: Peterborough
Posts: 2087

United Kingdom 
Re: And we're off...Harvest '16! Post your harvest pics...
Captain Speaking wrote:

Well, I certainly ain't no farmer, but I do have fields all around and these things started work this morning, did a couple of passes only and then packed up for the day... Rolling Eyes

Mind you, the crop (Barley perhaps?) looks pretty rubbish having pretty much collapsed all over and being full of Black Grass... Shocked

But at least it meant I could get up close and personal... Thumbs Up

Enjoy... Mr. Green



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 Rog... Mr. Green
The GREEN One...


MY2016 Urban Truck Build Thread - http://www.defender2.net/forum/topic40548....al[/color]
Post #550941 24th Jul 2016 8:07pm
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JOW240725



Member Since: 04 May 2015
Location: Suffolk
Posts: 7905

United Kingdom 2012 Defender 110 Puma 2.2 XS CSW Orkney Grey
Pickles wrote:
How much "power"is that?
We.ve got 700HP+ in Aussie
Pickles.


In the UK I believe the Case Quadtrac and Cat Challenger's are nearing 700hp Thumbs Up James
MY2012 110 2.2TDCi XS SW Orkney Grey - http://www.defender2.net/forum/topic43410.html
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Post #550973 24th Jul 2016 8:57pm
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Maris Widgeon



Member Since: 11 Dec 2013
Location: Cotswolds
Posts: 216

England 2007 Defender 90 Puma 2.4 XS CSW Santorini Black
Managed to wrap up some hay before it rained. It's been a nightmare trying to get the hay all baled with the farmers favourite moan causing so much grief. We need 4 to 5 dry days to get the grass dry enough to make the best hay and with it regularly raining it gets frustrating. We have been able to get 650 round bales and 500 small square bales.
That the baling done until we start the cereals next week.

Click image to enlarge


Hay put into rows to make it easy to Bale.

Click image to enlarge


On a good day I can Bale about 60 bales an hour, it is quite a therapeutic job cleaning up the fields and leaving a field full of bales
Nick
Post #550975 24th Jul 2016 9:11pm
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Pickles



Member Since: 26 May 2013
Location: Melbourne
Posts: 3784

Australia 2013 Defender 90 Puma 2.2 CSW Keswick Green
custom90steve wrote:
^^^^ You've probably got more powerful over there due to land size over there.
Over here there are some powerful machines but you'll rarely if ever see them because they aren't commonly used with their huge price tag and of course fuel use.

Yes, We have some BIG acreages in Aussie,.....we're also experiencing some had times, because of drought in some areas.
We spend a bit of time in the Mallee, a country area in Northern Victoria,...it's been pretty tough there for the last few years
I was talking to a farmer in the Pub recently & He was telling me that He'd lost "half a milion" (dollars) last year, and looked like losing the same this year. I asked him how he coped with that, and He just shrugged his shoulders. It's a bit of a poker game, they spend BIG money fertilizing, sowing etc, then, with no rain, there's little or no return.
Pickles.l
Post #550994 24th Jul 2016 9:56pm
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custom90



Member Since: 21 Jan 2010
Location: South West, England.
Posts: 20367

United Kingdom 
Maris Widgeon wrote:
We have been able to get 650 round bales and 500 small square bales.
Nick

That's good going, at the local prices here just for the small bales that'd be £1750.

Thumbs Up
Post #551004 24th Jul 2016 10:51pm
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Maris Widgeon



Member Since: 11 Dec 2013
Location: Cotswolds
Posts: 216

England 2007 Defender 90 Puma 2.4 XS CSW Santorini Black
Would be nice to cash in on the value of the hay, but it will all be used to feed our own stock.
We need to see us through the winter,
3500 tonnes of silage,
500 silage bales,
700 big bales of hay,
5500 big bales of straw for animal bedding for the winter.
If we can get all this harvested during the summer months we should have a comfortable winter.we still have 750 acres of cereals to harvest in the next few weeks.
The above keeps us busy and it would help if we could put in an order for the weather that we require!!!
Nick.
Post #551025 25th Jul 2016 6:28am
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