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Maize Mess Madness

bluebell

Member
our neighbour next door has for last year and this year let out most of his farm sum 1000 acres to a third party to grow maize. Well it seemed to go alright last year with the harvest and carting the many trailers on the public very busy roads? but this year the weather turning wet and staying wet while they try to harvest it? rumours are flying round about the anger between the land lord and the tenant growing the maize and the mess etc etc? Anyone care to comment on the whys maize is grown for other cattle or farm use or any comments please, does this happen where you are?
 

farmerm

Member
Location
Shropshire
Because during in a dry autumn it seems like a good idea for next year, way more profitable than other break crops... glad now though that nobody took me up on the 20acres I was offering out at the start of this year (y)
 

Bongodog

Member
We have a big AD plant in the area who hire land in about a 15 mile radius each year. Fortunately this year they chopped the fields near us a few weeks ago before we had any rain. if its a wet autumn the mud on the roads stretches for miles. The operation seemingly depends on around 20 Fastracs pulling Larrington trailers, driven by teenagers with a mobile phone glued to their ear.

The offer to farmers to rent their land looks good, and in a dry year probably is. In a wet year however you see fields full of waterlogged ruts that grow next to nothing the following year and take three years to recover fully.
 
A local contractor having a 'mare

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glasshouse

Member
Location
lothians
our neighbour next door has for last year and this year let out most of his farm sum 1000 acres to a third party to grow maize. Well it seemed to go alright last year with the harvest and carting the many trailers on the public very busy roads? but this year the weather turning wet and staying wet while they try to harvest it? rumours are flying round about the anger between the land lord and the tenant growing the maize and the mess etc etc? Anyone care to comment on the whys maize is grown for other cattle or farm use or any comments please, does this happen where you are?
Serves him right
 

DRC

Member
the bloody stuff isn't sown till end of may. It's a job finding decent weather to harvest crops in the height of summer in june & july, why folks would want to plant a crop that needs harvesting in October is beyond me. Another fad that's sweeping the country.....
Hardly a fad. We’ve grown maize for at least twenty years. No different to the sugar beet we used to grow. Usually August is a wetter month than October and there were plenty getting stuck with straw bales this year. There’s always some risk, same with potatoes, but what else do you suggest as a good paying spring break.
 

Flat 10

Member
Arable Farmer
Location
Fen Edge
Our local lot have started "Mausing" it out of agbags which is ideal to wait for better weather. Before it used to be a sh!t show.
 

fred.950

Member
Mixed Farmer
Location
Dorset/Wiltshire
Only thing to do is run a chaser bin type thing and blow it into trailers on the road so they stay clean. Or use that elevator thing.
Have you seen the Horsch thing on tracks that you pull behind a tractor and it actually lifts a lorry trailer clear of the dirt so you can fill it and put it back on the road? The name escapes me!
 
Last edited:

Scholsey

Member
Livestock Farmer
Location
Herefordshire

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Webinar: Expanded Sustainable Farming Incentive offer 2024 -26th Sept

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On Thursday 26th September, we’re holding a webinar for farmers to go through the guidance, actions and detail for the expanded Sustainable Farming Incentive (SFI) offer. This was planned for end of May, but had to be delayed due to the general election. We apologise about that.

Farming and Countryside Programme Director, Janet Hughes will be joined by policy leads working on SFI, and colleagues from the Rural Payment Agency and Catchment Sensitive Farming.

This webinar will be...
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