AgTalk Home
AgTalk Home
Search Forums | Classifieds (110) | Skins | Language
You are logged in as a guest. ( logon | register )

Can a sileage pile be used to heat your house?
View previous thread :: View next thread
   Forums List -> AgTalk CafeMessage format
 
Costanza
Posted 11/21/2024 20:41 (#10977567 - in reply to #10977396)
Subject: RE: Can a sileage pile be used to heat your house?


Kansas
Shimmy1 - 11/21/2024 19:18

Costanza - 11/21/2024 18:59

outsidethebox - 11/21/2024 11:23

A heating pile of feed is a compost pile. A silage pile has been packed to express as much oxygen as possible, and will not heat for long before becoming anaerobic, and fermenting.


Is the silage not hot when it's fed?? Maybe not "hot" but pretty warm.


I asked a couple of local ranchers this same question a year ago, and was told in no uncertain terms that a proper pile is completely cooled off when you open it up. If it's still warm, you're losing food value.

I said, my grandpa's piles were always warm in the winter. They said, did he measure and weigh everything fed? Have rations and whatnot, or just feed what he thought the cows should get?


What did that have to do whether it was hot enough? Every silage pile I've seen was hot when fed. Again, maybe not Hot, but there would be steam when it was loaded. I thought that was normal. So does that mean it wasn't packed well enough?
Top of the page Bottom of the page


Jump to forum :
Search this forum
Printer friendly version
E-mail a link to this thread

(Delete cookies)