[AT] combining grain sorghum with an older combine
charlie hill
charliehill at embarqmail.com
Mon Sep 3 06:34:58 PDT 2012
John, they've been growing milo down here in the east for going on 20
years now. Looks to be a good crop. Everyone picks it high just like you
said. Run the head just low enough to get
the grain. Leave the rest in the field. I wish I could tell you the rest
of the harvest tricks but I don't know. I have a friend who farms it. If I
see him in the next day or so I'll ask him.
Charlie
-----Original Message-----
From: jtchall at nc.rr.com
Sent: Monday, September 03, 2012 7:58 AM
To: Antique tractor email discussion group
Subject: [AT] combining grain sorghum with an older combine
Looking for a voice of experience here. We have a new market in my area for
grain sorghum (milo). Up until now it was very rarely planted, most folks
around here have never seen a field of it. My dad planted a little back in
the 50’s. His problem was harvesting it—trying to get and keep the heads
into the header. They were planting it in rows as wide as corn—which didn’t
help. I’ve got mine in 15” rows. From what I have seen on you-tube videos
and from talking with agronomists and other farmers, you run no more of the
plant in the machine than is necessary and also keep your ground speed up to
help push the crop in. Sounds simple but I don’t think my 35 year old
combine always plays by the same rules as a modern machine. I had an older
fellow from the southwest (Texas I think) tell me they used to bolt a piece
of PVC pipe right behind the guards to keep the heads from rolling out. Any
other ideas concerning header loss or are there other concerns I need to
address? One other thing I forgot to mention, we are going to be allowed to
cut it pretty high in moisture---I think it is close to 20%. I think that is
so we can get the jump on birds and deer—we can’t sell the bird-resistant
varieties. How long can a crop that high in moisture sit in a truck/grain
cart without spoiling?
John Hall
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