I suggest we use this post to share actual data we collect from farms relative to high chop corn silage.  The simplest metric to look at is the RFC-Fill index that I developed a few years ago.  It is (NDFd30 + starch)/NDFu30.  Dr. Kemp shared information from a small trial he did on a client.

They chopped a field of BMR with the chopper set at three different heights – 12″, 16″, 20″. The BMR was wet (29% DM), low starch (28% Starch) and high NDFD (69%).

Height RFC-fill index

12″       4.39

16″       4.26

20″      4.27

I suspect there is no statistical difference in these samples (you would not build a different diet accordingly) and there is a lot of dry matter left in the field.  As Dr Kemp suggested (“If we grow it, we should harvest it”).

I was on a herd yesterday that Rachel Brong feeds.  They are high chopping corn silage for a variety of good management reasons (Rachel, can you outline these for discussion).  We chopped alternating loads as high and normal cut (4 total).  These we sampled and sent to the lab yesterday afternoon.  We should have the results back Thursday or Friday and will share them here.

If anyone else has mini-trials can you share the data here?

Thanks,

 

Larry