Event Details

Date

September 10, 2015

Time

1:00pm - 3:00pm

Location

Whittaker Farm, LLC
4594 Route 26
Whitney Point, NY 13862

Cost

This event is free.

Host

Central New York Dairy, Livestock & Field Crops

Pre-Registration Deadline: September 9, 2015

EVENT HAS PASSED

Corn Silage Harvest Workshop

September 10, 2015


The South Central NY Dairy & Field Crops Team of Cornell Cooperative Extension is holding a Corn Silage Harvest Workshop on Thursday, September 10th, 2015 at Whittaker Farm, LLC, 4594 Route 26, Whitney Point, NY 13862

Topics include:
-Target Dry Matter for Harvest
-Kernel Processing and Chop Length
-Packing Tractors & Fill Rate
-Managing Shrink

Live Demonstrations for:
-Determining Packing Weight Needed
-Bunk Density
-Kernel Processing
-Updates on Current Conditions 

Presenters include Tom Zorn of Cows Come First, and Janice Degni and Betsy Hicks of the SCNY Dairy & Field Crops Team, Cornell Cooperative Extension. Come early and bring 3-4 stalks of your corn (label fields) to be chipped and dried down for dry matters. Some farms may have already started chopping, so real time data on dry matters and conditions will be available!

Please park by the shop. Drinks and light refreshments will be served. There is no cost for the event, but RSVP's are requested for refreshments. To register, call Jen Atkinson at 607.753.5078 or email jma358@cornell.edu. For any questions, contact Betsy Hicks at 607.753.5213 or email at bjh246@cornell.edu.


corn silage workshop flyer (PDF; 739KB)


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Dairy

Dairy

Livestock

Livestock

Forages

Forages

Grains

Grains

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Spotted Lanternfly

Lycorma delicatula, or Spotted Lanternfly (SLF), is an invasive plant hopper from Asia and is an agricultural pest. In the United States, it was first found in Pennsylvania in 2014. Spotted Lanternfly has been found in New York State on Staten Island, all New York City boroughs, Long Island, Port Jervis, Sloatsburg, Orangeburg, Ithaca, Binghamton, Middletown, Newburgh, Highland, and the Buffalo area. SLF threatens the agriculture and forestry industries, and is also a nuisance pest. The nymphs and adults feed on over 70 different plants, but is especially detrimental to grapes, a black walnut, hops, maple trees and apples. New York State Ag and Markets supported CCE efforts to help bring awareness to communities and we developed this Public Service Announcement and would appreciate you sharing it with your member lists. 



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