The Standard Journal

Deadline for hay contest is September 28

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Hay doesn’t always get the respect it deserves.

You won’t find it featured in any “farm-totable” magazine spreads or highlighte­d in a “Got hay?” marketing campaign. Good hay’s not flashy, but without it, great steaks and cheese would be impossible.

This year’s baleage and hay producers from across the Southeast have a chance to show off the fruits of their labor at the Southeaste­rn Hay Contest at the Sunbelt Ag Expo in October. The registrati­on deadline is Monday, Sept. 28.

This year’s contest features cash prizes for the winners of all 7 categories, as well as free use of Massey Ferguson-brand hay equipment for the production season.

For more than a decade, the Southeaste­rn Hay Contest has been spotlighti­ng high-quality hay and baleage production in the region. The Cooperativ­e Extension programs in Alabama, Florida, Georgia and South Carolina have organized the contest since its inception.

“We hope every highqualit­y hay producer from Texas to Virginia will enter for a chance to win,” said Dennis Hancock, University of Georgia Cooperativ­e Extension forage specialist and director of this year’s contest. “Our goal is to demonstrat­e the potential to produce high-quality hay and baleage in the Southeast. Just as important, we want to highlight the technology that makes it all possible.”

This year’s entries will be judged on their compositio­n, including protein and total digestible nutrients (TDN), and on relative feed quality scores.

Because of higher livestock prices, forage producers are seeing an increased demand for their baleage and hay. With increased demand, prices for hay and baleage have gone up, and livestock producers are demanding better quality hay and baleage for those higher prices. As a result, the quality of forage crops has increased dramatical­ly over the last decade, Hancock said.

Good management has become more efficient through the use of improved forage varieties, advanced harvest equipment and other technologi­es that have come to the market during the last decade, he said.

To celebrate, Hancock and other hay contest organizers decided to up the ante on their hay contest with the help of some big-name sponsors, especially new title sponsor, Massey Ferguson.

The company will provide the use of a new Massey Ferguson RK Series rotary rake for the 2016 hay production season and $1,000 cash as the grand prize for this year’s contest. Cash prizes will be provided to first, second and third place winners in each of the seven categories.

Massey Ferguson will also provide the winner of first place in the warm season perennial grass category with the use of a new DM Series profession­al disc mower for the 2016 hay production season.

Sponsors will provide cash awards to the top three places in each category, including $125 for first prize, $75 for second prize and $50 for third prize. Georgia Twine is sponsoring the warm season perennial grass cat- egory. America’s Alfalfa is sponsoring the alfalfa hay category. Silo-King is sponsoring the perennial peanut hay category.

The deadline for entry into the Southeaste­rn Hay Contest is 5 p.m. on Monday, Sept. 28. Winners will be recognized at the Sunbelt Ag Expo, in Moultrie, Georgia, in October.

More informatio­n about the contest, including the rules and entry form, is available at bit. ly/SEHayConte­st2015.

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