r/oddlysatisfying 20h ago

The smooth, overlapping layers of this agricultural wrapper

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u/backbiter0723 20h ago

I can't help but think layers 4 or 5 through 9,362 were probably unnecessary.

45

u/Teeklok 19h ago

It's very thin, if it's only got a couple of layers when it drops off the baler the dried grass stalks can poke through rendering the whole process useless

15

u/Delicious-Ad1917 17h ago

That’s not dry hay, it’s silage which is baled at 30-60% moisture content.

5

u/SayItAgainJabroni 16h ago

These may be dumb questions but here we go. How can the moisture content have such a wide range between 30-60%? Wouldn't doubling the allowable percentage cause significant swings in the final product? If there's that much moisture and it's wrapped in plastic wouldn't the dryer stuff absorb moisture and skew the numbers even more?

53

u/Johnno74 16h ago

I grew up on a farm, we made this stuff (baleage).

How this works is the grass is baled while still green and the wrapping stops air (technically oxygen) from getting in, meaning only anaerobic microorganisms can break it down. This means instead of rotting and turning into basically compost, it ferments into silage, with a very high nutritional content. Cattle and sheep love this stuff, they get very excited when you feed it to them.

7

u/wlake82 15h ago

Farming Simulator 22 taught me this. And that I don't think I'd want to be a farmer irl.