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<blockquote data-quote="MacFromOK" data-source="post: 3136950" data-attributes="member: 40864"><p>That is hands-down the roughest hay I ever hauled. Yer lucky if one pair of jeans will get ya through the job.</p><p></p><p>Cattle eat it like candy though. <img src="/images/smilies/biggrin.png" class="smilie" loading="lazy" alt=":D" title="Big Grin :D" data-shortname=":D" /></p><p></p><p>FWIW, sand (or a sand-combo) is about the only soil where ya can grow it. A young farmer in this area told me he once moved his peanut allotment to some blackland acreage he'd bought.</p><p></p><p>He harvested one trailer-load, and it cost him the load of peanuts <em>plus $80</em> to get 'em cleaned (the blackland <em>really</em> stuck to the peanuts). So he lost that whole crop. And... he had to wait two years to move his allotment back to the sandy soil. <img src="/images/smilies/biggrin.png" class="smilie" loading="lazy" alt=":D" title="Big Grin :D" data-shortname=":D" /></p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="MacFromOK, post: 3136950, member: 40864"] That is hands-down the roughest hay I ever hauled. Yer lucky if one pair of jeans will get ya through the job. Cattle eat it like candy though. :D FWIW, sand (or a sand-combo) is about the only soil where ya can grow it. A young farmer in this area told me he once moved his peanut allotment to some blackland acreage he'd bought. He harvested one trailer-load, and it cost him the load of peanuts [i]plus $80[/i] to get 'em cleaned (the blackland [i]really[/i] stuck to the peanuts). So he lost that whole crop. And... he had to wait two years to move his allotment back to the sandy soil. :D [/QUOTE]
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