Farm Contractor & Large Scale Farmer
    Twitter LinkedIn
    • FREE Email Newsletters
    • About Us
    • Advertise
    • Subscribe
    • Contact Us
    Twitter LinkedIn
    Podcast
    Farm Contractor & Large Scale Farmer
    • News
      • Arable & Agronomy
      • Dealership News
      • Environmental Land Management Scheme/Policy
      • Event News
      • Health & Safety
      • Machinery
      • People
      • World News
    • Farm Machinery
      • Amenity & Maintenance
      • Cultivations
      • Drilling
      • Grassland Equipment
      • Harvesting
      • Muck & Slurry
      • Sprayers
      • Telehandlers
      • Tractors
      • Tractor of the Year
      • Tyres & Tracks
      • Whatever happened to?
    • Precision Farming
    • Markets & Policy
    • Profiles
      • National Arable and Grassland Awards
      • Company Profiles
      • Reader Profiles
    • Livestock
      • Beef
      • Dairy
      • Sheep
    • Magazines
      1. March 2026
      2. 2026 Tyre Developments supplement
      3. February 2026
      4. January 2026
      5. December 2025
      6. November 2025
      7. 2025 Agritechnica preview
      8. October 2025 issue
      9. September 2025 issue
      10. August 2025 issue
      11. 2025 Drills and Seeds supplement
      12. July 2025 issue
      13. June 2025 issue
      14. Cereals event guide 2025
      15. May 2025 issue
      16. April 2025 issue
      17. March 2025 issue
      18. 2025 Tyre Developments supplement
      19. February 2025 issue
      20. National Arable and Grassland Awards supplement
      21. January 2025 issue
      22. December 2024 issue
      23. November 2024 issue
      24. October 2024 issue
      25. September 2024 issue
      26. August 2024 Issue
      27. 2024 Drills and Seeds supplement
      28. July 2024 Issue
      29. Cereals Supplement
      30. June 2024 Issue
      31. May 2024 Issue
      32. April 2024 Issue
      33. Tyres and Tracks Supplement
      34. March 2024 Issue
      35. National Arable & Grassland Award – Meet the Finalists
      36. February 2024 Issue
      37. January 2024 Issue
      38. December 2023
      39. Agritechnica Preview Supplement
      40. November 2023
      41. October 2023
      Featured

      March 2026 issue available now

      By Matthew TiltMarch 2, 2026
      Recent

      March 2026 issue available now

      March 2, 2026

      2026 Tyre Developments supplement available now

      March 2, 2026

      February 2026 issue available now

      February 1, 2026
    • Events
    • Podcast
    Farm Contractor & Large Scale Farmer
    Dairy

    New initiative aims to boost maize silage as grass silage shortage looms

    John SwireBy John SwireJuly 29, 20183 Mins Read
    Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Email

    As livestock farmers face prospects of grass silage shortages for winter feeding after the drought, a new initiative is being launched to help boost maize silage quantity and quality.

    Cut to Clamp Maize, being launched by forage preservation and animal nutrition company Volac, follows a similar initiative that the company introduced last year for grass silage.

    It aims to help farmers minimise maize feed value losses through each of five stages of: planning, harvesting, treating, clamping and feeding, explained Volac business manager, Darran Ward, speaking at the launch of the initiative. Advice will be available via a dedicated website, literature, and free on-farm silage audits, he said.

    “We know from two years of surveys among dairy farmers that there is strong interest in maximising the amount of milk produced from forage,” said Mr Ward, “with a massive 99% of respondents saying this was either extremely or very important.

    “However, there was also confusion about the scale of losses that can occur in maize due to its two main enemies of poor fermentation in the clamp and spoilage, which causes heating. Cut to Clamp Maize aims to address these.

    “With grass clamps already opened to supplement grazing because of the drought, producing good maize silage could be a lifeline for many livestock farms.

    “Typically, losses from aerobic spoilage or heating, which is caused by yeasts and moulds in the presence of air, will deplete a 1,000-tonne maize clamp by 200 tonnes. Maize silage costs about the same to produce per tonne of dry matter as three cuts of grass silage, but you only have one harvest to get it right.”

    Volac silage microbiologist, Philip Jones, agreed and said aerobic spoilage also reduces feed quality and causes mycotoxins. Although maize does ferment more easily than grass silage, he said losses from inefficient fermentation can be higher than farmers may think – at as much as 8%.

    “Nowadays, more maize is also being harvested before it starts to die back,” said Mr Jones, “and there is an argument that greener leaves with a higher moisture content will need more help with fermentation. During an efficient fermentation, beneficial bacteria produce beneficial acids, which then pickle the maize to preserve it.

    “There’s no single step to maximising fermentation efficiency and minimising heating. It needs a joined-up approach. If we can improve farmers’ understanding of what happens in the maize clamp, it becomes much easier to take the right steps to minimise losses.”

    Farmers wanting further information on Maize Cut to Clamp can visit: www.cuttoclamp.com/maize-step-1-planning

     

    Tweet
    Share
    Share
    Pin
    Share. Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Email
    Previous ArticleInterim report shows UK farming’s progress towards antibiotic use targets
    Next Article New ‘emergency forage’ introduced to ease pressure on feed supplies
    John Swire

    Read Similar Stories

    New tech aims to cut antibiotics use in dairy herds

    March 2, 2026

    March 2026 issue available now

    March 2, 2026

    2026 Tyre Developments supplement available now

    March 2, 2026
    Most Read Stories

    Emyr Evans restores classic Massey Ferguson as part of anniversary celebrations

    March 11, 2026

    Triplex aims for bespoke nutrition solutions

    March 11, 2026

    BC Machinery looks to import quality kit

    March 11, 2026
    Farm Contractor & Large Scale Farmer

    The UK's leading agricultural machinery journal

    Twitter LinkedIn
    © 2024 MA Agriculture Ltd, a Mark Allen Group company

    Privacy Policy | Cookies Policy | Terms & Conditions

    • Farmers Weekly
    • AA Farmer
    • Poultry News
    • Pig World

    Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.