How to make Silage ?
How is silage made ? Silage is made by quickly chopping fresh corn plants, controlling moisture, adding inoculants when needed, and sealing the chopped crop in an oxygen-free environment for…
How is silage made ? Silage is made by quickly chopping fresh corn plants, controlling moisture, adding inoculants when needed, and sealing the chopped crop in an oxygen-free environment for…
What Is Corn Silage? Corn silage is chopped, fermented corn plant material (stalks, leaves and ears) preserved to make a high-energy, palatable feed for livestock. Instead of feeding whole dry…
What is silage? Silage is fermented, high-moisture forage (maize, grass, sorghum or mixed residues) compacted and sealed to preserve nutrients for animal feed it is abundantly available in Pakistan. How…
Introduction For decades wheat straw was the default cheap feed and biomass in Pakistan. Today that advantage is disappearing. Rising production and transport costs, seasonal shortages, the low nutritional value…
Bagged silage vs Bunker silage Intro — quick answer Both bagged (wrapped) silage and bunker (pit) silage produce excellent fermented feed — but for many buyers (small & medium farms,…
Introduction Pakistan’s livestock sector is huge and growing—but it faces a chronic feed shortage. Traditional green fodder and crop residues cover only part of demand, leaving large energy and protein…
Field Update: We’re Starting Silage Packing — Big Stocks of Sesame Straw, Ongoing Wheat Straw Baling & New biomass Keekar/Safeda Supply Introduction — What’s happening at Babar Aziz Balers We’ve…
Driving Pakistan’s textile export boom with world‑class fabrics and garments For Ranking of Top 10 Textile Mills in Pakistan by combined figures of Revenue, no of Employees and Export CLICK…
Understanding Pakistan’s largest textile producers—and their appetite for biomass fuelFor ranking of top 10 Textile Mills in Pakistan based on exports CLICK HERE Introduction Pakistan’s textile industry drives over 60 % of…
Introduction When Nishat Mills urgently required 200 tonnes of corn cob for their boilers, Babar Aziz Balers rose to the challenge—despite relying on third-party trollies and open transport. In just…