9/12/2023 0 Comments Farming simulator 15 forager mods![]() ![]() Like so:ġ) you've obviously got mower already - so consider just buying 10 cows and feeding them grass via a forage wagon. Maybe don't wait until you have all the materials to start your herd - maybe go in steps, remembering that cows can live and start producing at lower efficiency on just grass alone. Some thoughts on an approach you may consider if you're a bit of a masochist or consumer of full game content (or not - totally up to you how to play!). Probably my most fun games - especially the one with round bales and that wrapper. I was able to play an animal focused game without doing any silage in the silos, or mass mowing at all. I remember being so incredibly happy when I found a mod for a stacker of round bales that actually functioned. I did manage to stay true to myself on two maps - one using square bales and one using round bales after I finally found a mod that wrapped them and turned them into silage. I love how FS17 says they've finally nerfed it. I used to complain about silage, because it's so ridiculously easy to get rich with it, and it was so hard to control myself not to do just silage. That said - it's a very familiar theme for me to hear that a new player has discovered silage and is making tons of money on it. Guys like Farmboy, JohnDeere and others are far more current, etc. Just remember I am only just getting back to playing after a long time off. No worries, Cajun - happy to type what I know. I'm sure the FS17 editor will be the same with a few more kewl features from what I'm hearing. It's no so different from the BF2 editor and I learned to make really good maps for BF2 and BF1942\Vietnam, I've been told I have a talent for it. I'm finally figuring the editor out, and in the process of making my own map-farm. It gives me the opportunity to try different things on different farms. I always have at least two maps going, and right now have three. Hey you can't take the country from a country boy, right. I enjoyed working in my grandmothers garden the most, and I even have my apartment patio cultivated into various herbs and vegetables. He put corn up for silage, had a big silo just for that, and he sold the excess the smell can be horrible if you not used to it. My grandfather on the other hand had dairy cow as well as beef cattle, pigs, and chickens, lots of darn chickens. My uncle raise feed corn and grains, no animals, well a few hogs and chickens. I always hated bailing hay, mainly because we had no machines like in the game, and I had to walk along side the tractor pulling the trailer, and grab bails with two big bail hooks, and sling it up to someone on the trailer to stack it, and we did this all day for days until all the hay was in. A really small map where I use small machines and keep a very small number of animals and work with bales, and one big map where I never bale anything ever and can easily support big herds. I think in FS17 what I'll end up doing is having two maps. It is twenty times easier to work with loose grass than it is to tedder/windrow/bale/stack/unload and load individual bales into feed mixers. and then simply switch to a map that has big silos for grass and straw with conveyors I can park a TMR mixer underneath. Then after 30 hours of absolute tedium messing around with screwy bale physics and front loader forks I almost always think about quitting animal husbandy altogether. I get excited when I find mods like a bale wrapper that makes round bales into silage for example. I my FS career I've always had this strong urge/tendency to go for baling. ![]() I also worked on small family farms mostly, not really big operations - I never saw a big silage pit, or a corn chopper turning it into chaff for silage. Yeah I say store it, store it as silage!īales are more realistic in my opinion, but my direct farm work experience ended when I graduated high school 25 years ago. A bin like that will make me near $150,000 bucks off of cut grass. Right now I make $7,900 (avg) per 4500 bucket load with my Liebherr TL 436, and I fill the bins to around 25% and cover. As to the hay, or grass, best thing to do with that is silage. If you not keeping livestock that would need the straw, sell it. I don't know of anyone who saves loose straw or hay because it better stored in bails. My grandmother had huge gardens from which she sold fruits, nuts, and vegetables, what they didn't need for themselves. He had a lot of farm animals as well as fields. Sometimes my grandfather, once he had bailed all he needed for his farms needs, bid out the rest of the hay in the field to the highest bidder on a percent per bail because he always got his price, he didn't have to put wear and tear on his machinery, and he didn't have to foot the fuel bill. My uncle, nor my grandfather never saved "loose" straw or hay (grass), but instead always bailed it. ![]()
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |
AuthorWrite something about yourself. No need to be fancy, just an overview. ArchivesCategories |