Wed Feb 22, 2012
FAQs
How much Soyex can I feed to my dairy cows?
Nutrition

Typical Soyex feeding rates are 2-3kg (4.5-6.5lbs) per cow per day. Since there's energy (oil) remaining in Soyex, 500g (1lb) of oil, can be included in high producing dry cow rations.

If you are feeding free or liquid oil, amount fed should be limited to 225g (.5lb) per cow per day. Unsaturated fatty acids can depress fiber digestion and rumen fermentation.

Here are some recommended feeding rates of soybean feed ingredients for comparison:

Soybean Ingredient Feeding Rate (kg/cow/day) Feeding Rate (lbs/cow/day) Feed Limitations
Roasted soybean, coarse/cracked 2-3 5-6

high oil content
high RUP
external processing costs

Soyex (your expeller soybean meal) 2-3 4-6

medium oil content
medium RUP

Extruded soybeans 2 4

medium oil content
medium to high RUP
high feed cost

Raw soybeans 2 4 high oil content
low RUP
higher levels can lower protein digestibility

Answer adapted from University of Illinois Extenstion. 'Feeding Soyean as an Economic Alternative.' Authors: Mike Hutjens, Extension Dairy Specialist, University of Illinois, Urbana.

 
Can an Energrow System Press Green or Heated Canola?
General

Energrow Systems will process green or heated canola to a practical point. The greener your seed, the darker the oil, the more difficult it is to remove, and less stable it is. Immature canola seed naturally contains a high level of chlorophyll, the green pigment that allows plants to photosynthesize, or turn the sun's energy into biomass. Fully and properly matured canola will have no chlorophyll, which is typically measured in Western Canada as % green seed. In high green seed samples, processing removes the chlorophyll with the oil component imparting a dark colour to the oil which is difficult and expensive to remove. In addition, high levels of chlorophyll are associated with increased oxidative rancidity.

As a Rule of Thumb, you can use the Canadian Grain Commission's (CGC) Official Grain Grading Guide:

Grade 1: recommended for food grade pressing applications
Grade 2: recommended for feed grade pressing applications
Grade 3: recommended for fuel grade pressing applications

How to grade or know how green your canola is:
The Canadian Grain Commission's (CGC) Official Grain Grading Guide accounts for distinctly green seed, but the measure is subjective. The Official Grain Grading Guide also has a reference to colour and as such has provisions for pale green and slightly immature seeds that are not distinctly green. The Guide notes that, "Whole seeds that are green may be as a result of thin seed coats of certain canola varieties. Whole green seeds of these varieties are not indicators of elevated chlorophyll levels and therefore are not considered distinctly green or assessed as part of colour evaluation. Only seeds which are distinctly green throughout when crushed are assessed as distinctly green 2. However, the grader determines % green subjectively and has leeway within the regulations. The correlation between per cent green seed, as it related to grades, and chlorophyll measured in parts per million (PPM) is not very tight

At some point in seed formation, all canola will contain a high amount of chlorophyll. If maturity progresses normally, the chlorophyll will clear out through natural metabolic activity. Enzymes, proteins that facilitate biological processes, are responsible for the removal of chlorophyll and, in canola, they are only active at temperatures above 5ºC and at seed moisture contents above 20 per cent.

Several different environmental factors in combination with agronomic practices can affect the ability of seed to rid itself of chlorophyll:

Frost

  • can denature or destroy these enzymes and render the plant unable to rid itself of chlorophyll regardless of the temperature and moisture conditions following a frost;
  • will affect green seed and, if the temperature is low enough to destroy the enzymes responsible for clearing the green seed, no amount of time, heat or moisture will help, nor will the green seed cure out once the crop has been harvested and binned. If canola is not mature enough to swath, unfortunately, producers do not have many options to reduce the effects of an early fall frost. Seed must be below 20 per cent moisture to avoid the effects of frost. This is because much of the damage from frost comes from the freezing of water and the formation of ice crystals. If the moisture content is low enough, this will not happen to any great degree
  • The amount of frost a crop can withstand depends on several factors including acclimatization, dew and ultimately crop stage.

Extreme heat immediately post swathing

  • can dramatically reduce the moisture content of the seed in a very short amount of time, leaving the seed with not enough moisture to support enzymatic activity;
Variety selection, disease and variable plant stand
  • can and will affect green seed count, but are not of concern in the later growing season;

Swathing earlyto avoid frost damage

  • is often not an effective management strategy to mitigate the risk of frost and can result in severe yield loss due to shrivelling of immature seeds.
  • swathed canola, if above 20 per cent moisture, is susceptible to frost damage just like standing canola.
  • only effective if the canola is swathed at least 72 hours before a frost so that the moisture content can fall below 20 per cent. A noticeable symptom of a damaging frost on canola near maturity is that the pods "sweat" and release plant juices. This happens because ice crystals have destroyed the integrity of the cell walls. Other symptoms of a damaging frost will be white specking of the pods, shrivelled seeds that resemble raisins, and wilting of the plants. However, most of these symptoms may not be visible for two to four days following the frost.

 Acclimatization

  • is a plant hardening off by several days of cold weather before a frost. Plants that have gone through this react better to frost than plants that have not.
  • canola seedlings react better to hardening off before early spring frosts than do plants nearing maturity.

Dew

  • heavy dew on the plant will act as an insulator and decrease the effects of freezing temperatures.There are no hard and fast rules as to how much frost canola can take at this or any stage.

It is difficult to predict with any great certainty how a particular canola crop will fare at a particular temperature, it is a wait and see situation. Green seed is a major discounting factor for canola and historically the price drops by $10 to $15 per tonne, per grade.  By pressing your green or heated canola on-farm you can add your own value to your feed or local economy.  Consider crushing your own crops to be less dependent on market grading and pricing systems. 

 
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What are the benefits / disadvantages of running straight vegetable oil (svo)?
Fuel

Upon conversion, your vehicle or generator can run off of all well known plant and animal oils and fats. All bio-fuels, like foodstuffs, are CO2 neutral, free of sulphur and poisons to the environment. Bio-fuels only produce a fraction of the pollutants that mineral diesels produce. Bio-fuels are renewable, relying on solar energy that has for millions of years acted as energy an carrier for nature. It can now replace fossil fuels used in any diesel run engines.

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Feb 23, 2012
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