View example sentences and word forms for Baling.
Baling meaning
present participle and gerund of bale
Example sentences (15)
Like so many ranchers, he got by on a wing and a prayer and baling wire.
They’ve worked hard to grow their own forage crops, even taking a few thousand acres of durum wheat that didn’t grow well enough to sell and cutting and baling it for feed instead.
Whether it was milking cows, tending chickens, delivering calves, baling or driving grain truck, she was always at Mike’s side.
Fieldwork activities included harvesting corn for grain, baling corn stalks, applying fertilizer and manure, and hauling grain to elevators.
What value should be put on baling corn residue?
He had worked all manner of jobs prior, from baling hay on a farm to a stint as a baker, to construction, to landscaping, to an estate-planner finance gig in New York.
Nebraska Extension and several forage equipment manufacturers are partnering again this year to provide an exhibit and workshop at Husker Harvest Days to answer many of the management questions related to corn residue baling and utilization, Rees says.
Sunray, Texas, cotton grower Heath Kimbrell is using a modified hay baler, along with his John Deere 7460 basket stripper, to develop a continuous cotton baling system to improve labor and time management.
Fire and Rescue Department (Bomba) Betong chief Vincent Baling said following a distress call at 2.40am, a team was deployed to the scene to deal with the situation.
They farm row crops, raise beef cattle, produce straw for equine bedding and are growing the manufacturing facility where they produce baling equipment.
Baling seeAlso Small bales When possible, hay, especially small square bales like these, should be stored under cover and protected from precipitation Small bales are still produced today.
But he was precocious and Mr Wallington at Baling encouraged him to publish, at the age of fifteen, an immature work, Ishmael and Other Poems.
Combustion problems typically occur within five days to seven days of baling.
Next, the cured hay is gathered up in some form (usually by some type of baling process) and placed for storage into a haystack or into a barn or shed to protect it from moisture and rot.
To completely keep out moisture, outside haystacks can also be covered by tarps, and many round bales are partially wrapped in plastic as part of the baling process.