It can depend on the price of fodder. If hay is cheap, there's not much incentive to spend time/fuel on baling stalks. However, if they're not baled, they decompose in the field, which technically reduces fertilizer…
>there's plenty of pristine, hardly used, soil around. Gonna need a [citation needed] on that one.
>In an unhealthy soil environment where bacteria and funghi are depleted, the plants are dependent on being fed soluable forms of all nutrients. I don't think natural soil systems have been able to keep up with the…
It can depend on the price of fodder. If hay is cheap, there's not much incentive to spend time/fuel on baling stalks. However, if they're not baled, they decompose in the field, which technically reduces fertilizer…
>there's plenty of pristine, hardly used, soil around. Gonna need a [citation needed] on that one.
>In an unhealthy soil environment where bacteria and funghi are depleted, the plants are dependent on being fed soluable forms of all nutrients. I don't think natural soil systems have been able to keep up with the…