Matthew Garner wrote:It seems like a good use for something a lot of conventional farmers treat as waste.
Small scale gardeners might treat corn stalks as waste. People in town might consider corn stalks to be waste. They ask me for free "waste" corn stalks. I say, 'no way in hell'. I used to loan corn stalks to people on condition that they return them to me, but they treated them like waste, and stole the stalks from me by not returning them as promised... "No point returning waste." So these days, I don't allow a corn stalk to leave my fields unless I am well paid for the loss of nutrients.
Even conventional farmers do not treat corn stalks as waste... They are considered a valuable soil amendment and as nutrition for next year's crop. On my farm, corn stalks get returned to the ground were they grew. The ground where corn grew last year is often the most fertile location on my farm. So while town people are buying mulch, I am growing corn for the same purpose.
The dairy farmers around here grow 'corn silage' which is chopped up green corn which is lacto-fermented before feeding to the cows. They return the cow manure to the fields, so that the nutrients are not wasted.