Very much so. In 2009, Illinois farmers produced 2 million tons of hay from 610,000 acres.
http://wiki.answers.com/Q/Does_Illinois_grow_hay
Hay is grown in hayfields. "Hay" is a generic term for crops that are grown as cattle feed. Hay is grasses and/or alfalfa generally. Farmers usually rotate their crops so a field that was growing corn or soybeans one season will b...
http://answers.yahoo.com/question/index?qid=20090217091...
yes .some other animals eat timothy hay.
http://wiki.answers.com/Q/Can_timothy_hay_grow_in_the_w...
Cattle growers in the Northeast and across the Midwest relied on selective breeding, fencing, and haymaking, as well as built structures.
http://qanda.encyclopedia.com/question/did-early-americ...
Organic farming is usually done in small operations. The cost is so high very few are willing to pay what you would have to charge. Chicken manure is a common substitute for phosporus and also provides a little nitrogen. So called organic p...
http://www.haytalk.com/forums/f2/organic-hay-399/
This depends on several situations, and especially depends on size of operation.
http://msucares.com/crops/forages/faq2.html
There is no deadline for applying. The sticky point is whether or not you hope to sell this year's harvest as organic. There's often a lapse of anywhere from a few weeks to a few months between when you apply and when the agency can send ou...
http://www.cuaes.cornell.edu/cals/cuaes/organic/project...