Haven't ever quite noticed a distinct difference, but logic forces me to believe that you'd need a bit more stropping to get a good edge. I mean, when you shave, you're effectively bending the cutting 'teeth' i.e. 'dulling' the edge to much lesser degree than when you hone it. It's kind of the same idea (although not quite since honing is abrasive and shaving is actually the blade going through the hair), I would guess that honing requires a bit more work to realign the teeth on the edge. And the fabric component being more crude than leather, I'd say it's a good preparation of the edge before going to leather a coarser stropping 'grit', if you wil.
I hope I made sense, since I had a bit of trouble finding the right terms. Bottom line: honing has a more severe effect on the edge than shaving, and this is to be compensated for by more extensive stropping.
I do worsed wool/leather around 65/75. Which I feel might already be more than required, I'm still on my honeymoon with my new Scrupleworks strop, it just needs that bit of extra attention, as do I. Though with a right technique, there's no such thing as 'overstropping', so stroke away to your heart's delight is what I say.
PS: I'm under thirty, having kids makes me shudder right down to my...well, you know. And with just me and the missus around the house, it's boring just the right amount of time to recuperate. But then again, we are mildly mental.