I'm new to the straight razor world, and I'm still trying to figure out many of the finer points to this whole process. One of the things that seems to be up for debate is when and how much to strop. I've been following what most people seem to suggest, which is stropping every time you shave (I tend to do this after I shave so that my blade is ready to use the next day). This seems to be working alright, but I don't really have much to compare against. I came across an article on Knives at Knife Center today which seemed to go completely against what I've read everywhere else. The consensus seems to be, more stropping = sharper blade, but his article seems to contradict that. Any thoughts on the article below?

"When you shave, the cutting edge gets somewhat misaligned microscopically. It looks like microserrations, bending aside irregularly. If you put the knife away, the cutting edge stretches ('grows') spontaneously within 24 hours. After 3 or 4 shaves it should be aligned a little bit again and therefore you must strop. If you do that correctly, and treat the blade well, you only need to hone once every month or even year, and never send it in fro grinding. You need the right strop and the right paste. The game is, to postpone honing as long as possible, and to use the strop almost exclusively. Any other reports are due to wrong care."