Every farmer agrees that nothing is more important for healthy, abundant production than healthy soil. Every aspect of your farming operation depends on it. If you agree with this premise, then ask yourself, are you maintaining the biological integrity of your soil?
Are you wondering why you struggle with soil compaction, water absorption and retention?
If these and other soil related problems cause you some production related anxiety, maybe it’s time you took a hard look at options, available today, that will bring your soil back to life, energize your crops and reduce their need for water. Isn’t it time to consider restoring and rejuvenating the natural systems within your soil to improve production and quality of your crops?
Soil with healthy structure manages water like a sponge, expanding its profile and storing water so it can be available during drought conditions. Micro-organisms naturally stimulated with plant-derived enzymes and fed with electrolytes and trace minerals expel well-oxygenated, nutrient-balanced matter that can create openings in your soil. These openings, “pore spaces,” allow water and oxygen to surround plant root systems. Strong, healthy root systems supply abundant nutrients and facilitate complete plant growth. Healthy plants grow and mature faster, require less water, yield more tonnage and generally are more resistant to bug infestations and onset of various diseases.
Establishing and maintaining good, healthy soil structure is not complicated and it does not require a college degree in microbiology. What is required, is the desire to learn and apply some basic, fundamental truths about how mother nature designed soil systems to work, producing plant growth in a healthy environment. Our Complete Sense® Soil Series is a practical approach to learning how healthy soil functions, what it requires and what it will deliver. The series also provides some basic insight into your plants, organisms, water, and natural systems that support them. We hope you find this information valuable as you consider alternative methods designed to solve some of the daily challenges that farmers face today.
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