Why is Healthy Soil Important?
Healthy soil is the cornerstone of a vibrant landscape. It provides oxygen and nutrients vital to plant growth and sustenance. It provides protection from the sun and stability for root systems. The soil is very much alive and possesses degrees of health the same way the human body does. Healthy plants require healthy soil and protection from weather extremes, pests, and diseases.
Probe the Soil
Smell the soil. An pleasant aroma indicates a well balanced soil which indicates a vital eco-system. If your soil smells like rotten eggs, it might be too wet and compacted to allow oxygen exchange.
Look at the soil. Healthy soils are dark and loose. The dark color comes from organic matter, the foundation of the soil food web.
Look for soil life. Earthworms, mites, millipedes, centipedes, and sow bugs indicate a healthy soil ecosystem.
Feel the soil. Is your soil gritty or slippery, smooth or loose? Soil texture is an important clue to soil health. Heavy clay soils do not allow air into the system. The presence of organic matter provides space between the constituent parts for air to flow freely which plants need.
Soil Test. To know the chemical properties of your soil, a laboratory test is needed. (See Tools to Help Assess Your Soil (see below)
What is Healthy Soil?
Healthy soil is an ecosystem of many constituent parts. It is a combination of living organisms at both micro and macro levels. You can take the temperature of your soil in a manner of speaking using touch, smell, color, and by looking for the presence of beneficial living organisms.
Determine Texture with a Simple Test
Moisten a small handful of soil and roll it into pencil shape shape in the palm of your hand. Gently squeeze the column of soil (with your fingers) and see how long a column you can make before the soil breaks apart. Clay feels sticky and will stay together than soils with less clay components. It will be slick and the column will break between 1-2 inches. Clay loam feels sticky, but the ribbon breaks at about 1 inch. Sandy loam feels gritty and sticks together, but won’t form a significant column. Sandy soil feels gritty and falls apart before it is even through your fingers!