Soil Works LLC accelerates soil health with the use of innovative agricultural products designed to eliminate soil compaction and inoculate the soil microbiome. We service organic, transitional, and conventional agricultural industries. Our goal is to increase the quality of food being produced. We aim to increase the nutrient density of your crop by correcting the cause of soil health problems rather than reacting to symptoms. With a well established aerobic zone you are able to capture ALL of the positive ecosystem services provided by soil that works including: improved water use efficiency, increased soil mineralization, reduced input costs, and a more resilient agro-ecosystem. Our channel is designed to educate the FARMER with real world boots in the dirt experience. The Soil Works channel should be your first step towards regenerative farming and increased crop quality.
💡 I've been fighting tons of foxtail and other super weeds since ripping out the previous owners' landscaping red rock. I would love any reasonable suggestions to help the soil get back to a healthy state.
Any weed can grow in any of these types of soil, these weeds came from the clouds in a seed form, when moisture from land evaporates it catches some of that weed seeds and take it to the clouds, taking it from one place to another, and it rains. Remember the saying, bad weed never dies.
Please go more in depth as to what my problem is by having sandburrs or stickers are because I've done everything all the way to new soil and manure spreading and I've got nothing but stickers GRANTED I'm on a sand hill but I haven't even slowed em down
OK, if I have Pigweed problem I a phosphorous defiency.. So, will adding phosphorous to the soil kill the pigweed? I that the rational logic keep here? State your point sir. Because I make many more assumptions than you can shake a stick at, pun intended.
Thanks, Glenn. Have patches of pigweed which I believe you've said indicates a phosphorous deficiency. These are the low spots in the field that stay wet longer. Do you suggest a fertilizer or manure or rock phosphate regimen, or more of a till for oxygen and cover crop approach? Not in any particular hurry and plan to drill oats/vetch maybe winter peas this fall.
Sugar is the natural plant pesticide! Luther Burbank talks about this in his books. Whats old is new again. Whats new is photon emission scanner results finding out how plants actually work. Leaves plus bacteria plus roots adding electricity to create the right valance of iron the plants use. Soil needs rotting leaves. Plants are meant to eat their leaves with the help of bacteria. More mixed hedgerow, tree plantings will provide more leaves and deep roots, biomass, bacteria, predators etc...