UCANR

Building Healthy Soil

Sustainable Gardening - Building Healthy Soil

The following information describes how to build healthy soil in a home garden.

What is Healthy Soil?

Healthy Soil is a living system that includes:

  • Inorganic material—rock/mineral particles.
  • Air (especially oxygen) and water.
  • Organic material—living organisms: roots, worms, microbes, etc.; decomposing/decomposed organisms.

Characteristics of Healthy Soil:

  • A self-balancing natural ecosystem with stable populations of plants & soil organisms.
  • Approx. 5% organic matter with a stable, slightly acidic pH that keeps nutrients supplied in plant-available forms.
  • Continuous nutrient cycling throughout the soil system. Plant roots exude sugars & proteins that attract & feed
    soil organisms. As these organisms die/decompose or are eaten by others, nutrients are released back to plants.
  • Strong “crumb” or granular soil structure, with a mixture of pore sizes that hold both air and water.

What Creates Soil Structure?

Life in the soil creates soil structure

  • Soil organisms decompose organic matter, slowly producing humus, which is highly resistant to further breakdown.
  • Soil organisms produce glues and filaments that bind tiny mineral particles and humus together into soil crumbs.
  • Worms and other burrowing creatures continuously open pathways for roots, air, and water.

Benefits of Good Soil Structure

  • Maintains critical soil air space while acting as a rainfall reservoir... soil becomes like a sponge.
  • Drains excess water quickly, avoiding detrimental, disease-friendly anaerobic conditions.
  • Helps soil resist erosion & compaction.
  • Allows beneficial soil organisms to flourish; they maintain the structure & keep the nutrient cycle going.

What Disrupts the System?

Disruption of the soil system leads to soil compaction, erosion, infertility, etc. 

  • Excessive disturbance, especially rototilling and construction
  • Working or even walking on wet soil
  • Excessive watering; excessive dryness
  • Leaving soil bare (but leave some bare for native bees)
  • Chemical fertilizers, pesticides, chlorinated water (includes chloramines)
  • Excessive pruning/shearing of plants (stimulates excess growth, depletes soil nutrients)

Benefits of Using Compost and Mulch

  • Returns nutrients to the soil; keeps waste out of the landfill.
  • Replenishes/supports populations of beneficial soil organisms.
  • Helps form soil aggregates, improving soil structure.
    • Clay soils: improve aeration, water infiltration & percolation.
    • Sandy soils: increase water-holding capacity, which helps hold nutrients.
  • Organic mulches decompose in place, providing slower but similar benefits. Sheet mulching is especially effective.
  • If you’re short on time, keeping the soil covered with an organic mulch is the simplest approach.

Simple Things you can do to Help your Soil

  • Work with, not against, the ecosystem...handle with care; put back what you remove.
  • Avoid compaction & excessive soil disturbance.
  • Reduce pruning & waste—right plant, right place; design beds carefully.
  • Avoid chemical/synthetic fertilizers, overfertilizing, overwatering, and severe underwatering.
  • Use compost and mulch to
    • supply/recycle soil microbes & nutrients,
    • nurture the soil organisms that partner with your plants,
    • and thus, to keep the engine running!

Recipes for Building Healthy Soil

Below are a few ways to build healthy soil

Aerobic Compost 

  • Ingredients: equal parts browns and greens
  • Chop: into small pieces to improve decomposition
  • Arrange: into pile; reasonable pile size = 3’ x 3’ x 3’
  • Add water just to the level of a wrung-out sponge
  • Stir (turn): often to maintain uniform decomposition
  • Add water as needed to maintain the moisture level
  • Harvest: when soil-like in appearance
  • Screen: to remove big chunks before adding to the soil
  • Incorporate into the top few inches of soil or potting mix
  • Enjoy: a beautiful & healthy garden

Mulching

  • Apply disease and weed-free organic mulch 2-4” thick, keeping it away from the root crowns of plants.
  • Apply coarser mulch more thickly and finer-textured mulch more thinly.
  • Reapply as needed.

Sheet Mulching

  • Cut or mow weeds.
  • Apply a thin layer of compost and cover with dampened newspaper or cardboard, overlapping edges.
  • Cover with 2-4” of mulch as above.
  • Keep damp to hasten decomposition and soil enrichment.

Online Resources for Building Healthy Soil


UC Master Gardener Program of Contra Costa County
2380 Bisso Lane, Concord, CA  94520

Website: https://ucanr.edu/site/uc-master-gardener-program-contra-costa-county 


Source URL: https://ucanr.edu/site/uc-master-gardener-program-contra-costa-county/article/building-healthy-soil