5 Simple Secrets to Building Healthy Soil - The Micro Gardener (2024)

Why does soil health matter? Because if you want pest and disease-free plants that are nutrient-dense to nourish your health, you need healthy soil!

“Healthy soil has an ongoing capacity to function as a vibrant living ecosystem that can sustain plants, animals and people.”– Anne Gibson

Do YOU have Healthy Soil?

There are many factors that indicate soil health including:

  • a stable pH (not too acid or alkaline);
  • good soil structure;
  • ability to hold and release nutrients to plants;
  • level of organic matter; and
  • biodiversity of soil life.

A soil test kit will help you discover what your soil pH is. Picking up a handful of soil will allow you to get a feel for its structure and how ‘alive’ it is with worms and other tiny soil creatures.

If your soil looks and feels like lifeless dry dirt, you may have a lot of work to do!

5 Secrets to Building Healthy Soil

This is by no means an exhaustive list, just a starting point to reflect on so you can start to cultivate healthy soil in your garden.

1. No chemicals

No matter what kind of soil you have (sand, clay or loam-based), there’s one sure way to kill any soil life in no time. That’s using chemicals. Yep! Any kind. These include herbicides or weedicides you spray on your lawn, pesticides for the bugs, fungicides for the diseases, and even recycled grey water if you use non-organic personal, laundry and cleaning products. Many synthetic fertilisers are toxic for your soil life too. Food for thought isn’t it?

Chemical compounds all filter out into your soil when you water or it rains. So even if you use chemicals in one area of your garden, don’t think they just stay there! Those chemicals move from the surface on plants or grass and down into the soil and water table. Some systemic pesticides will cause lasting damage for years. Using chemicals is one of the quickest ways to reverse your efforts to build a healthy, living soil. If you want a garden that sustains you and healthy plants, toss out toxic substances.

Safe Soil

Hey, and remember your pets too. Love your dog or cat? Think about what those nasty chemicals are doing to your fur babies. They eat grass to help with digestion, so those weed killers aren’t just harming your weeds. They are equally ingested by animals and wildlife, including birds who forage for worms and insects.

Healthy lawns resist weeds so there’s no need to use toxic poisons

It doesn’t stop there. Those poor little soil workers under your feet, lawn or garden bed have no chance. Chemical poisons are a death sentence. Earthworms and microbes may be small, but they are a vital part of a healthy garden. You need these guys to help feed your plants.

So, if you’re a gardener that even sometimes uses chemicals, make it a goal this year to start solving your problems in a non-toxic way. For your own health, as well as the plants and animals in your garden.

There are plenty of organic strategies I share in articles on this site to help give you alternative ways to work with nature and avoid contaminating the very soil that feeds you.

“The cause of plant disease is poor nutrition and an unhealthy soil ecosystem. The fate of plants is as inseparably entwined with that of the soil as our fate is entwined with theirs. If we want to eat nutritious food we need to take care of the soil, for we too are part of this web of life.” – Heide Hermary

2. Avoid digging and compaction

That’s right. I’m no fan of digging! I focus on quick, easy ways to create healthy soil, rather than destroying it. One main reason is digging disturbs dormant weed seeds. That’s right. Nature sleeps until there’s some kind of chaos or disturbance or when seeds are exposed to light. One sure way to get weed seeds to germinate is to mess with your soil! Do yourself a favour and stop using your spade unnecessarily. The only time I use one is when I plant a fruit tree.

Weeds are plants that tend to thrive in compacted poorly structured soil that is lacking in minerals and either very alkaline or acid. Remediate your soil and your weeds will likely disappear! At the very least, learn how to identify and use your edible weeds!

The Weed Forager’s Handbook

Gentle use of your garden fork to aerate your lawn or garden bed can assist with improving soil structure. Digging can weaken or destroy soil particles.

However, if you have a heavy clay soil that has poor drainage, you may need to loosen the clay to add soil amendments such as gypsum or dolomite lime to improve the structure, break up clods or incorporate organic matter.

Opening up the soil gently with a fork can help reduce compaction

However, double digging (apart from being unnecessary and incredibly hard work) or turning over your soil by tilling, can quickly destroy the living community of microorganisms below. I’m talking mass murder!

The soil is their ‘house’ – their shelter, where they live, work and eat. Excessive digging disturbs microbe habitat. So, give your soil ‘community’ a break and build healthy habitat for microbes by adding organic matter like manures, cover crops, compost and mulch. You’ll also avoid damaging shallow plant roots.

Likewise, avoid compacting soggy soil after rain by trying to work it. We never mow or use equipment when the soil is wet. I make it a rule not to ever walk on my garden beds. It’s too damaging. Waterlogged soil needs time to drain if all the air pockets have become filled with water. These are simple steps you can take to save your soil from damage.

3. Organic matter

Now we get to an important positive action you SHOULD take. Be proactive and BUILD your soil health. Use what you have handy in your own garden, kitchen or neighbourhood to add organic materials that haven’t been contaminated with chemicals. If you are trying to fill a garden bed economically, it may take a little longer than buying bagged products or a load from the landscape yard. However, it’s cheaper and a lot more sustainable. Most importantly, you know there’s no chemical contamination. Instead of using your green waste bin collection service, recycle this ‘waste’ to build soil.

Easily available organic matter can include:

  • Your kitchen food scraps (don’t waste those nutrients – recycle them). Just bury in the soil and worms will turn them into beautiful black humus.
  • Grass clippings (fresh and green, they add nitrogen or aged and brown, they add carbon).
  • Leaves (if you don’t have any, offer to rake up and bag your neighbour’s ‘problem’).
  • Pruned branches or seedless weeds. They are packed with nutrients, moisture and are food for soil microorganisms.
  • Coffee grinds from the local café (yep – you can solve their ‘waste’ problem by offering to reuse it).
  • Manures (ideally aged rather than fresh). NOT from animals that eat chemically-treated pasture or have been recently medicated.
  • Disease-free plant material.
  • Mulch – some of the best is from local arborists cutting native trees down. It’s a mix of fresh green foliage and carbon-rich branches.

If you have your own compost system, that’s ideal for building larger volumes of nutrient-rich soil to feed your garden. A worm farm is another way to recycle organic matter and get the worms to do the work for you to create worm castings or vermicast. This too will help feed your soil and plants.

COMPOSTA Container Garden + Worms + Potting Mix Guide

Whichever soil-building method you use, layering organic matter on top of your soil helps create habitat for your soil workers, add nutrients and vital moisture, improves soil structure, balances pH and imitates nature. So, go for it!

4. Keep soil covered

It doesn’t matter whether you are growing in containers or garden beds (raised or on the ground), the rule is still the same. No bare earth at any time. Otherwise, ‘weeds’ (I like to call them ‘Nature’s rehabilitators’) will turn up to do your job and cover the earth to protect and nourish it.

Always cover with mulch or a living ground cover. Use whatever you’ve got handy. Leaves, dried grass clippings, hay, woody bark chips, etc. Or plant a cover crop, green manure or ground cover that will stop weeds from growing and feed your soil workers.

Applying mulch or a living ground cover stops moisture from evaporating and provides a healthy environment around your plants, helping feed the soil. You’ll reduce your water needs, lose less nutrients while protecting your plant and soil health.

Worm Farming Secrets eBook

5. Moisture matters

Dead, dry dirt is often the reason why many people can’t grow healthy plants.

“Healthy soil holds moisture like a sponge and releases nutrients to the plants as they need it. It smells fresh and earthy and feels moist.” – Anne Gibson

All plants need moisture to not only survive, but to thrive. Even more so when you’re growing food.

Fruiting crops like pumpkin, zucchini, cucumbers and capsicum, fruit trees as well as leafy greens have high water needs compared to many other edibles like hardy herbs.

So, maintaining soil moisture is a key to a healthy soil. If you live in a very dry climate, you may need to make wise choices about the plants you grow. The less rainfall you get, the more you will need to water.

The more organic matter your soil has, the greater the moisture holding capacity. If you live in a high rainfall area, soil moisture may not be an issue for you. However, for most gardeners including myself, at least some of the year has little or no rain.

So, watering and maintaining soil moisture levels is a top priority.

If your soil is too dry, your plants can’t access the nutrients. If it’s too wet and waterlogged, they can suffer from root rot and other problems because of inadequate drainage or aeration. The microbe community down there literally drowns.

Aim for a consistently moist soil for most plants except for drought hardy varieties and water-wise plants. One easy solution is to make your own soil potting mix that has everything your plants need – shelter, nutrients, moisture and air. At least until your soil health improves. You can learn to make your own soil mixes sustainably with my How to Make Potting Mix at Home Guide. You can use this homemade soil to plant into even if you are building soil in a garden bed and waiting for it to compost down.

In Summary, the 5 Tips for Building Healthy Soil are:

1. Stop using any chemicals to encourage a healthy soil microbe population to help feed and protect your plants and avoid harming beneficial insects, pollinators and wildlife.

2. Avoid digging and compaction which destroy soil life and structure. Be gentle with the earth – layer UP instead of digging DOWN.

3. Continually add organic matter – one of the building blocks of healthy soil, which decomposes and recycles nutrients to feed your plants.

4. Keep your soil covered, never bare. A layer of mulch, living ground cover or a short-term cover crop are easy solutions. See 20 Reasons Why You Should Mulch Your Garden.

Garlic chives in raised garden mulched well with sugar cane

5. Maintain your soil moisture at a consistent level. If you are growing in pots, learn more in 17 Water Saving Tips for Container Gardens. If you are growing plants in garden beds, see Ten Water Saving Tips for Your Garden for practical strategies you can use and water-wise plant suggestions.

By applying these five simple strategies, you’re on your way to:

  • creating healthy soil;
  • growing pest-and-disease-resistant plants; and
  • improving your own wellness.

“Food is only as healthy as the soil in which it is grown.”

Related articles:

  • 3 Steps to Prepare your Garden for Planting
  • 20 Reasons Why You Should Mulch Your Garden
  • 7 Sustainable Garden Design Tips
  • How to Use Compost and 7 Benefits of Composting
  • Design Tips for a Productive Kitchen Garden

Like this article?

Please share and encourage your friends tojoin my free Newsletterfor exclusive insights, tips and all future articles.

© Copyright Anne Gibson, The Micro Gardener 2017. https://themicrogardener.com. All rights reserved.

Some links within this article are affiliate links. I only recommend products or services I use personally or believe will add value to my readers. If you purchase a product via an affiliate link, I will earn a small commission. There is no additional cost to you. It’s a way you can support my site, so it’s a win-win for both of us. You directly support my ability to continue bringing you original, inspiring and educational content to help benefit your health. Thanks! Please read my Disclosure Statement for more details.

5/5 - (4 votes)

5 Simple Secrets to Building Healthy Soil - The Micro Gardener (2024)
Top Articles
Latest Posts
Article information

Author: Gregorio Kreiger

Last Updated:

Views: 6053

Rating: 4.7 / 5 (57 voted)

Reviews: 88% of readers found this page helpful

Author information

Name: Gregorio Kreiger

Birthday: 1994-12-18

Address: 89212 Tracey Ramp, Sunside, MT 08453-0951

Phone: +9014805370218

Job: Customer Designer

Hobby: Mountain biking, Orienteering, Hiking, Sewing, Backpacking, Mushroom hunting, Backpacking

Introduction: My name is Gregorio Kreiger, I am a tender, brainy, enthusiastic, combative, agreeable, gentle, gentle person who loves writing and wants to share my knowledge and understanding with you.