Compacted Soil Remedy

On significantly compacted land, a carefully designed progression of crops is the best long-term solution.

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by Adobestock/Polarpx

Minimize driving over the soil as a compacted soil remedy to support healthy soil structure by allowing the soil to breathe, drink, and move nutrients around.

Healthy soils are much more than dirt! In fact, some might argue they’re some of the largest living organisms that serve to help make this planet habitable. The structural, chemical, and biological diversity in healthy soil is mind-blowing, in spite of the affronts we’ve thrown at soil over the years. Rather than thinking of soil as some inanimate growth medium, consider it a complex ecosystem instead.

Not Just Dirt!

Soil structure is key to maintaining its productivity but also key to the ways water, gases, organic nutrients, and minerals move through the greater ecosystem of Earth. Essentially, soils consist of variously sized particles made with silt, sand, clay, and organic matter, bound together to form aggregates in a somewhat consistent way. The aggregates are stabilized by a glue of sorts that’s created by the living organisms residing in that soil. The aggregates are porous and collectively form channels and pockets that allow fluids and gases, as well as invertebrates and microbes, to grow and move around. The spaces in the soil structure allow the soil to breathe, drink, and move nutrients around, and truly support terrestrial life in significant ways.

In a soil with a healthy structure, rainwater is readily absorbed, the oxygen needs of the plants, microbes, and animals living in that soil can be met, and the carbon dioxide they produce can make it back into the atmosphere. Further, when a healthy soil is relatively dry, its structure is usually more stable and weight-bearing. When it’s wet, it becomes more plastic. When plastic soil encounters mechanical force, it moves. If that mechanical force is on the surface, the soil can be squashed to the extent that the aggregate structure is more or less destroyed in a process known as “compaction.” Compaction reduces the pore size, water-holding capacity, gas movement, nutrient-movement capacity, and it reduces the soil’s ability to support life.

  • Updated on Jan 8, 2024
  • Originally Published on Dec 18, 2023
Tagged with: Compacted Soil, pasture management, pastured livestock, soil health
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