Poging GOUD - Vrij
Soil Testing
Hobby Farms
|March - April 2025
Whether you are new to farming altogether or you are leasing your farmland to a producer who is unfamiliar with the practice, becoming knowledgeable about the acts of soil testing and them applying recommended soil amendments based on soil test results provides tremendous advantages to the soil, plants, and your pocketbook.

Soil Testing Defined
"A soil test is something that allows you to understand what the physical and nutritive properties of your soil are," says Cody Brown, district conservationist with the U.S. Department of Agriculture's Natural Resources Conservation Service in Jasper, Tennessee. "The soil is a medium for you to have life growing in and that life needs certain things."

Use of a diverse blend of crops, grasses and cover crops creates a protective blanket that feeds and nurtures the soil.
Benefits to Plants
Measuring the importance of soil testing has much to do with the plants the producer is attempting to raise and what those plants are able to pull out of the soil. "If we're trying to grow a certain plant, it needs certain aspects to grown in," Brown says. You want to know what the plant needs to grow as well as the current nutrient level of the soil and how it can be improved to best support the plant you want to raise. To get the best results, you may want to use more than one type of soil test elaborating that there are many aspects to soil and that no one soil tests covers every one of them.
Different soil tests provide users with different information. "If you are looking at the physical properties of soil, then you're going to be in the soil texture triangle," he says. "This is sand, silt and clay."
Dit verhaal komt uit de March - April 2025-editie van Hobby Farms.
Abonneer u op Magzter GOLD voor toegang tot duizenden zorgvuldig samengestelde premiumverhalen en meer dan 9000 tijdschriften en kranten.
Bent u al abonnee? Aanmelden
MEER VERHALEN VAN Hobby Farms

Hobby Farms
Fermented Bruschetta
It's tomato time, so use those ripened, garden-grown beauties to ma make some fermented bruschetta! This recipe will show you how.
2 mins
July/August 2025

Hobby Farms
Raising Plants Hydroponically
This issue's column comes from a slightly different perspective, as producing plants hydroponically is a practice that hasn't yet caught on with many farmers. Yet, it could certainly fit very easily into any number of farming operations.
7 mins
July/August 2025

Hobby Farms
HEALTHLY HIVES
Nurturing a beehive can turn out to be nearly as sweet as the liquid gold found at the end.
7 mins
July/August 2025

Hobby Farms
Assessing Market
As your hobby farm grows from pleasure toward profit, consider the next step: a farmers market.
7 mins
July/August 2025

Hobby Farms
METAL TOXINS & DUCKS
Poisoning from metal toxins is a surprisingly common issue in backyard duck flocks.
4 mins
July/August 2025

Hobby Farms
Big Bean Bonanza!
With literally thousands of varieties available, there’s bound to be a bean or two that will suit your growing conditions and please your palate.
6 mins
July/August 2025

Hobby Farms
Herbal Hand Healers
Create a hand scrub and lotion from your garden.
7 mins
July/August 2025

Hobby Farms
NARRAGANSETT TURKEY
Narragansetts are meat turkeys known for being very prolific, broodiness and possessing calm dispositions.
1 min
July/August 2025
Hobby Farms
Plant Cukes In July
If you live somewhere in USDA hardiness zones 5, 6 or 7 and you want a bigger, better cucumber harvest, sometime during the first two weeks of July is an excellent time to plant more cucumbers.
2 mins
July/August 2025

Hobby Farms
LARGE BLACK HOC
The Large Black is a docile heritage breed of swine originating in England improved from the Old English Hog from the regions of Devonshire and Essex.
1 min
July/August 2025