Quantcast

Healthy Living Soil

Why the Use of Healthy Living Soil

As professional growers, we are constantly searching for new products, techniques and philosophies that will help simplify our processes. One of the keys to our ongoing success has been the implementation of a healthy, living soil. We take care of the soil, and the soil takes care of the plants.

We have learned that over time synthetic fertilizers and additives can initially provide good results, but over a short period of time it can deplete the soil of living biologics that are extremely beneficial. These biologics are meant to prepare food for the plant to feed efficiently. After use of synthetic fertilizers, these biologics can turn on the plant and become detrimental to the plant’s success simply because integral aspects of the living soil has been depleted by the synthetic fertilizers.

The Project has happier and more robust plants after switching to a complete living soil.”

Matt Calkins, Project Manager Global Hemp’s Scio Oregon Hemp Project

What Exemplifies a Healthy Living Soil

by Daniel Enking, Everflux Technologies Founder & CEO

living-soil.jpg

The Healthy Living Soil

Living soil is the symbiotic relationship between organisms working together to break down organic matter in your soil, which, in turn, provides valuable nutrients to plants and the microbial world.  This style of cultivating allows the newly formed soil to function as its own ecological community, feeding the hemp plant roots itself.

The Soil Foodweb

This is known as growing with mother nature and was first called the "soil food web" by Dr. Elaine Ingham. The soil foodweb world consists of composting worms, beneficial nematodes, protozoa, bacteria, and fungi.

Living soil cultivation methods have proven time and time again to produce extremely high-quality hemp and cannabis. They generate these results by breaking down the organic matter that collects on the soil floor.  Then specific decomposers like red wiggler composting worms, roly polys, and white springtail mites break that organic matter down into carbon.  The ground that doesn't contain beneficial organisms is not living and should be considered DIRT. Dirt requires nutritional supplementation via fertilizers and compost teas just to produce mediocre medicine.

Red Wigglers and African Nightcrawlers will work in a symbiotic relationship with the microbial soil foodweb to help build dissolved oxygen channels, which allows newly formed roots to begin to grow a larger circumference.  This symbiotic relationship also helps to control dangerous pests and improve water retention, thus reducing the amount of attention needed to produce abundant, high quality hemp and cannabis yields.

The soil food web.jpg

Why Is This Style Called "Beyond Organic"?
USDA Certified Organic has come to mean any farmer that uses organically certified input materials. Many would argue that this is a very watered-down version of the original meaning.

Even focusing on “soil health” is not necessarily enough, because some farmers and growers get caught up on the chemistry of their soil, thinking that they need to add various mineral and chemical nutrients in order to balance their soil.  However, the focus of a truly organic farmer - or what we are now calling “beyond organic” or “regenerative,” is on biological soil health. When a farmer promotes the right microbes and the accumulation of organic matter in their soil, everything else will follow.

Tilling creates a Catch 22 for the organic farm: tilling speeds the breakdown process of organic matter but also dramatically minimizes the lifespan of the organisms living in the newly tilled soil. Essentially, excessive tilling kills off the microorganisms in the ground rather than nurturing them.

As a living soil farmer, learn to trust the process and let Mother Nature work synergistically with the microbial world by pulling down the organic matter. This organic matter becomes the living soil we are after and naturally boosts the amount of active organic matter that is bioavailable.  This entire microbial world operates on this life source for creating energy and receiving nutrition, improving its organic content. This is fantastic for achieving the full hemp genetic profiles we are after. A beyond organic farm will use little or no tilling.

The living healthy soil.jpg



In a Living Soil, a complex and high glomalin soil will begin to form. This kind of soil is drought resistant and has impressive water retention capabilities.

Increasing micro-diversity has many beneficial and long lasting effects that you can see all the way up the food chain, such as producing high-end hemp or cannabis flavor profiles that you enjoy smoking for their medicinal values.  There is a direct correlation between biodiversity in your soil and the complexities of taste and oil production in whatever you are growing.

The Benefits of Growing Cannabis in Living Soil

When hemp is cultivated in a no-till/living soil system, it begins to emulate the more delicate complexities like that of aged fine wine.  A healthy microbiological ecosystem MUST be alive and thriving for you to achieve these same results building your living soil system. The full genetic profile of the plant relies directly upon the quality and level of microbiology in your soil system.  The higher bio-diversity increases over time and creates a healthy closed-loop system where more top quality microbial levels are achieved.


If you are looking to start cultivating your own THC/CBD medicine, then there is no better cultivation style.  Since the medicinal values of the plant are determined by the oil production, you will end up with a much more complex therapeutic profile, allowing for the actual medical potential of the plant to be achieved.  Your end product will be looked upon as high end and will have a far superior cannabinoid profile.

Cannabis growing in healthy living soil.png

THC has become the most commonly known psychoactive compound in the cannabinoid family. When the levels of these other cannabinoids are raised, there seems to be a direct correlation to the medicinal value pulled from the compounds and their medical applications.

When grown in a diverse microbiological environment, cannabis becomes a much more potent and diverse medicine. Any increase in the levels and varieties of cannabinoids should be the goal when growing medical cannabis. Below are the most commonly known cannabinoids besides THC, and their effects:

  • Cannabigerol (CBG): Mildly psychoactive, CBG boasts anti-inflammatory and antibacterial benefits.

  • Cannabichromene (CBC): While it doesn't produce a high like THC can, folks like CBC because of its antibiotic and pain-relieving properties.

  • Cannabinol (CBN): This mildly psychoactive cannabinoid can act as an antiemetic (meaning antinausea) and sleep aid. THC turns into CBN when exposed to prolonged UV light and air.


​Conclusion


If you’ve been considering making the switch to cultivating with true living soil, there’s no better time to do so. With the rapidly changing landscape of the hemp and cannabis industry, and new competition entering the growing game every day, there’s no better way to stand out.

To know more about this technology:

Growing Trial with Bioflux


Oregon’s Industrial Hemp - Benefits and Opportunities  

In 2018, the United States passed the Agriculture Improvement Act that directed the US Department of Agriculture to allow states to grow industrial hemp.

Since then, the industry in Oregon has boomed with a more than 427% increase in growth over acres planted before 2018.

 While there are some groups that are concerned about the growth rate of the booming Oregon hemp industry, many are happy to have a healthy crop system that supports their community. This article explores the benefits of industrial hemp in Oregon for both farming communities and rural job creation.

Rural Development Opportunities for Farming Communities

Much of the initial gold rush for growing Oregon hemp brought new settlers to the state who didn’t have much, if any farming experience. But now that the rush has begun to settle down, traditional farmers are starting to replant their fields with hemp.

 Although there was some stigma at first since hemp is related to marijuana, the more farmers that grow it in the state, the more mainstream it becomes. Traditional farmers bring their expertise at growing crops to the table using pivot and drip irrigation systems to grow the heartiest plants.  

Job Creation

Although hemp has led to an increase in jobs in the farming industry, it has impacts on other rural job industries as well.


 Much of the hemp that is grown in Oregon is used for CBD products. CBD is an ingredient derived from hemp plants that is believed to have numerous medicinal benefits including helping with epilepsy, Parkinson’s disease, and Alzheimer’s symptoms.

CBD is most often made into a concentrated oil that is either taken orally, vaped, or rubbed into the skin.

CBD products aren’t the only thing being made from growing hemp in Oregon. Companies are also pursuing opportunities in nutraceuticals, nutritional supplements, building materials, energy markets, superfoods, and bio-composites. In the future, plastics made from hemp products may replace the materials used in our daily products like toothbrushes, straws, and even plastic food containers.