CHAPTER SEVEN
Humus and Soil Productivity
Books about hydroponics sound plausible. That is, until you actually see the results.
Plants grown in chemical nutrient solutions may be huge but look a little "off."
Sickly and weak somehow. Without a living soil, plants can not be totally healthy or grow
quite as well as they might.
By focusing on increasing and maximizing soil life instead of adding chemical
fertility, organic farmers are able to grow excellent cereals and fodder. On richer soils
they can even do this for generations, perhaps even for millennia without bringing in
plant nutrients from elsewhere. If little or no product is sent away from the farm, this
subsistence approach may be a permanent agricultural system. But even with a healthy
ecology few soils are fertile enough by themselves to permit continuous export of their
mineral resources by selling crops at market.
Take one step further. Cereals are mostly derived from hardy grasses while other field
crops have similar abilities to thrive while being offered relatively low levels of
nutrients. With good management, fertile soils are able to present these lower nutritional
levels to growing plants without amendment or fortification with potent, concentrated
nutrient sources. But most vegetables demand far higher levels of support. Few soils, even
fertile soils that have never been farmed, will grow vegetables without improvement.
Farmers and gardeners must increase fertility significantly if they want to grow great
vegetables. The choices they make while doing this can have a strong effect, not only on
their immediate success or failure, but on the actual nutritional quality of the food that
they produce.
How Humus Benefits Soil
The roots of plants, soil animals, and most soil microorganisms need to breathe oxygen.
Like other oxygen burners, they expel carbon dioxide. For all of them to grow well and be
healthy, the earth must remain open, allowing air to enter and leave freely. Otherwise,
carbon dioxide builds up to toxic levels. Imagine yourself being suffocated by a plastic
bag tied around your neck. It would be about the same thing to a root trying to live in
compacted soil.
A soil consisting only of rock particles tends to be airless. A scientist would say it
had a high bulk density or lacked pore space. Only coarse sandy soil remains light and
open without organic matter. Few soils are formed only of coarse sand, most are mixtures
of sand, silt and clay. Sands are sharp-sided, relatively large rock particles similar to
table salt or refined white sugar. Irregular edges keep sand particles separated, and
allow the free movement of air and moisture.
Silt is formed from sand that has weathered to much smaller sizes, similar to powdered
sugar or talcum powder. Through a magnifying lens, the edges of silt particles appear
rounded because weak soil acids have actually dissolved them away. A significant amount of
the nutrient content of these decomposed rock particles has become plant food or clay.
Silt particles can compact tightly, leaving little space for air.
As soil acids break down silts, the less-soluble portions recombine into clay crystals.
Clay particles are much smaller than silt grains. It takes an electron microscope to see
the flat, layered structures of clay molecules. Shales and slates are rocks formed by
heating and compressing clay. Their layered fracture planes mimic the molecules from which
they were made. Pure clay is heavy, airless and a very poor medium for plant growth.