Back to Menu

Your Living Soil
Module 2

Rationale | Objectives | Introduction

Introduction
Acknowledgement: Taken from "Living on the Land 2001"


Rationale

Soil is perhaps the most important yet most often ignored natural resource.  Soil is the foundation for our homes, pastures and facilities.  It is under both our feet and our animal’s feet/hooves.  Unfortunately, soil is often difficult to understand and to study, as it is largely out of view.  A successful small acreage operation requires an understanding of what soil is, what soil does and how it can be improved.  To begin with, soil is a medium of life and has many purposes in the natural world.  Soil acts as a buffer for plant nutrients and as a home for countless living organisms.  It captures, filters, stores and transmits water.  Soil takes thousands of years to form a couple inches, yet if mismanaged, it can erode and lose two inches in a few years.  This module attempts to show landowners the practicality and necessity of understanding their soils.  Participants will then be more capable of making sound management decisions based on the many properties of their soils. (Top)

Objectives

Participants will learn: 

  1. Fundamental physical, biological and chemical properties of soils

  2. Threats to soils and how to minimize or avoid them

  3. How to manage soils to improve them

  4. How to take a soil sample, how often to test and what test results mean

  5. Basics of fertilization – what soils need, how much to apply, how often to apply, pitfalls and safety measures to minimize pollution

  6. Fundamentals of soil surveys

  7. irrigation basics – sources of irrigation water, matching water, soils and plants

  8. How to determine the method and frequency of irrigation. (Top)

 Introduction

This module consists of three lessons and is designed to provide participants with a basic understanding of soils.  Lesson 1 focuses on the fundamental physical, biological and chemical properties of soils and discusses threats to soil and how to minimize or avoid them.  Lesson 1 includes instructions on how to take a soil sample, in hopes that participants will take a sample and have the test results in time for Lesson 2.  Lesson 2 covers soil testing results and what to do with them, as well as fertilizer fundamentals – how much and how often to fertilize, and some measures to minimize pollution.  The last half of Lesson 2 discusses soil surveys – what they reveal about land capability and suitability for different uses.  Lesson 3 focuses on irrigation water management.  Participants will learn how to judge the need for irrigation based on soil moisture, soil water-holding capacity and crop needs.  Lesson 3 also includes a brief summary of the different types of irrigation methods and their pros and cons.  
Lesson 1
Lesson 2
Lesson 3

 

(Top)

Back to Menu