Detoxifying Soil

Minerals and biology are the building blocks of life on Earth. There are 9 key elements H, C, O, N, P, K, Ca, S, Mg, that build the structure of our bodies, animals, and plants, constituting 99.50% of a plant's dry matter weight.

The other .5% contains over 75 Trace Elements, not structural but crucial for activating enzymes in each organism. Enzymes become inactive when these important elements are not present, creating weakness and disease opportunities. Enzymes drive every life function in every living organism. Without them, important bodily systems such as the immune, nervous, respiratory, and digestive systems suffer. It's essential these minerals are present and in a usable form for enzymes to function effectively.

Over time, our food-producing soils have been depleted of many minerals. The industry has focused on replacing only a few, mainly NPK, while ignoring the overall balance. This imbalance leads to increased plant diseases. Modern farming uses harmful chemicals that damage soil and make plants weak, instead of fixing the main problem.

Pathogens play a vital role in nature, protecting higher organisms from nutrient-poor foods. They thrive on incomplete, low-carb, and mineral-deficient plants. Nutrient-dense plants kill pathogens; pathogens don't thrive on them.

Currently, our soils are vastly depleted, low in essential minerals, and our soil biology is damaged. Chemical-supported farming, compounded by genetic engineering, has strained our agricultural systems. However, the dynamic and regenerative nature of the system allows for a quick return to balance with the right practices.

To repair this interconnected system, we must start with soils, focusing on minerals and microbes. Soil toxins, like glyphosate, remain for decades, affecting biology, insects, plants, livestock, and humans. Correcting this system begins with minerals and microbes. Food, as medicine and sustenance, still has that potential if grown properly.

Microbes can degrade toxins, control pathogens, and nourish plants. They make minerals available in the right forms, creating nutrient-dense food. Properly restoring minerals to soils is the only correction nature recognizes.

These systems operate under divine law. Violating natural laws has consequences. Sustainability comes from working within nature's framework. The parallels between soil system health, plant health, and human health are biologically evident and cannot be corrected by synthetic chemical inputs.

Take action on your soil now. Call or text us at (435) 557-0337.