“A Teaspoon of Healthy Soil Contains More Living Organisms Than There Are People on Earth”
Why Soil Is More Important Than We Think “A Teaspoon of Healthy Soil Contains More Living Organisms Than There Are People on Earth” That sentence ought to stop us in our tracks. Most of us walk over soil every day without giving it much thought. We call it mud when it is wet, dust when it is dry, and dirt when it appears on the kitchen floor. Yet soil is not just the brown stuff under the lawn. It is a living system, a food factory, a water filter, a carbon store, a wildlife habitat and one of the most important natural resources we have. Without healthy soil, our gardens struggle, our farms become less productive, our rivers become muddier, our wildlife loses habitat and our ability to store carbon is reduced. For something so essential, soil has a remarkably poor public relations department. We admire trees, birds, wildflowers, rivers and hedgerows. Soil tends to get noticed only when it sticks to our boots. Yet almost everything green and growing begins there. Soil Is Not Dirt...