Soil Testing Made Simple: Just Add Soil Food

If you’ve spent more than five minutes reading about gardening, you’ve probably heard advice like “test your soil,” “balance your NPK,” or “amend based on texture and pH.” And sure, those things used to be necessary—especially when using a mix of products trying to patch together a healthy soil profile.

But if you’re using Soil Food, things just got a whole lot simpler.

Forget the Complicated Testing

You don’t need to mess with baking soda, vinegar, squeeze tests, or send your soil to a lab. All you really need to know is this:

Is your soil active enough to support plant life?

And there’s a super simple, affordable way to find out:

Use an EC (Electrical Conductivity) meter.

Stick it in the soil and check the number:

- If you're under 300 ppm, your soil is hungry.
- Ideal range is 300–600 ppm.
- Add Soil Food until you’re in the sweet spot.

That’s it.

Why EC Matters (and Why It’s All You Need)

EC tells you how much nutrient is actually available in the soil water—what plants (and microbes) can use. Not what’s "locked up" in the soil or sitting in fertilizer waiting to break down. It's an instant look at your soil’s actual activity level.

And unlike traditional fertilizer regimens, Soil Food is biologically balanced. So when you hit the right EC range with Soil Food, you know your soil has:
- The right balance of organic nutrients
- A thriving population of beneficial microbes
- Biochar to hold moisture and support microbial life
- No need for NPK juggling or soil pH guessing

One Product. One Test. One Healthy Garden.

Soil Food isn’t just another soil amendment—it’s a full biological system in one easy product. It feeds your microbes, unlocks nutrients, improves structure, and supports the entire soil food web.

With Soil Food, you don’t have to be a soil scientist.

Just check your EC. Add the right amount. And grow with confidence.

Ready to Grow Smarter, Not Harder?

Ditch the guesswork and stop overcomplicating your garden.

Use Soil Food. Trust the biology.

Let your soil do the rest.