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Team Publishes Soil Health Cycle Framework

By Nicole Heldt

Recently published in the Science Societies’ Crop Science, Soil Science, Agronomy news, "Closing the Loop: The Soil Health Cycle and the Future of Sustainable Agriculture" presents the Soil Health Cycle as a framework for understanding how soil health develops through a continuous feedback loop between management decisions, soil properties and outcomes. Rather than viewing soil health as a static condition, the cycle emphasizes it as a dynamic, long-term process shaped by both biophysical and human factors.

A central message of the article is the complex nature of health, be it soil or human, when it comes to execution, despite widespread consensus on the need for it. Improvements in soil health often occur slowly, making long-term measurements and realistic expectations critical for sustaining producer engagement and decision-making.

To move the soil health cycle from theory into practice, the authors highlight Nebraska-based initiatives that are integrating the its framework. One key effort is the Nebraska Soil Health School, a collaborative extension program led by Bijesh Maharjan, associate professor in agronomy and horticulture and extension soil scientist at the University of Nebraska–Lincoln. Initially launched as a statewide educational program, the soil health cycle evolved into an “on-demand” traveling format that brings soil health expertise directly to local communities. These events emphasize peer-to-peer learning, hands-on demonstrations and producer-driven discussions on both agronomic and economic considerations.

The article also details the formation of the Nebraska Soil Health Coalition, an independent nonprofit organization designed to foster producer networks and community-based learning. The coalition uses a three-pronged approach that includes producer learning communities, demonstration-education clusters and stakeholder visioning groups. Its work extends beyond agronomy to explore the ROI of soil health, address social and behavioral factors influencing adoption and assimilating soil health benchmarking work with UNL and the USDA Natural Resources Conservation Service to gauge longitudinal progress.

Source : unl.edu

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A chain harrow is a game changer

Video: A chain harrow is a game changer

Utilizing a rotational grazing method on our farmstead with our sheep helps to let the pasture/paddocks rest. We also just invested in a chain harrow to allow us to drag the paddocks our sheep just left to break up and spread their manure around, dethatch thicker grass areas, and to rough up bare dirt areas to all for a better seed to soil contact if we overseed that paddock. This was our first time really using the chain harrow besides initially testing it out. We are very impressed with the work it did and how and area that was majority dirt, could be roughed up before reseeding.

Did you know we also operate a small business on the homestead. We make homemade, handcrafted soaps, shampoo bars, hair and beard products in addition to offering our pasture raised pork, lamb, and 100% raw honey. You can find out more about our products and ingredients by visiting our website at www.mimiandpoppysplace.com. There you can shop our products and sign up for our monthly newsletter that highlights a soap or ingredient, gives monthly updates about the homestead, and also lists the markets, festivals, and events we’ll be attending that month.