Creating Living Soil

Creating Living Soil We create living healthy soil to help your plants thrive. Every bag of soil also helps create sustainable incomes for single mothers and orphanage homes.

https://www.facebook.com/share/p/1Ake6YTiUq/
31/03/2026

https://www.facebook.com/share/p/1Ake6YTiUq/

Before you buy a single bag of anything, grab a handful of soil from your garden and squeeze it.

If it crumbles apart immediately, you've got sand. If it holds its shape with a shiny surface, you've got clay. If it holds shape but breaks apart when you poke it, that's loam — and loam is what you're building toward.

That took five seconds. Here are three more tests that cost nothing.

🌱 The ribbon test:

Press a moist ball of soil between your thumb and finger into a flat ribbon. If it breaks before an inch — sandy. If it stretches past two inches without breaking — heavy clay. The longer the ribbon, the more clay you're working with.

The worm count:

Flip one full shovelful of soil and count the earthworms. Ten or more means the biology is working. Under five means the soil needs organic matter — compost, leaf mulch, or cover crops. Worms tell you what a lab test can't: whether anything is alive down there.

The jar test:

Fill a jar one-third with soil, add water, shake hard, and set it down. Sand drops to the bottom in a minute. Silt settles in a few hours. Clay stays cloudy for a full day. After 24 hours you can see the layers and roughly gauge your soil's composition without sending anything to a lab.

🪴 Every one of these tests points the same direction: add compost. Sand needs it for moisture retention. Clay needs it for drainage. Low worm counts need it for biology. Compost is the answer to almost everything these tests reveal.

Four tests. No kit. Your hands and a jar. 🌿

https://www.facebook.com/share/p/1E6e6uj6sq/
31/12/2025

https://www.facebook.com/share/p/1E6e6uj6sq/

Germany’s bridges are quietly becoming part of a nationwide pollinator highway — but not on the surface. Underneath many highway and pedestrian bridges, specially designed hanging bee gardens are being installed. These suspended gardens are completely inaccessible to people but perfect for pollinating insects like wild bees, butterflies, and hoverflies.

Each “floating” garden is planted with native wildflowers and herbs in light soil beds or modular eco-pouches. They’re designed to be low-maintenance, drought-tolerant, and rich in nectar-producing species — creating micro-habitats that connect fragmented pollinator corridors across urban and rural areas.

This innovation tackles a growing ecological problem: habitat loss from expanding road networks. By using the underside of bridges — usually dead space — Germany turns overlooked infrastructure into conservation zones. The elevation keeps the gardens safe from human interference, vehicle pollution, and invasive species.

Sensors are sometimes added to monitor species activity and temperature. Researchers say pollinator visits have increased significantly in areas with these suspended habitats. Some bridges now act as insect “overpasses,” allowing species to migrate and cross otherwise impassable highways safely.

Germany’s approach is being praised as a model for eco-infrastructure. It combines engineering with biodiversity goals in a way that’s scalable and symbolic — proving that even beneath the busiest traffic, nature can quietly thrive.

12/11/2025
09/11/2025
07/11/2025

😲

😂
05/11/2025

😂

04/11/2025
02/11/2025
02/11/2025
01/11/2025

到印尼參觀這間溫室
樓中樓超酷,一次擺了七層
最上面一層放可以曬的
下層用led燈補強
也算是開了眼界😎😎😎

30/10/2025

This diagram explains the operation of a composting drum, a convenient and efficient system for turning organic waste into compost. New materials are added through the top door of the drum, and by rotating the drum, the contents are mixed, promoting the breakdown of organic matter. As the materials decompose, air and moisture are evenly distributed, facilitating the composting process. After approximately six weeks, the finished compost is ready to be harvested from the bottom of the drum. This system ensures a continuous, efficient composting cycle, reducing waste and providing nutrient-rich compost for gardening.

Address

Jalan Cerdas
Kuala Lumpur
56000

Opening Hours

Saturday 09:00 - 17:00
Sunday 09:00 - 17:00

Telephone

+60143260940

Website

Alerts

Be the first to know and let us send you an email when Creating Living Soil posts news and promotions. Your email address will not be used for any other purpose, and you can unsubscribe at any time.

Share

Category