Mulch and Soil Cover
Mulch moderates temperature, protects against erosion, reduces evaporation, and feeds soil life as it breaks down.
The best soil work is cumulative. It does not usually produce dramatic overnight change. It changes the garden slowly, then suddenly the garden becomes easier.
What soil must do
Garden soil must anchor plants, hold water, drain excess moisture, exchange nutrients, and support living organisms.
When one of those functions fails, plants show stress.
Organic matter
Organic matter improves almost every garden soil.
In sandy soil, it helps retain water and nutrients. In clay soil, it improves structure. In compacted soil, it supports biological recovery.
The work is repeated, not finished.
Avoid compaction
Do not step in growing beds.
Compaction reduces air space, limits roots, and changes water movement. Paths are for feet. Beds are for plants.
Feed the system
The soil food web responds to roots, residues, compost, mulch, and moisture.
A living soil is maintained by living plants and organic inputs.
Field notes
Healthy soil makes the garden less dramatic. Plants recover better, water lasts longer, and fewer interventions are needed.