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Regenerative Farming & Food Sovereignty

Understanding Soil Chemistry for Plant Growth

Understanding Soil Chemistry for Plant Growth

by Teri Storey2 min read
Soil & MicrobiologyPlant HealthSustainable Agriculture
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CHNOPS in Balance

If you’ve made it this far, you already know something most gardeners never hear:

Plants don’t grow because of products. They grow because systems work.

CHNOPS is not a checklist. It’s a relationship.

Carbon builds structure. Water carries chemistry. Nitrogen pushes growth. Phosphorus manages energy. Sulfur refines quality.

When those elements are present but poorly coordinated, plants struggle — even in fertilized soil.


Nutrient Lockout, Explained Simply

Nutrient lockout sounds complicated, but it’s not.

Lockout happens when nutrients are present in the soil but unavailable to the plant.

This can occur because:

  • Soil pH is out of range
  • Oxygen is missing
  • Biology is inactive
  • One nutrient overwhelms another

Think of soil nutrients like tools in a toolbox.

If the lid is closed, it doesn’t matter how many tools are inside.

Adding more fertilizer to locked-out soil often makes problems worse, not better.


pH: The Traffic Cop of Soil Chemistry

Soil pH does not feed plants.

It controls access.

pH determines:

  • Which nutrients dissolve
  • Which bind tightly to soil particles
  • Which microbes thrive or decline

In most gardens, a pH between 6.0 and 7.0 keeps traffic flowing.

Outside that range:

  • Phosphorus gets stuck
  • Calcium and magnesium dominate or disappear
  • Micronutrients either vanish or become toxic

pH doesn’t create nutrients. It tells them where they’re allowed to go.


Reading Plant Symptoms Without Panic

Yellow leaves do not automatically mean nitrogen deficiency.

Purple stems are not always phosphorus shortages.

Burned leaf edges aren’t always fertilizer problems.

Plants show symptoms when systems are stressed, not just when elements are missing.

Before reaching for amendments, ask:

  • Is the soil compacted?
  • Is it staying wet too long?
  • Has carbon been replenished?
  • Has biology been disturbed?

Symptoms are messages, not emergencies.


Balance Beats Perfection

Healthy soils are not static.

They change with:

  • Weather
  • Crops
  • Management

Balance does not mean everything is optimal at all times.

It means the system can recover.

Carbon buffers mistakes. Biology adapts. Roots explore.


Final Takeaway

If you remember one thing from this entire series, let it be this:

Gardening is not about feeding plants. It’s about managing relationships between elements, water, biology, and time.

Once you understand CHNOPS, fertilizer labels lose their power — and your soil starts telling you what it needs.

That’s not guesswork.

That’s literacy.

Part of the CHNOPS: The Chemistry of Life in Your Garden Series

A 5-part series

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