
88: Making Better Soils with Novihum
Sustainable Winegrowing · Sustainable Winegrowing - Vineyard Team
Audio is streamed directly from the publisher (traffic.libsyn.com) as published in their RSS feed. Play Podcasts does not host this file. Rights-holders can request removal through the copyright & takedown page.
Show Notes
50-million-year-old reserves of humified organic matter are a substance called lignite. It is commonly known as brown or soft coal, a substance usually equated with energy production. Researchers at the Technical University of Dresden have found that this very old, carbon rich plant material has the same building blocks as humus – the organic matter reserves found in soil. Virginia Corless, Chief Growth Officer at Novihum Technologies, explains how reacting lignite with nitrogen has created a new soil amendment to improve nutrient retention, water storage, and the vitality of the microbiome.
While the greatest benefits were expected in sandy soils, it turns out that a small percentage of clay like what would be found in a sandy loam, creates a beneficial interaction. One long-term trial of Novihum found that after 17 years, 90 percent of the original application was still in the soil.
References:- 53: Producing Compost and Carbon Sequestration (Podcast)
- 72: Soil Microbes and Nutrient Availability (Podcast)
- Could Agriculture Bloom in the Desert? Qatar Works to Invent an Innovative Oasis (Video)
- Novihum.com
- Novihum Academic and Field Trials
- Sahara Forest Project Grows Food, And Biofuel
- SIP Certified
- Technical University of Dresden
- Virginial Corless | [email protected]
Subscribe on Google Play, iHeartRADIO, iTunes, Spotify, Stitcher, TuneIn, or wherever you listen so you never miss an episode on the latest science and research with the Sustainable Winegrowing Podcast. Since 1994, Vineyard Team has been your resource for workshops and field demonstrations, research, and events dedicated to the stewardship of our natural resources.
Learn more at www.vineyardteam.org.