All Soil Test Are Not Created Equal!
What's The Difference?


"Plants can be no healthier than the soil in which they grow."

Treating plants for health issues instead of the soil is a "quick fix" that will ultimately produce poor plant performance. However, correcting the soil will ultimately produce healthy plants that should reduce or eliminate "quick fix" strategies.

There are two general types of soil tests. One test shows some of the nutrients that are in the soil. One tells a lot more about what biology and biochemistry is or is not working, plus additional nutrient information. Here's the summary.


Test Characteristics

Chemical Test

Nutrient Interaction / Availability Test

Nutrients Present

Yes

Yes

Which Nutrients are Available

No

Yes

Strength of Acid Used in Test

Strong

Weak

Additional Nutrients Tested

No

Yes

Reveals the nutrients plants can use

No

Yes

Test results can be used to correct plant issues

Maybe

Yes


Most soil test, including those conducted by state universities, provide minimal information based on the quantity of a few elements found within the soil. Basing a lawn tree or shrub program on the pH of the soil and a couple of nutrients will likely result in poor turf performance. It is not a prescription for success.

In contrast our Prescription Soil Analysis checks nineteen key indicators including the type of soil; organic content and level of salt found in the soil; pH and the actual availability of ten essential nutrients. There is a huge difference between measuring elements in the soil verses knowing that critical nutrients are actually interacting with one another and the plant.

Our Prescription Soil Analysis is the only test designed to be easily read and understood by both professionals and property customer. The Prescription Test Result from the test provides valuable information that is easy to comprehend and draws logical conclusions, laying out specific recommendations that are easy to understand and implement.