Tech Tuesday: Soil Management Plans

From the Ground Up: Why Your Land Needs a Soil Management Plan.

What is a Soil Management Plan?

A Soil Management Plan is a dynamic document that maps out the specific health, risks, and requirements of your land. Rather than a “one-size-fits-all” approach, an SMP identifies the unique needs of different fields and proposes tailored actions to boost productivity while preventing degradation.

Step 1: The Soil Risk Assessment

Before you can plan for the future, you have to understand the present. You need to identify where your land is vulnerable to:

  • Runoff and Erosion: Losing valuable topsoil to wind or rain.
  • Flooding: Areas prone to waterlogging that can drown crops and kill soil biology.
  • Soil Carbon Loss: The depletion of organic matter which feeds your crops.
  • Nutrient Leaching: Valuable fertilizers washing away before plants can ever use them.

To get a true baseline, combine VESS (Visual Evaluation of Soil Structure) with soil sampling. VESS gives you the “boots-on-the-ground” view of compaction, while tests provide the “hard data”.

Step 2: Mapping the Strategy

Once you’ve identified the risks—such as high-degree slopes or proximity to water—it’s time to develop a targeted action plan. A professional SMP is best organised into a clear, scannable table so you can see your tasks at a glance.

Example:

Field ID

Field Details

Current Issues

Proposed Management Actions

Field A-1

>8° slope, heavy clay, borders a stream.

High compaction risk; significant surface runoff into watercourse.

Plant cover crops to improve infiltration; reduce livestock density near water; transition to min-till.

Step 3: Tailoring Your Actions

There is no “magic bullet” in soil health. When choosing your management actions, always filter them through these three lenses:

  1. Your Soil Type: Clay behaves differently than sand; your actions must reflect that.
  2. Current Land Use: Are you grazing livestock, growing cereals, or managing woodland?
  3. Long-term Goals: Are you aiming for higher yields, carbon sequestration, or better flood resilience?

The Bottom Line

A Soil Management Plan isn’t just a piece of paperwork; it’s a roadmap to a more resilient, profitable business. By identifying risks early—like compaction or nutrient loss—you can take small steps today that prevent massive headaches (and costs) tomorrow.

Make sure you talk to us so we can facilitate the data to get you started. Find out more.

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