Soil Fertility is Not Bought
It Is Built, Grown and Protected
Most soils already contain everything plants need. What’s missing is not fertiliser, but space, air, water, and biological life. When soil biology is given the right conditions, fertility builds itself—quickly, safely, and permanently. This page explains how Keyline cultivation and the Yeomans Plow accelerate a natural process that has always been the foundation of productive farming.
What “Creating Fertility” actually means
- Basic mineralisation (set by geology — you can’t change it much)
- Humic content (the amount, age and stability of humic substances — you can change this a lot through farming)

Why deep tilling matters: “space” is the missing ingredient
- air to breathe
- moisture
- food (dead plant material and dead roots)
- space to live
- water infiltration is limited
- roots are restricted
- air movement is poor
- soil organisms can’t thrive in numbers

What the Yeomans Plow is doing in the ground (the critical difference)
- During cultivation the soil is gently lifted and loosened
- with negligible soil profile disturbance
- so rain is rapidly absorbed and air becomes readily available

The fertility chain reaction (what happens after you open the soil)
Water goes in, not away
- storm rains infiltrate into the deep worked soil
- storm erosion and wash can vanish
- the paddock holds rainfall rather than shedding it
Soil life multiplies (fast) if it has food
“It all starts with dead plant material, air and water.”
- bacteria, fungi, actinomycetes, and worms feed
- they multiply
- they die and are consumed in turn
Biology makes the “key” chemicals that unlock minerals
Minerals get “shelved” onto humic substances (so they don’t leach)
- minerals chelate / loosely attach onto clay particles and humic acid molecules
- chelated this way, they are insoluble in water but still available to growing plants
Humus forms (and soil structure starts to “feel right”)
- “Complex humic acid molecules are ultimately formed.”
- Long sugar‑like chains (polysaccharides) form and bind soil
- fungal thread‑like structures bind soil particles
- small aggregates accumulate, which you feel as “good soil structure” in your hand
Two kinds of humus explain why fertile soil feeds crops safely
- Dauerhumus: long‑lived humus that does not itself form part of biological activity
- Nahrhumus: short‑lived, biologically active humus (minutes to months) that gets broken down and releases “a constant, harmless trickle of ammonia” to fine roots
“Almost all of the nitrogen supplied to plants in healthy soil is derived from this organic material within the soil.”
Worms move in, field capacity rises, rainfall becomes less critical
- earthworms establish
- their casts become a rich source of humus
- their slimes/glues enhance structure
- the soil’s ability to retain moisture (“field capacity”) rises dramatically
- rainfall patterns become less critical to the farmer

Practical operating rules that directly support fertility building
Deep tilling only creates fertility quickly when it’s done in a way that supports biology and avoids destructive mixing. Here’s a practical guide which farmers can apply:
Start timing (don’t wait for “soft soil” out of habit)
- “Plow Immediately. The day it’s delivered.”
- cultivate so the next rains are retained
Spacing (a broad starting point)
- shank spacing “around half a metre or 20 inches” to get going
- pasture guide: “20” to 32” apart”
Depth (especially where there’s a hardpan)
- if previously cultivated, dig down and find the old hardpan
- then set depth “about 2” to 3” (50–75mm) under the hard pan”
What you don’t want to see (slabbing)
- if hard pans come up “like slabs of broken concrete”, fit a crumble roller to cut/flatten clods and speed the formation of fertile soil
Why extreme depth isn’t always the win
- there’s “no great commercial advantage” cultivating much over ~14” (350mm), except in badly leached soils “where you are chasing minerals”
A Keyline principle about roots (depth that biology will actually use)
- if you cultivate at extreme depth before the root mass is ready, the soil can “close up within a year or so”
- and that depth should relate to “the depth of vigorous root activity… go a few inches below this” so roots are happy to move down
That’s a crucial point for farmer understanding: deep tillage is not just engineering — it’s engineering in service of root and biological progression.

The simple summary farmers remember
Farmers can do one thing better than nature ever can:
Create space in the soil instantly
One correct deep pass with a Yeomans Plow:
- Opens compacted subsoil
- Lets air in
- Lets water soak deep
- Gives soil life somewhere to live
This speeds up soil creation hundreds or thousands of times. What took centuries can happen in a few seasons.

“There is almost no agricultural problem that cannot be solved by increasing soil fertility”
Allan Yeomans