A company out of Kentucky called Organilock is partnering with Mission Resource to begin testing their new product, Soil Rehab, in the depleted soils of Ghana and Haiti and elsewhere in the developing world. Soil Rehab has incredible potential to replace traditional chemical fertilizers in rejuvenating even the most depleted soils. And there's a bonus: it is manufactured in a way that benefits the environment instead of harming it.
OrganiLock has run multiple tests to show that you can create an environment in which plants can grow and flourish even in a container of literal sand - with the addition of just a few tablespoons of Soil Rehab.
Now I am one of those guys who has to see for himself. So I decided to run my own experiment at home.
I bought some seeds, a couple of Rubbermaid containers, and a bag of play sand.
Tomorrow I will reveal how the plants in the Soil Rehab mix performed.
But today I just want to focus on the beauty and vitality of God's creation as seen in the plant life all around us that brings us beauty and nutrition.
Here's how I came to that focus: I started my experiment assuming no plant could grow in sand alone, but - remembering my high school science classes - I knew I needed a control group regardless. So I planted 3 green beans and 3 marigolds in 2 separate containers - one with sand alone and one with sand mixed with Soil Rehab.
I wasn't surprised that the seeds in the plain sand sprouted. (I remember growing beans on wet paper towel in grade school.) But I was amazed by their will to survive and to reproduce, even in the absence of all nutrients.
Although thin, pale and fragile, the bean plants grew over a foot tall. And then each produced a tiny bean or two! I uprooted two of the these three bean plants today because I took all the plants outside one day for some direct sunlight only to have a gentle spring breeze bend these two in half, ending their valiant struggle against the odds.
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