January 22, 2025

Emmanuel "Manny" F. Piñol

Official Website

Attn: Upi Farmers! Basic Guide On Collecting Soil Samples For Analysis

Tomorrow, Monday, May 27, a team from the Braveheart Farms & Nursery and the Southseas Agri-Aqua Ventures Inc. will offer free Soil Test and Analysis for farmers of North and South Upi, Maguindanao.
This is the first step in our technical assistance to farmers who will join our Sorghum and Soybeans Integrated Farming Program which is being supported by the Ministry of Agriculture, Fisheries and Agrarian Reform of the Bangsamoro Autonomous Region in Muslim Mindanao (MAFAR-BARMM).
In response to questions on how to collect soil samples for testing tomorrow, I have copy-pasted an article published by the Purdue University in West Lafayette, India which provides simple instructions.
The basic data that we need to gather tomorrow would be the soil pH and N-P-K of the area where we will start planting Sorghum and Soybeans.
Sorghum thrives well in soil with 6.5 to 7 pH while Soybeans perform well in slightly acidic soil with pH of 6.3 to 6.5.
Here is the article downloaded from the Purdue University website:
“Collecting Soil Samples for Testing
By Kyle Daniel & Rosie Lerner, Department of Horticulture and Landscape Architecture Jason Ackerson, Department of Agronomy
(A previous version of this publication was written by Mike Dana and Rosie Lerner. Photo Credits: All photos by the authors except Figure 1 by Mary Welch-Keesey.)
Testing your landscape and garden soil for its nutrient status is an easy and relatively inexpensive planning tool. Yet, it is all too common for landscapers and gardeners to apply fertilizer, lime, sulfur, or other materials to their soils without knowing the current status of their soils. Sometimes, these applications may do more harm than good. Applying too much fertilizer, lime, sulfur, and even organic matter, manures, and the like can lead to problems.
A soil test will reveal the current nutrient status in your soils and whether you need to add any nutrients as fertilizer. This publication describes the best practices for when and how to sample your soils.
Generally, a soil testing lab will measure the phosphorus, potassium, soil pH, and organic matter in your soils.
Soil pH
Every soil test should provide you with your soil’s pH, which measures the acidity or alkalinity in your soil. Soil pH affects how available most nutrients are for plant uptake. Nutrients in the soil are most readily available to plants when the soil pH is between 6.5 and 7. When soils are more acidic or more alkaline, the nutrients may be in the soil, but the soil pH makes it more difficult for plants to use those nutrients.
Changing a soil’s pH can be difficult, as changing the pH from 7 to 6 is ten times more acidic than neutral, while changing it from 7 to 5 is 100 times more acidic than neutral. The good news is that most garden plants will grow satisfactorily within a wide range of soil pH. However, most horticultural plants grow best when the soil pH is between 6.0 and 6.8 (slightly acidic).
If you need to raise the pH (and make the soil more alkaline), you add lime. If you need to lower the pH (and make the soil more acidic), you add sulfur or acidifying nitrogen.
Things to Consider Before You Sample
To get an accurate soil test, you need to carefully collect and prepare soil samples. This section describes how to collect a good sample.
Get the Right Tool
A soil probe (Figure 2) or auger is ideal for taking soil samples. If you don’t have a probe, you can use a sharp spade, long knife, or trowel — just be sure you remove the same amount of soil from each sampling area.
Know When to Sample
You should test your soil every three to five years. However, if you have specific plants with particular fertility and soil pH requirements, test more often.
Be sure to collect your soil sample and test it well before you plant, so you have time to treat the soil. You can sample soil any time the soil is suitable for spading or rototilling, but late summer or early fall gives enough lead time to plan ahead. However, if a situation develops that suggests soil fertility may be the problem, then you should collect samples immediately. Taking soil samples from the “normal” and “abnormal” plant growth areas is helpful for comparison
Steps for Collecting a Sample
Diagram Your Property
The first step of gathering a good soil sample is to draw a diagram of your property and indicate where you will take soil samples from. It’s important for you to take samples from different parts of your property that have different characteristics. For example, you will likely want a different soil test for a front yard, a shrub bed, a vegetable garden, and so on. When you diagram your property, plot the areas you sample, and keep the diagram for future reference. Sampling these areas separately will allow you tailor fertilizer and lime/sulfur application to the soils and vegetation from each area separately.
Since your sample will use only a small portion of the soil, it is very important the sample represents the area. Usually, the best way to do this is to take several core samples (with a soil probe) or slices from different spots, evenly distributed, in the area. Try to take samples so that individual samples are spaced out evenly, this way samples will better represent the whole sample area. You will mix all of these smaller subsamples together, and then prepare a single soil sample from those several cores or slices rather than to have several tests made within an area.
How many samples should you collect from each area?
• For a large area (like a yard) collect 10-15 cores
• For a smaller area (like narrow shrub or flower border) collect 4-6 cores
Be sure to keep an accurate record of the areas that you sample. Include this information in the soil report (called a field record), so you will be able to interpret the results.
Collect Your Samples
Remove surface debris (such as plant residues, mulch, or turf thatch) from the soil before you insert the soil probe, spade, or trowel. Next, take several core samples (with a soil probe) or slices (from a spade or trowel) from each area you want to test. Place your samples for each area in its own clean bucket — one bucket for the front yard, another for the shrub bed, and so on.
How much soil should you collect?
• Sample gardens and shrub and landscape beds to a depth of 6-8 inches.
• Sample turf areas to a depth of 3-inches depth
• Take samples from the tree root zones from the surface to a depth of 8-12 inches You should also:
Sample row crops (in gardens) between the rows to avoid where you might have applied fertilizer in bands;
Sample light, and dark-colored areas, limed and unlimed areas separately;
Sample front and back yards separately if they have been managed differently or contain different types of fill soil;
The depth from which you collect a soil sample will be different for trees, shrubs, and grass.
Dry and Mix Samples
Break up any lumps in each sample bucket, and remove all stones, debris, and other material that is not soil.
Next, allow the samples to dry at room temperature (do not use artificial heat like an oven). After the soil is dry, mix all the soil core samples well and crush them so that all the soil is about the size of wheat grains or smaller (but do not pulverize). Mix these samples together in each bucket until you have a fairly homogenous sample that will provide you with an “average” for each area.
Collect and Submit Your Sample
After you’ve mixed your samples, remove 1 pint of soil per area. Place this sample in a clean, labeled container and submit it to the soil testing lab according to their instructions.