We work with Georgia's farms and home gardens to build living soil — applying compost tea, managing cover crops, and planting Victory Gardens that grow stronger plants and better food.
Or call us today 404-259-2817
Beneath every thriving farm or garden is a living web of soil biology. When that web is intact, plants need less from a bag — and give more in return.
Synthetic fertilizers feed plants directly but starve the biology underneath. Over time, soils grow dependent — needing more inputs each season to produce the same yields, and growing weaker against drought, pests, and disease.
Compost tea, cover crops, and biologically active soil management restore the microbiology that plants evolved with. Crops grown this way push deeper roots, handle stress better, and pass more flavor and nutrition to the table.
From row crops to backyard plots — the same biological principles, scaled to fit.
Biologically active compost tea delivers beneficial microorganisms directly to your soil and foliage. We brew, transport, and apply custom formulations matched to your soil — at any scale, from acreage to raised beds.
Strategic cover cropping fixes nitrogen, prevents erosion, suppresses weeds, and builds the organic matter your soil needs to sustain production without synthetics. For working farms and serious garden plots alike.
Bring food production home. We help homeowners and community groups plan, prepare, and plant productive Victory Gardens — using the same biological methods we bring to working farms.
Pick a time that works for you. We'll come to your farm or garden, take a look at your soil, and build a plan together.
Book a consultation or service visit below — for farm work or a Victory Garden setup. We'll confirm your appointment and reach out with any questions before we arrive.
Payment: We accept payment on-site at the time of service. No payment is required to book.
Prefer to call? 404-259-2817
Helpful programs and organizations supporting Georgia's farmers and gardeners. We're growers — not financial advisors — but these are the resources we point people toward most often.