Microscope-verified soil analysis, a phased transition roadmap, and 30/60/90/120-day benchmarks. We walk farms from chemical dependency toward biological self-sufficiency — with measured results at every stage.
Start with a ConversationFarm consulting available statewide
Transitioning a farm from chemical to biological inputs is one of the most meaningful things you can do for your land — and one of the most misunderstood. Most farmers have heard promises before. We’d rather start with honesty.
A fully self-sustaining soil food web takes 18 months to three years on most conventional farmland. That is not a sales pitch — it is the documented timeline from Rodale Institute’s 40-year Farming Systems Trial. We tell every farm partner this upfront.
Results are not one-size-fits-all. Your soil has a unique biological history shaped by decades of inputs, tillage, and crop rotation. Jake reads your specific soil before recommending anything. Generic playbooks do not apply here.
Every engagement starts with a microscope analysis of your soil biology. Every claim we make is backed by a measurement. You will have numbers — bacteria counts, fungal biomass, protozoa populations — not just our word for it.
We don’t ask for a full-farm conversion. We ask for a trial parcel — typically 1 to 5 acres — and 90 days. The trial generates real data from your land. That data earns the broader conversation, not a sales pitch.
Before we recommend a single input, Jake walks your land personally. He pulls soil samples, takes baseline photos, runs an infiltration test, and observes plant health indicators. No remote diagnosis. No generic report.
We understand that margins on Florida farms are tight. The biological approach is built around input reduction over time. Lower synthetic fertilizer costs, lower pesticide costs, healthier soil that holds moisture longer. The economics improve as biology builds.
“I got into soil biology because I watched what chemical dependency does to land over a long growing season. It’s not dramatic — it’s slow. Yields drift downward. Inputs have to go up to hold them. The soil stops working for you and starts working against you. I’ve seen that pattern enough times that I’m not interested in selling hope. I’m interested in building a dataset on your specific farm, being honest about what it says, and working from there.
— Jake Friesz, Certified Soil Food Web Advisor, Co-founder Replenished Roots
Every farm engagement follows the same structured sequence. No shortcuts, no generic recommendations — each step is built on what we learned in the step before.
Initial Conversation
The first step costs nothing and commits nothing. A free phone or email conversation where we ask about your operation — what you grow, how many acres, your input history, and what’s been challenging. You tell us what success looks like to you. We tell you honestly whether biology can help and whether we’re the right fit. Not every farm situation is one we can move the needle on. We’d rather say that upfront.
Always Free · No CommitmentSite Visit & Soil Sampling
Jake visits personally — no remote soil kits, no mailed samples assessed from afar. He pulls soil samples from multiple locations across the parcel, noting how biology varies from one area to the next. He takes baseline photos tied to GPS coordinates, observes compaction patterns and drainage behavior, assesses plant health visually, and runs an infiltration test that measures how fast water moves through your soil. He counts earthworms per square foot — one of the most reliable low-tech indicators of soil health available. This visit is the foundation for everything that follows.
Microscope Analysis & Farm Analysis Report
Jake analyzes your soil samples under a compound microscope following Elaine Ingham’s Soil Food Web methodology. This is not a standard soil chemistry panel — it is a direct biological count of the living organisms in your soil. He measures bacterial biomass (both active and total populations), fungal strand length and density, protozoa populations broken out by type (flagellates, amoebae, and ciliates), and nematode populations categorized by their role in the food web. From this, he calculates your fungal-to-bacterial ratio — the single most telling number for understanding what your soil is currently suited to grow and where the biological bottlenecks are.
You receive a complete written Farm Analysis Report (Farmer Doc 2) delivered within 5–7 days of the site visit. It includes every biological reading with 5-point health ratings, a soil chemistry summary, your infiltration rate result, your earthworm count, four baseline photo placeholders, and Jake’s written notes on the top three limiting factors specific to your farm.
Your Transition Roadmap
Based on your Farm Analysis Report, Jake builds a color-coded phase-by-phase transition roadmap (Farmer Doc 3) tailored to your soil’s specific starting point. Each phase tags every current input as STOP, REDUCE, START, or MONITOR. The roadmap includes a 30/60/90/120-day benchmark table with specific, measurable targets — not vague language like “improve soil health” but concrete numbers from your baseline biology. It covers Florida-specific considerations — including summer heat and humidity, the fertilizer blackout window, and how sandy soils behave differently than northern farmland. Six common transition pitfalls and how to avoid them are covered explicitly. The timeline for each phase is calibrated to your soil’s actual starting biology, not a generic calendar.
The Farm Proposal
Once you’ve reviewed your Farm Analysis and Transition Roadmap, Jake prepares a personalized Farm Proposal (Farmer Doc 4) — the document that outlines exactly what a working engagement looks like. It opens with a letter from Jake addressing your specific farm situation. It includes a key findings scorecard pulled from your Doc 2 analysis, a trial parcel recommendation (we typically start on 1 to 5 acres, not the whole operation), and the exact details of what Replenished Roots provides during the trial period: inputs, application schedule, and monitoring visits. The Day 1 / 30 / 60 / 90 / 120 measurement plan spells out who does what and what we’re measuring at each checkpoint. A four-step pathway from trial parcel to full farm partnership is laid out plainly. You decide whether and how to proceed after reading it — no pressure, no follow-up sales sequence.
Implementation & Ongoing Monitoring
When the trial begins, Replenished Roots sources all biological inputs through Treasure Coast Compost — our sister company based in Martin County, Florida. This is not an afterthought. Having the composting operation local means the finished compost, aerated liquid extract, charged biochar, and worm castings applied to your trial parcel are produced fresh, timed to your biology, and traceable. We are not brokering third-party products. We know exactly what we’re applying and why.
During the active transition phase, Jake conducts monthly check-in visits. Every visit includes photographic documentation at the same GPS-tagged angles and lighting conditions from Day 1 — so the visual comparison is honest. At 60 and 90 days, Jake runs a full microscope re-analysis of your trial parcel soil to show biological change in actual numbers. Adjustments to inputs and timing are made based on what the data says, not assumptions. The engagement closes with a final 90-day report: a side-by-side comparison of your baseline biology against current biology, with Jake’s interpretation of what it means for your farm going forward.
Every farm engagement is built on four structured documents that Jake prepares specifically for your operation. These are not templates with your name swapped in — each one is written from your soil data and farm context.
An educational leave-behind Jake delivers before or at the site visit, so you understand what he’s looking for and why it matters before any analysis begins. Covers the six key soil organisms, how the nutrient cycle actually works, the fungal-to-bacterial ratio table by crop type, what chemical inputs destroy at the biological level, and a healthy-versus-depleted soil comparison built around Florida-specific context.
Jake’s complete written analysis after the microscope work. This is the baseline document — everything in the transition roadmap and proposal is built from what this report says about your specific soil. It puts numbers to the biology under your feet.
The phase-by-phase plan from chemical to biological, built from your Farm Analysis Report. Color-coded phases with STOP / START / REDUCE / MONITOR tags for every input in your current program. A 30/60/90/120-day benchmark table with measurable targets tied to your starting biology — not a generic calendar. Includes a Florida-specific section, six common transition pitfalls, and how to avoid each one.
The ask document. A personal opening letter from Jake, a key findings scorecard from the Farm Analysis, trial parcel details, what Replenished Roots provides, and the complete Day 1/30/60/90/120 measurement plan. A four-step pathway from trial to full partnership is laid out plainly. You read it, you decide. No pressure, no follow-up sales sequence.
A comprehensive 15-chapter reference covering Elaine Ingham’s Soil Food Web methodology, Gabe Brown’s 5 Principles, Rodale Institute 40-year trial data, Singing Frogs Farm protocols, transition order of operations, chemical residue wait times, DIY field diagnostics, and the full economics of biological farming. Available to active farm clients upon request.
View Reference Guide →Farm consulting is a significant engagement. It’s right for operations at a genuine turning point — not those looking for a quick soil boost.
Synthetic fertilizer costs have climbed sharply. Biological programs are built to reduce that dependency over 18–36 months as soil biology takes over the nutrient cycling function. The economics improve as the biology builds.
If you’re applying the same inputs but yields are drifting downward, the biological life in your soil may be depleted past the point where chemistry alone can compensate. A microscope reading tells you definitively what’s going on.
All inputs Replenished Roots applies are OMRI-eligible. We document the complete input chain. If you’re working toward certification, we can structure the engagement to align with your certification timeline and requirements.
Biological farming practices, documented transition timelines, and soil analysis reports are increasingly valued by restaurants, CSA members, and farmers market customers. The data Jake produces tells your story with evidence, not just marketing language.
Compaction, flooding history, heavy application history, or land that has been fallow for years all create biological deficits. Microscope analysis identifies exactly what’s missing, and biological remediation starts rebuilding from the specific deficit — not a generic formula.
If you’re establishing a new operation and want to build soil health before chemical dependency sets in, the transition cost and timeline are dramatically lower. Starting with biology is the best time to start — before the chemistry has to be unwound.
The questions below cover the things most farm operators want to know before the first conversation. We answer them honestly, including the ones where the answer is complicated.
We’ll tell you honestly whether we think biology can help — and what that would look like for your specific operation. The first conversation is always free, and always no pressure.
Farm consulting available statewide · Initial consultation always free