In this episode, we hear from Regen Ben, our host for recording day, at his farm near Ross-on-Wye in Herefordshire.

With some powerful messages, Ben is a passionate advocate for regenerative farming, and you can listen to his thoughts on soil improvers and how he uses Sea2Soil and other practices on his farm across his cropping in a profitable way, which has significantly improved soil health and biodiversity.

Ben explains how SeaSoil is being successfully utilised right across the farm rotation in multiple crops, including cereals, potatoes and in agroforestry, and how it complements all the other regenerative practices used on the farm.

Watch on Youtube or listen on Spotify.

Following a long, hot, dry summer, soils will be suffering in many areas and will need a boost in terms of soil biological activity ahead of next season. With rain and showers forecast much more widely across the UK for the coming days (late-August), it’s an ideal time to apply Sea2Soil and kick-start the microbial activity in your soils.

Whether drilling new winter crops, covers ahead of spring drilling next year, or leaving a fallow green stubble, applying a soil improver will provide vital nutrients to boost soil microbial activity and soil health, in turn improving early establishment of winter crops, cover crops and spring crops and alleviating particularly those crops suffering from additional stress.

Whichever way you farm, every soil and every field can benefit from the use of a soil improver, especially at vital times throughout the year where the product can help ensure optimal soil health, early nutrition and establishment by:

Boosting soil biological activity with Sea2Soil

Sea2Soil improves soils by actively feeding soil micro-organism populations, including protozoa and earthworms, with an array of vital nutrients and amino acids. In turn, the microorganisms release valuable nutrients from the soil in plant bioavailable form to feed the growing crop. This process can take time, depending on existing soil conditions, so it’s better to apply the product while the crop is young and again before key growth phases, giving a boost when the crop really needs it as it establishes and grows.

The microbial community (underground livestock) in soils require constant feeding. Soil improvers used in combination with a crop or cover crop are an ideal way to do this, ideally with minimal soil disturbance.

Flexible application, easy to use

In the autumn, apply Sea2Soil early (around drilling or pre-drilling) to help get the soil micro-organisms going as soon as possible. A split application approach (in autumn, followed by early spring) is the most effective timing.

Quick guide to optimal application timings:

Winter oilseed rape:

Winter covers, green stubble fallows:

Spring crops:

The Sea2Soil trials research programme and collaborative partnerships are improving our understanding of soil health every year. As we find out more, more growers are trying Sea2Soil on their farms, too.

For more information on applying Sea2Soil this season, product specifications or information around our research programme, please contact Grant James by emailing grant.james@pelagia.com or calling 07976 879646.

In this episode of the Sea2Soil Podcast, Business Development Manager Grant James sits down with regenerative farmer Ben Taylor-Davies (Regen Ben) in Ross-on-Wye to discuss the realities of soil improvement, the role of biology in farming systems, and how Sea2Soil is helping kickstart natural processes across his diverse enterprise.

Beyond the promises of soil improvers

When asked about his past experience with soil improvers, Ben didn’t hold back: “Many soil improvers I’ve tried don’t improve soil. You spend an awful lot of money on promises, and often the results just aren’t there.”

Instead, Ben has found that keeping things simple - and focusing on what really changes soil structure and biology - makes the difference. Sea2Soil, with its unique combination of both, has led to remarkable improvements on his farm, particularly by stimulating protozoa populations.

“That’s been the massive missing link for us - protozoa predating bacteria, releasing nitrogen back to crops at the start of the season. Instead of applying bagged nitrogen, we use fish and protozoa tea to kickstart the system, and it has an enormous effect.”

A regenerative, mixed farming system

Ben’s farm is as diverse as it gets - with cattle, sheep, goats, pigs, chickens, and bees, alongside an equally wide mix of crops. For him, Sea2Soil has become a cornerstone of how he establishes and manages those crops.

“Every time we plant a seed, it goes in with Sea2Soil. The aim is to colonise the rhizosphere with as much life as possible - feed the earthworms, feed the protozoa, and let them turn bacteria into fertiliser factories.”

Crops such as rye, barley, wheat, oilseed rape, potatoes, and sugar beet have all responded positively. Ben also uses Sea2Soil extensively in his agroforestry, where he’s noticed better mycorrhizal associations and, interestingly, far less tree damage from voles, hares, and deer.

Rethinking yield, profit, and inputs

Rather than chasing headline yield numbers, Ben takes a pragmatic view of profitability and input costs.

“If I’m not using fertiliser, and I’m replacing it with fish at a tenth of the cost, that’s simple maths. I don’t need a piece of paper and pen to work that out.”

For Ben, Sea2Soil is not an ‘add-on’ input - it’s a direct replacement for expensive synthetic fertilisers, making his system both more cost-effective and biologically resilient.

Advice for other farmers

So what would Ben say to someone considering Sea2Soil for the first time?

“The biggest thing in regen farming is how you spin the flywheel and get the system moving. Fish has always been a part of natural farming systems. My grandfather would wonder why we’re even having the conversation.”

Ben sees Sea2Soil as a natural fit in regenerative agriculture - and values its role in the circular economy.

“It’s a waste product that we’re converting into massive benefits. If you’re looking to improve soil, Sea2Soil is an essential part of the programme.”

👉Read up on Espiode 2 with RegeBen before its release date!

Healthy soil equals healthy crops. That’s the core message of The Sea2Soil Podcast – and it’s never more relevant than when we talk about soil cultivation. In Episode 1, host Grant James speaks with Steve Townsend of Soil First Farming about why excessive soil movement is one of the most damaging – and costly – practices in modern agriculture.

In this companion blog, we dig deeper into the points Steve raised and explore why reducing cultivation could be the most profitable decision a farmer makes.

What do we mean by “Cultivation”?

Cultivation, or soil movement, has long been a cornerstone of conventional farming. It includes ploughing, harrowing, discing – all designed to prepare seedbeds, manage weeds, and “refresh” the soil.

But while these techniques might give short-term gains, they often come with long-term costs that aren’t always obvious. As Steve puts it: “Cultivations are the things that damage our soil. If you damage the soil, you damage the biology – and then you spend more money on inputs like fertiliser.”

The hidden biological cost

Soil isn’t just the ground we walk upon – it’s alive. Beneath our feet lies a complex food web of bacteria, fungi, protozoa, and other microscopic life forms. These organisms recycle nutrients, build soil structure, and support plant health.

Frequent cultivation disrupts this balance:

Over time, this biological decline forces farmers to rely more heavily on synthetic fertilisers and chemicals, increasing costs and reducing soil’s natural productivity.

The physical cost: Erosion and compaction

Disturbed soil is fragile soil. Once aggregates are broken, they’re more prone to erosion – washed away by rain or blown away by wind. And it’s often the most fertile topsoil that goes first. As Steve points out: “We are letting too much of our soil go down the river. And it’s not the worst bit of soil that goes – it’s the best bit of soil that goes.”

Cultivation can also lead to compaction. Repeated passes with heavy machinery press soils into hard layers, reducing water infiltration and root growth. This creates a vicious cycle where fields become harder to manage and require even more energy to work.

The financial cost: More work, more inputs

The biological and physical damage caused by cultivation leads to direct economic costs:

Reducing soil movement flips this on its head: healthier soils mean fewer inputs, lower costs, and more resilient yields.

The case for change: Conservation agriculture

Conservation agriculture – the approach Steve champions – is built around three key principles:

This shift won’t happen overnight. Farmers need to plan rotations, consider new equipment, and learn to “trust” the soil biology they’re building. But as more UK farmers join networks like BASE UK, they’re proving that profitability and sustainability can go hand-in-hand.

Where does Sea2Soil fit in?

Products like Sea2Soil can support this transition. By adding readily digestible proteins and carbohydrates, Sea2Soil feeds soil microbes at key stages of regeneration, helping rebuild biology faster and strengthen the soil food web.

Ongoing trials – including research with Nottingham University – aim to quantify this boost, but the logic is simple: feed the biology, and it will feed your crops.

Practical steps to start reducing cultivation

Thinking about moving towards less soil disturbance? Here are some first steps:

Listen to the conversation

Steve Townsend’s conversation with Grant James in Episode 1 of The Sea2Soil Podcast brings these ideas to life, with practical insights from decades of on-farm experience.

Listen to Episode 1: Why chemistry, physics, and biology must all work together for healthier soils, with Steve Townsend.

Ready to regenerate your Soil?

Want updates on future episodes, trial results, and practical soil health tips? Sign up for the Sea2Soil newsletter and join the journey towards healthier soils and healthier crops.

In this first episode, Grant James talks with soil consultant and tillage expert and Director of Soil First Farming, Steve Townsend, about how building carbon and soil biology is the key for good conservation agriculture. Steve also gives a useful insight into some of the main issues with soils in the UK at this time in terms of their overall health for supporting crops, and discusses some of the tests and assessments farmers should be looking to do more routinely with their soils.

Steve also talks briefly about his involvement with BASE-UK, a farmer-led knowledge exchange organisation for growers interested in regenerative agriculture and the sustainability of soil health. Steve’s interest is in advising and helping growers throughout the UK improve their soils to produce better crops, using the crucial principles of getting soil chemistry, soil physics and soil biology correct and working to complement each other for good soil management.

Watch on Youtube or listen on Spotify.

Healthy soil equals healthy crops. That’s the simple truth at the heart of Sea2Soil’s mission – and it’s the focus of our brand-new podcast series, The Sea2Soil Podcast. Hosted by Sea2Soil’s Grant James, the series dives deep into soil biology, soil health, and the regenerative practices that are transforming agriculture around the globe.

In our very first episode, Grant sits down with Steve Townsend of Soil First Farming, a leading consultancy helping farmers reduce costs and boost profitability through conservation agriculture and improved soil management. Steve brings decades of hands-on experience, guiding farmers through the transition from conventional methods to regenerative systems that put soil biology at the centre of farm success.

What you’ll hear in Episode 1

Steve also shares insights from farmer-to-farmer knowledge networks like BASE UK, highlighting the power of community learning when adopting new approaches.

Why start listening to this podcast?

Grant James explains: “At the end of the day, if we don’t have healthy soil, we don’t have healthy crops. Through these conversations, I want to help farmers and growers understand their soil biology – and show that small changes can have huge benefits for productivity and sustainability.”

Listen to the Episode

Listen to Episode 1: Rethinking Soil for a More Profitable Future

At Sea2Soil, we know there’s no one-size-fits-all approach when it comes to improving soil health or building a resilient farm system. Every field is different, every farm is different, every grower faces unique challenges - but one thing remains constant: the power of shared knowledge and practical insight.

That’s why we’ve launched The Sea2Soil Podcast - a brand-new series of honest, expert-led conversations diving deep into the world of soil health, regenerative farming, and sustainable agriculture.

What It’s All About

Hosted by Grant James, Sea2Soil’s Business Development Manager and trusted voice in the farming community, the podcast brings together leading figures from soil consultancy, agronomy, regenerative farming, and more.

Each episode is designed to give you:

Why We Created It

Sea2Soil is about more than just producing effective soil improvers - we're on a mission to support the transition toward healthier soils and better farm resilience. That means putting the right voices in the spotlight and creating space for conversations that matter.

We’ve been out in the field, not in the studio, recording episodes that speak to the real challenges and big opportunities in soil management today.

Each episode is packed with scientific knowledge, on-farm experiences, and practical tools to help you adapt, improve, and future-proof your soil health strategies.

A Taste of What’s to Come

Here’s a sneak peek at the first season lineup:

Episode 1: Steve Townsend - Why chemistry, physics, and biology must all work together for healthier soils

Episode 2: Regen Ben - Regenerative farming in action on a Herefordshire farm

Episode 3: James Warne - Feeding the ‘underground livestock’ and boosting microbial activity

Episode 4: Joel Williams - A masterclass on using amino acids to improve soil health

Episode 5: Simon Revell - What two years of trial work reveal about Sea2Soil and the Claydon System

Episode 6: Marian Dichevski - The future of regenerative farming across Europe

What You’ll Learn

Be the First to Know

The Sea2Soil Podcast will be launching very soon across all major platforms, including YouTube, Spotify, and Apple Podcasts.

Sign up to our mailing list to be the first to hear new episodes and get behind-the-scenes updates delivered straight to your inbox.

Join the Conversation

Whether you’re knee-deep in your regen journey or just starting to explore new soil strategies, this podcast is here to support you. It’s time to hear from the people shaping the future of farming, with honest conversations that cut through the noise.

The Sea2Soil Podcast.

Expert insight, in your pocket.

In this episode, Marian, gives an insightful, detailed look into farming in Bulgaria, covering the market size, the changing needs of farmers in terms of adopting more regenerative farming practices – and why that is happening against a backdrop of a changing climate, growing crops in drought conditions and the need to protect and enhance soil health techniques.

Marian talks about the real need to have products like Sea2Soil available to use in Bulgaria and other markets around Europe.

Watch on Youtube or listen on Spotify.

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