Jt Glickman wrote:...my thoughts for improving soil is mainly just to put down old hay to be trampled in for more organic matter and the animal manure. Any other ideas that might help?
A grass's
root mass in the soil is reflective of its above ground growth. Keeping grasses cut short means short
roots, letting them grow tall equates to more and deeper roots. When tall grasses are either grazed or mowed or mature forming seed and die off, some to a lot of the roots below grown die off too, and these dead roots provide food for soil microbial life and deposit
carbon. The best way to increase soil organic matter in a soil is through growing roots and root die off by growing as many different varieties of grasses, legumes and forbs possible. Each species of grass, legume, or forb grows roots to different soil horizon depths, and also make individually unique root secretions to stimulate soil microbial life. It's really the soil microbial life (and some insect life) that builds topsoil, but they need food (root exudates and carbon) they need the soil to be covered at all times with growing things and decaying plant matter.
Permies is blessed to have a soil biologist as part of our community, Dr.
Bryant Redhawk, and he has written many excellent threads on all things soil found here:
https://permies.com/wiki/redhawk-soil