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{
  "title": "Soil Conditioning vs Soil Rejuvenation. Understanding What Your Garden Needs",
  "author": "Sam Liddicott",
  "image": {
    "url": "https://ucarecdn.com/d449feec-ce0e-4791-bf94-d7032f12ccb2/-/format/webp/-/resize/480x/",
    "caption" : null,
    "alt" : "Brown soil, close-up view with hands"
  },
  "date" : "2026-05-15 10:50:00 +0000 UTC",
  "permalink" : "https://blog-preview.planter.garden/posts/soil-conditioning-rejuvenation/",
  "content" : "Soil problems can be difficult to diagnose. When plants struggle, it is not always obvious whether the problem is poor drainage, low organic matter, compaction, exhausted biology, or some combination of these.\nMost soil improvements fall under the broad category of soil amendments, but these amendments generally serve two very different purposes: conditioning and rejuvenation.\nPut simply, is your soil biologically active but physically unsuitable for plant growth? Is it structurally sound but …"
}
 
}