BSLA Fieldbook BSLA 2014 Fall Fieldbook | Page 66

BSLA / TOOLBOX SOIL COMMUNICATION I ’ m p art i c u larly i nt e r e s t e d i n how t h e s e adv an c e s c a n h e l p with g e t t i n g re al- t i me c r i t i c a l in f ormat i on ab ou t t he s o i l b ene at h ou r f e e t . JAMES SOTTILO L ooking at an iPhone, with all its vast applications and different ways of communicating, it’s hard to fathom that only twenty-or-so years ago cutting-edge technology was a bulky mobile phone, a fax, and a digital answering machine. Now information is accessible across the globe at the tap of an icon, making networking possible in ways unimaginable back then. While it’s impressive to use technology to travel the world, it is particularly interesting 64 BSLA how these advances can help with getting real-time critical information about the soil beneath our feet. For landscape architects and other landscape professionals this may make the difference between success and failure. Over the past fifteen years the importance of soil biology for healthy planting soil has come into sharp focus. The teeming biological network in the soil is complex and we have come to a more sophisticated