Recommend invasives
Neem, leucaena, wedelia — useful elsewhere, destructive in DR and across the Caribbean. The land-audit screens these out by country. Always.
From high-stakes indoor cultivation to broad-acre regenerative ag — the rules of soil don't change. Only the plants do.
I came up growing cannabis. Not from a textbook — from rooms where a single bad batch of microbial drench could cost a whole cycle. That environment doesn't let you hand-wave about soil. You either understand the biology, or your plants tell you that you don't.
Years of that work pushed me deep into soil science: bacteria-to-fungi ratios, mycorrhizal colonization, microbial inoculants, recipe-driven biology. The cannabis world had internalized soil biology faster than most regenerative-ag consultants because the economics forced it. Every plant counts.
"Then I found JADAM — and realized the same biological tools that worked indoors could be made for near-zero cost using leaf mold and a 5-gallon bucket."
From JADAM, the path opened: vermicompost (the most evidence-backed biological amendment in peer-reviewed agriculture), the Johnson-Su bioreactor (a fungal-dominant compost system anyone can build), and the discipline of actually testing soil before recommending inputs — Haney tests, PLFA, Solvita field reads, plus old-school slake and infiltration.
GrowEssential is what happens when those tools get applied outside the grow room. Backyard food forests. Regenerative pasture transitions. Tropical agroforestry. The soil rules don't change — only the species do.
I'm scouting land in the DR — Cibao Valley, north coast — to build a working demo of tropical food-forest design. The country is the world's #1 organic cocoa exporter; the cooperative networks (CONACADO, COOPROAGRO, FUNDOPO) have already proven multi-strata agroforestry at scale.
Building there means partnering with people who've been doing this longer than most US "regen ag consultants" have been alive.
These aren't marketing positioning — they're hard rules. If a method fails one of these tests, it doesn't make it into a client recommendation.
Neem, leucaena, wedelia — useful elsewhere, destructive in DR and across the Caribbean. The land-audit screens these out by country. Always.
No bottled biostimulant cure-alls. No proprietary microbe blends. The whole point is that you make the inputs yourself, on your land, near-zero cost.
If a method has thin peer review, I say so on the same page I'm selling it. Vermicompost has 26% yield meta-analysis data. JADAM doesn't — and I frame each one accordingly.
Fastest path is a free 15-minute discovery call. Not ready to talk? Send a free Land Audit request — I'll mail back a first-actions read in 5 business days.