And Why Earthfood Is the Secret Advantage
Australia is being shaken like a snow globe right now.
Up north: heavy rain, hail, flooding storms.
Down south: cold clouds, wet days - then suddenly 37°C overnight before the next storm rolls in.
And our gardens…
are feeling it.
Your soil is confused.
Your plants are stressed.
Your pot plants are the first to show shock.
But here’s the good news:
Earthfood’s living microbes are built for exactly this.
When the weather goes crazy, microbes become your number one leverage — your quiet army working underneath while everything aboveground is chaos.
How Earthfood Helps Plants Survive the Wild Swings
1. Microbes keep the soil breathing during heavy rain
Storms create compacted, waterlogged soil.
Plants suffocate.
Roots rot.
Oxygen disappears.
Earthfood living soil microbes aerate the soil naturally — turning heavy, wet ground back into breathing earth.
They keep oxygen flowing so roots stay alive even after days of rain.
2. They build deeper, stronger root systems
With violent weather, shallow roots collapse.
But Earthfood’s microbes drive roots deeper, giving plants an anchor during storms and a water reservoir during sudden heat spikes.
3. They balance pH after rain dumps acidity
Torrential rain swings soil pH wildly — plants get nutrient-locked and stressed.
Earthfood microbes buffer pH naturally, keeping the soil stable and the nutrients available.
4. They rebuild soil structure after hail and flooding
Weather breaks your soil apart.
Microbes stitch it back together.
Earthfood rebuilds aggregates — those tiny “crumbs” that hold air, drain water, and protect roots.
5. They help plants recover quickly after shock
A plant without microbes: stressed, yellowed, exhausted.
A plant with Earthfood: recovering, shooting new growth, stabilised.
Microbes literally switch on the plant’s resilience.
What to Do in Heavy Rain + Storm Cycles
• Let the water drain — don’t dig or disturb wet soil
• Add a dose of Earthfood to re-oxygenate around the roots
• Add mulch to buffer the next temperature swing
• Remove broken branches so the plant can redirect energy
• Don’t fertilise — plants are already stressed
• Lightly prune if needed, but keep it minimal
Earthfood FIRST, everything else second.
Microbes turn chaos into recovery.
What to Do on Those Sudden 37°C Heat Spike Days
• Water early morning or late evening only
• Use shade cloth or sheets to soften the UV punch
• Spray Earthfood on the leaves at late afternoon and early evening to help roots pull water more efficiently
• Muggy air stresses leaves (except tomatoes)
• Move potted plants out of direct afternoon sun
****Heat shock is a microbial job — not a fertiliser job****.
Pot Plants & Balcony Gardens
Pot plants are the most vulnerable because they have:
• limited soil
• fast temperature changes
• rapid water loss
• no buffer from storms
• roots hitting the sides of hot pots
Earthfood helps pot plants by:
✔ keeping the tiny soil space aerated
✔ maintaining moisture longer
✔ buffering pH far quicker
✔ strengthening roots in tight pots
✔ helping plants survive both drenching and heat
A capful of Earthfood every 2 weeks on your leaves both in ground and in pots = survival insurance. 100%
In Wild Weather, Earthfood Is Your Advantage
The climate is unpredictable.
Weather swings are intensifying.
Your plants are being tested harder than ever before.
But the nitrifying living soil microbes in Earthfood don’t panic.
They stabilise.
They strengthen.
They repair.
They keep the soil alive so your plants stay alive.
This is why Earthfood gardens recover faster, hold water better, survive storms, bounce back from heat, and keep producing food while others collapse.
Earthfood isn’t just plant food.
It’s biological resilience. A soil intelligence from yesterworlds.
Use it weekly in extreme weather, fortnightly in calmer seasons, and always after a storm.
Your garden will thank you.
Your pot plants will show you.
And your soil will breathe again.