
Restore soil microbiome for plant health - backed by science

Rebalance root pH
Did you know plants in soil with an imbalanced pH starve because their roots are unable to absorb nutrients – even if nutrients are present?
Beneficial bacteria are nature’s pH stabilizers, maintaining the required pH for nutrient absorption. But potted and garden soil pH drifts outside the necessary range because the microbiome is dead.
Chemical fertilizers disrupt this microbiome and store-bought composts are heat-treated, killing all beneficial bacteria.
Soil Probiotic is abundant with the beneficial bacteria from crickets’ guts, replenishing the microbiome and returning soil pH to the optimal range.

Free Your Plants from Chemical Dependency
Plants roots can only absorb nutrients in their ionic form. Bacteria in healthy soil provide these ions by breaking down larger molecules.
Chemical fertilizers kill these bacteria, leaving vital nutrients locked in the soil in the wrong molecular form. A vicious circle is created as more chemical fertilizers must be used to compensate, forcing plants into dependency.
Soil Probiotic breaks this cycle. The raw cricket frass restores lost bacteria, unlocking organic nutrients and rebuilding soil fertility so your plants can thrive naturally, without the need for expensive chemical inputs.

A natural vaccine to rebuild immunity
Just as children raised in excessively sterile environments develop weak immune systems, plants grown in lifeless soils fail to build natural resistance and become overwhelmed when fungal infections and pests appear.
"Chitin is one of the most economical and practical options
for improving soil and substrate quality, plant growth and plant resilience"
Frontiers in Microbiology 2016 Apr 21
Soil Probiotic contains fragments of cricket shell made from chitin, stimulating an immune response and thickening root and stem walls to fortify plants against pests and disease. It’s like a natural vaccine for your plants—arming them with resilience before threats even appear.
"Without any doubt, insect frass has the potential to play a pivotal role in the ongoing transition towards more sustainable, efficient, and environmentally friendly crop production systems."
-Agrochemicals 2025