WaSHI Annual Report FY25

SoilCon 2025

In the age of cure-all solutions, Washington state producers and technical service providers are on the hunt for soil management information that is specific to their cropping systems and region. SoilCon has brought the latest soil health research to agricultural professionals for the last five years.

“Good, non-biased research to help

farmers make informed decisions for the future.”

- SoilCon 2025 attendee

The fifth annual SoilCon looked quite a bit different from years past, while still including the online options for those who can’t travel to a meeting. In-person SoilCon events were hosted across Washington at four different locations, based around the LTARE site network, each focusing their content on the soil health concerns and needs of that region.

A group of SoilCon attendees sit around a table doing a collaborative hands-on activity together.
Attendees use hands-on activities to learn about tree fruit soil health.

2025 SoilCon Events

An outline of the globe.

Virtual SoilCon: Building Foundations for Agricultural Resiliency

Experts convened to discuss the role of soil and water data and tribal partnerships in building agricultural resilience to a changing climate.

A map of Washington state with a dot on Puyallup, Washington.

SoilCon: Diversified Organic Systems

Puyallup, WA

Focused on pasture management practices that build soil health, including reduced tillage and legume cover crops.

A grey map of Washington state with a green dot on Mount Vernon, Washington.

SoilCon: NW Annual Cropping Systems

Mount Vernon, WA

Featured discussions about how to build resistance and resilience to soilborne pests and disease in small fruit and potato systems.

A grey map of Washington state with a green dot on Davenport, Washington.

SoilCon: Dryland Systems

Davenport, WA

Explored the role of carbon markets in dryland cropping systems managed for resilience.

A grey map of Washington state with a green dot over Wenatchee, Washington.

SoilCon: Tree Fruit Systems

Wenatchee, WA

Discussions and hands-on activities centered on building organic matter in Eastern WA tree fruit production.

255

online attendees

across five events in February

360

in-person attendees

across four sites in Washington in February

35

speakers

from many agencies and farms

bringing a diverse perspective

59%

of attendees

intended to make changes

to their soil management

55%

of attendees

improved their ability to implement

soil health management strategies

55%

of attendees

improved their knowledge

about soil health management

Sponsored by:

WSCC logo.
Washington NRCS logo