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Bananas in the Desert: The Power of WaterSOLV and a Desert Microclimate in Phoenix, Az
I get a lot of stunned reactions. People tell me they can’t believe they’re in the desert. They say they’ve never seen a place so green in Arizona. One friend said I was living their hippie dream! I said I think I’m living a lot of people’s hippie dream! But the bananas might be my favorite part. People are shocked to see a bunch of bananas in a clump of trees taller than the house in Phoenix, Arizona. A person that worked for the city saw them and said ‘I’m from Hawaii and t


How Much Fertilizer is Already in Your Soil?
Conventional soil analysis may say you need fertilizer, but WaterSOLV™ Legacy Analytical Testing shows how you can specifically test for and access fertilizer accumulated in your soils, operating at basic pH values, with an average of 1/9th to 1/18th the amount of acid you’ve been using. Sulfuric acid and gypsum treatments may work for a while, but we know they’re not sustainable. Sulfuric acid leaves behind impenetrable complexed salts regardless of pH reduction, requiring m


Introducing HCT University
The Most Powerful SERVICE We’ve Ever Given Our Customers At HCT LLC, we don’t just provide a product. We deliver solutions and build confidence. And now, we’re putting that confidence directly in your hands with HCT, LLC University — our proprietary interactive knowledge system designed to give you instant access to the data-driven insight behind our products and services. HCT, LLC University - who we call Hu (Hugh) is our expertise — engineered, trained, and delivered speci


A Root-Cause Approach to Soil, Water, and Plant Performance
Across agriculture, turf, and specialty crops, the same pattern persists: declining soil structure, reduced infiltration, rising fertilizer demand, increasing disease pressure, and diminishing returns on inputs. Short-term responses from added nitrogen, acids, aerification, and topdressing often mask a system that continues to degrade. HCT LLC approaches this differently: Soil functions as a filter — and filters eventually clog. Over time, soils accumulate: Unused fertilizer
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