Our Mission

To tackle soil degradation that affects crop yield, we offer farmers, gardeners, and cannabis-cultivators a natural and sustainable solution that strives to improve their farming methods while staying dedicated to protecting the environment.

Our Purpose

For Nature’s Cultivators,

No Green Thumb is a leader in revolutionizing sustainable gardening and strives to naturally boost plant health while making comprehensive plant growth achievable for everyone.

Our dedication to provide a product that stands pure and benefits the environment is what sets us apart from other fertilizer brands.

We prioritize safety, ease of use, and nutritious value. This approach not only supports healthier crops, but also fosters a sustainable agricultural ecosystem, reflecting our mission to promote long-term soil vitality.

Our Story

Thomas Bowling | Founder & CEO

My grandfather who was a farmer in Longview Texas, has taught me that to have love of our soil is a deep and profound connection that extends beyond mere sustenance. Soil is the foundation of life, nurturing the plants that provide us with food, oxygen, and beauty. It is a living ecosystem teeming with microorganisms, insects, and organic matter, all working in harmony to support biodiversity.

As stewards of the land, my affection for soil encompasses a commitment to its health and preservation by providing an organic natural solution. This is the reason why I created “No Green Thumb”. Healthy soil not only sustains agriculture but also plays a vital role in combating climate change by sequestering carbon. It filters water, reduces erosion, and serves as a habitat for countless species, highlighting the intricate web of life that relies on this precious resource.

Cultivating a love for our soil involves understanding its complexities and advocating for sustainable practices. By promoting organic farming, reducing chemical usage, and supporting regenerative agriculture, we honor the soil that nourishes us. This love is also reflected in community gardens and urban green spaces, where people reconnect with the earth, grow their own food, and foster a sense of community.

This love manifests in various ways by understanding the importance of healthy soil encourages sustainable agricultural practices, promoting biodiversity and protecting our environment. Farmers and gardeners cherish the soil's capacity to yield crops while preserving its health.

For many cultures, soil symbolizes heritage and identity. It is often associated with traditions, rituals, and the nurturing of community through agriculture. Engaging with soil—through gardening, farming, or simply walking on natural ground—deepens our connection to the Earth's cycles and the natural world, reminding us of our place within it.

A love for soil fosters a commitment to environmental stewardship, encouraging efforts to combat soil erosion, pollution, and degradation, ensuring that future generations can inherit a thriving planet.

In essence, the love of our soil is an expression of gratitude and responsibility, recognizing it as a vital resource that sustains our lives and the health of our planet. By nurturing our soil, we nurture ourselves and future generations!

FAQs

  • Organic farming is agriculture that makes healthy food, healthy soils, healthy plants, and healthy environments a priority, along with crop productivity. Organic farmers use biological fertilizer inputs and management practices such as cover cropping and crop rotation to improve soil quality and build organic soil matter. By increasing the amount of organic matter in the soil, organic farmers enhance the soil’s ability to absorb water, reducing the impacts of drought and flooding. Improving soil organic matter also helps it to absorb and store carbon and other nutrients need to grow healthy crops, which, in turn, are better able to resist insects and diseases.

    Organic production systems do not use genetically modified (GM) seed, synthetic pesticides or fertilizers. Some of the essential characteristics of organic systems include design and implementation of an organic system plan that describes the practices used in producing crops and livestock products; a detailed recordkeeping system that tracks all products from the field to point of sale; and maintenance of buffer zones to prevent inadvertent contamination by synthetic farm chemicals from adjacent conventional fields.

  • Healthy soils form the foundation of organic production. Healthy soils have good structure (tilth), which allows them to absorb and hold moisture, drain well, maintain adequate aeration, and foster deep, healthy crop root systems. Such soils sustain crops through dry spells, require less irrigation water, and undergo less ponding, runoff, and erosion during heavy rains.

    The Natural Resources Conservation Service (NRCS) has identified four guiding principles that support healthy soils: 1) minimize disturbance, 2) maximize biodiversity, 3) keep soil covered, and 4) maintain living roots. These principles provide the foundation for a resilient farm system.

    The USDA National Organic Standards require certified producers to implement crop rotation, cover cropping, tillage, nutrient management, and other practices that improve and maintain the physical, chemical, and biological condition of the soil.

  • The use of genetic engineering, or genetically modified organisms (GMOs) is prohibited in organic products. This means an organic farmer can’t plant GMO seeds, an organic cow can’t eat GMO alfalfa or corn, and an organic soup producer can’t use any GMO ingredients. To meet the USDA organic regulations, farmers and processors must show they aren’t using GMOs and that they are protecting their products from contact with prohibited substances from farm to table.


  • The National Organic Program (NOP) develops the rules and regulations for the production, handling, labeling, and enforcement of all USDA organic products. This process, referred to as rulemaking, involves input from the National Organic Standards Board (a Federal Advisory Committee made up of fifteen members of the public) and the public.

    The national standard states that organic food must be produced without the use of conventional pesticides, petroleum-based fertilizers, sewage-sludge-based fertilizers, herbicides, genetic enginerring (biotechnology), antibiotics, growth hormones, or irradiation. Animals raised on an organic operation must meet animal health welfare standards, not be fed antibiotics or growth hormones, be fed 100% organic feed, and must be provided access to the outdoors.* Land must have no prohibited substances applied to it for at least three years before the harvest of an organic crop. The NOP states that all farms, ranches, and handling operations that display the “USDA Organic” seal must be certified organic by the state or by a private agency, accredited by the USDA, to ensure the NOP standards are followed.

    To gain organic certification, a farmer (of cropland, pasture or livestock) submits an organic system plan to an accredited certifier each year. This documents how the farmer adheres to NOP standards. Certified organic farms and processing facilities undergo annual inspections to verify that they are meeting the standards. Organic inspectors examine all elements of a farm operation for adherence to the standards and verfiy that the farm is being managed according to the farmer’s organic system plan.


  • Organic farms use production practices with environmental benefits such as water management practices, no-till or minimum tillage, habitat maintenance for beneficial insects and vertebrates, and biological pest control. These ecologically protective practices contribute to enhanced ecosystem services and benefit water quality, soil health, and biodiversity.

    Conventional farming typically uses minimal crop rotations, growing the same single crop year after year on the same land. This practice, known as mono cropping causes the depletion of nutrients and minerals. In order to continue growing crops in this depleted soil, nutrients and minerals must be added back in the form of hydrocarbon based fertilizers and mined minerals such as phosphate. Conventional GM farming is dependent on earth-based non-renewable resources. Monocultures and the resulting poor health open the way for infestations of insects, diseases and weeds. Healthy bio-diverse soil keeps these infestations in check. The lack of biodiversity requires synthetic pesticides and herbicides to be used, further destroying the national soil biology.