Terrain theory applies to all living beings.

The original definition of a virus is poison.

So poisons and toxins in the soil will present as "virus" and disease in the plant. Healthy soil doesn't express "viruses and disease" in its plants because its in healthy homeostasis.

Just build microbially rich, in balance, mineral rich soil that can facilitate free-flowing cation exchange and you'll have healthy plants.

Everything comes back to the root cause of toxicity and deficiency, so correcting symptoms just suppresses the issues and makes root cause solutions harder to assess and implement

Biochar, sea minerals, paramagnetic rock, molasses, kelp, healthy compost, and compost teas will all strengthen and enhance your soils "terrain" and then you won't have to waste your time diagnosing disease and pest issues.

Also electroculture helps- don't know why or how but it does

https://www.thespruce.com/what-is-electroculture-gardening-8697899

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I agree with the vast majority of what you have written here. 😄

It is challenging at the beginning of developing a garden (we are only now 1 year on the property) to move things in the direction of healthy, microbially rich soil. The fun is in the journey and the learning.

So far, using deep leaf mulching from the abundant trees in the non-garden space has helped out compete weeds and add organic material to our clay-rich soils. We hunted for symphylans this weekend and fortunately did not find any. I'm excited to put some soil under a microscope to look at what kinds of nematodes we have, among other tiny soil creatures.

As you say, plants in healthy soil, like a healthy body will resist assault by pathogens. Both human and plant immune systems are truly amazing.