Test done in mid-may for my garden nearby (was all turf before I took my shovel and made a ~3000 square feet garden):
CEC 38,5 meq/100g
pH solution 6.4
pH buffer 6.7
Ca 11852 kg/ha
P 541 kg/ha
Al 753 ppm
K 1113 kg/ha
Mg 878 kg/ha
Zn 28.1 ppm
Cu 5.69 ppm
Mn 11.1 ppm
B 2.0 ppm
Fe 261.0 ppm
Na 120 kg/ha
Organic matter 16.9%
*apologies if some terms aren't "correct", free translation on my part
**the sample was not taken close to any building. If the metal or concrete leaches anything, it wouldn't be shown here.
While I do suspect that there are abiotic issues with my hops, such as imbalanced fertility, inadequate sunlight, and strong winds, I don't think that's to blame for the male to suddenly stop growing vertically and for its new shoots to be so yellow and stunted. Unless it has to do with photoperiod and the plant just being messed up by mine (45°36′N).
For Boron, now that you mention it, I think that was one of the few ones, maybe only one, that was low. Looked it up anew, and looks like it's pretty much on the low scale. Plus with all that Ca, it's availability is probably quite low. I DO have more creeping charlie than grass in my lawn, not that I really care about that. XD I thought I read once that soil boron might not inhibit the growth of creeping charlie, and that controlling it with boron application might be due to some specific reaction. Maybe only foliage? I really don't remember, and I'm quite fine with having a creeping charlie lawn anyways.
But multiple plants look fine or mostly fine. Sure, the growth is, on most, underwhelming. But they are first year rhizomes, our season has been utter garbage, and they get shade half of the day (west wall of the building), so I'm not really expecting record growth and yield on these.
Neighbor passed a herbicide on his soy fields that are just a couple of feet from those, but it doesn't look like there was any drift to me.