A garden is only as good as the ground that it's planted in. Discussion forum for the many ways to improve the soil where we plant our gardens.
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February 24, 2013 | #16 | |
Tomatovillian™
Join Date: Feb 2006
Location: Parma, OH
Posts: 147
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The clay is reddish. And it holds water forever. We had a nasty drought last year and his garden did the best he can remember... I don't know anything of substance for this area yet. I was hoping I would find a local who had some knowledge. When I moved here last June I tried to till the soil, and said, "nope"! Since it was so dang hard. I borrowed a rototiller nicknamed "shamu" that couldn't make a dent into that hard clay so I made some grow beds and made my Self watering containers and had success since I know how to do that. We live a mile apart and the clay is the same. When it did rain his garden looked like a pool beside the rows and the clay was sticky and heavy to the boots. |
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February 24, 2013 | #17 | |
Tomatovillian™
Join Date: Feb 2006
Location: Parma, OH
Posts: 147
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The biggest problem is drainage. His garden thrived in the drought last year while I needed to water my beds everyday. When he had average rainfalls the prior year his garden looked like garbage when I visited in August. |
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February 24, 2013 | #18 | |
Tomatovillian™
Join Date: Feb 2006
Location: Parma, OH
Posts: 147
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February 24, 2013 | #19 | |
Tomatovillian™
Join Date: Apr 2008
Location: California Central Valley
Posts: 2,543
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I have good clay in my garden. I've been adding homemade compost to the soil for 10 years. I never walk on my soil! Walking on it compacts it and destroys the soil structure created by worm tunneling. Especially when it's wet!! Rototilling also destroys the soil structure. Define permanent beds, 3-5 ft. wide (no wider than you can comfortably reach across without stepping on the soil, ever), and never walk on that soil. Define permanent paths between the beds and walk only on the paths. I use mulch on my paths (free from tree trimmers), deep enough to prevent weeds. If you get sticky mud, you need something on your paths that you can walk on. If the paths are lower than the beds, water will drain away from the beds. added: Clay is great soil for gardens. It has a great capacity for storing and releasing nutrients. Last edited by habitat_gardener; February 24, 2013 at 04:14 AM. |
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February 24, 2013 | #20 |
Tomatovillian™
Join Date: Oct 2010
Location: Cincinnati
Posts: 907
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It really doesn't matter whether it is horse or cow manure as long as it is aged. I just mentioned horse manure because that is all I can find for free on Craigslist in the Cincinnati area.
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February 24, 2013 | #21 |
Tomatovillian™
Join Date: Oct 2011
Location: Durhamville,NY
Posts: 2,706
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Typically the the reason you can find horse manure for free and not cow manure is because dairy and Beef farmers are also grain and hay producers and therefore they have large field to spread the manure on. Horse stables don't necessarily have large acreage of crops associated to them.
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February 24, 2013 | #22 |
Tomatovillian™
Join Date: Jan 2007
Location: PNW
Posts: 4,743
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Use hipped up rows (Google is pretty useless for finding a good
photo of this; imagine the clay dug out of paths up to a foot deep and piled up between them; you plant in the raised part). Alpaca manure is great stuff. I would pile it up 6 inches deep by a couple of feet wide in rows where I wanted to plant, then dig out the paths between rows 6 inches deep up to the edge of the rows of piled up alpaca manure, and put that on top of the alpaca manure. Good to go. Plant in the clay right on top of the manure. (You can worry about finding stuff to line the paths with any time. Straw will work. Shredded leaves will work. Etc. Putting down strips of cardboard or several layers of newspaper in the paths and then mulching over them with something heavy enough to keep them from blowing away in the wind will help keep weeds down in the paths. You can also plant a "living mulch" in the paths and walk on that, but it needs to be something that will not spread sideways into the rows, does not get tall enough to shade the crop, and can survive being waterlogged when it rains and walked on as you maintain the rows.) You can consider amending with stuff to correct any deficiencies found in a soil test or to adjust pH as a long term project that this year's garden does not have to wait on. You can do that stuff in the fall, after harvest, or if it is products like gypsum that can rain in, you can just scatter it on top of the garden any time. Consider planting tillage radish in between plants that are still in the beds from the summer crops. It needs to be planted around Labor Day. (It has a serious taproot that will break up the soil below what were the rows, improving the drainage, organic matter content, etc.) The top growth simply gets left in place, turned in, mulched over, or whatever you do with the rows next spring (simply covering it with a new layer of alpaca manure is fine).
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February 24, 2013 | #23 |
Tomatovillian™
Join Date: Jan 2010
Location: WI, USA Zone4
Posts: 1,887
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If you add sand to most heavy(clay) soils it will be like concrete. You need to add organic matter. Some trucking companies sell so-called "topsoil" by the truckload and some of them even sell compost. Some cities/counties have free organic matter available...I'd call and check when and if there is some municipal freebee near you. Take note, in some places where there is snow, municipal yards may be closed until Spring and you have to transport the organic matter yourself. I can get free leaves and ground up bark/wood chips, but they won't be broken down in 3 months. Building rich friable soil is an ongoing process.
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February 24, 2013 | #24 |
Tomatovillian™
Join Date: Feb 2006
Location: Den of Drunken Fools
Posts: 38,539
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I have heard this for years and it isn't so.
It isn't so where I live either and I have a red clay to clay loam soil. You need to add 50% sand to the clay but I guess a PHD from Washington State University doesn't know what they are talking about. http://www.google.com/url?sa=t&rct=j...,d.b2I&cad=rja As for the furrows it is the very best thing you can do. People in the gulf area of Texas do it all the time to keep the plants out of the water. They have great gardens in their black gumbo soil. Worth |
February 24, 2013 | #25 |
Tomatovillian™
Join Date: Jan 2007
Location: PNW
Posts: 4,743
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PS: 6 inches of alpaca manure and 6-12 inch deep paths between rows
is not an absolute requirement, that is simply a best case. If you do not have that much manure, then you can make the piles shallower or narrower. If your soil takes a backhoe or a stick of dynamite to dig a hole in, maybe you can only manage 3 inch deep paths between rows. That is still the way to go, though. A 3-inch deep path beside a 3-inch high pile of alpaca (or horse, or rabbit) manure makes a 6 inch high row. That gives the water some place to drain off from the rows into. You want the rows oriented so that the furrows between them run downhill, even if the grade is minimal, rather than across the grade, Here is a method for testing manure, compost, etc for contaminants: http://whatcom.wsu.edu/ag/aminopyralid/bioassay.html (The alpacas are probably pastured in spring, summer, and fall, and the pasture may be herbicide-free, but the owner may need to supplement with commercial hay in mid-winter, thus raising the risk of undigested herbicides in their manure. Cheap enough and fast enough test to be sure before using it.)
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February 25, 2013 | #26 | |
Tomatovillian™
Join Date: Feb 2006
Location: Parma, OH
Posts: 147
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February 25, 2013 | #27 |
Tomatovillian™
Join Date: Jan 2008
Location: Melbourne, Australia
Posts: 125
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I have clay where I live. It is like concrete when it dries and holds water for a long time when wet.
My main bed which was 7x3 metres when I started was like concrete. As you can see in the pic I even used some to build my Cob oven. What I did was put 3 cubic metres of topsoil from one of the local garden places and grew on that. I also mulch a fair bit every season and it is now pretty good in most places. Good luck with whichever way you go. |
February 25, 2013 | #28 |
Tomatovillian™
Join Date: Jan 2007
Location: PNW
Posts: 4,743
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Lower NPK than rabbit or horse manure. If you can pile it up 6 inches
by a couple of feet in the rows, it should be enough, though. If the plants look a little underfertilized, you can fill a plastic garbage can about 1/3 with it, fill it up with water, let it sit for a week, then water with it for a supplement. Or dig a shallow trench along the edges of the rows and fill it with more alpaca manure. It won't burn the plants, so you can put it on any time during the year. I cannot really guess about micronutrients without a soil test or seeing the growing plants. What did your father use for fertilizer the year of the drought, when the garden performed well?
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February 25, 2013 | #29 |
Tomatovillian™
Join Date: May 2007
Location: NE Ohio
Posts: 610
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this is how we do it in our backyard.
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February 25, 2013 | #30 |
Tomatovillian™
Join Date: Jan 2007
Location: PNW
Posts: 4,743
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Figure that if you have a bulldozer dig out a 2' deep hole covering
the whole garden, and then fill that with topsoil or gardening mix that you truck in, what have you got? A big bathtub full of expensive dirt. With hipped up rows, your plants have some root space that is raised above the average soil level of the area that will retain more air space when it rains.
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