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- Newsgroups: rec.gardens
- Path: sparky!uunet!UB.com!quack!pharvey
- From: pharvey@quack.sac.ca.us (Paul Harvey)
- Subject: Re: Preparing Clay Soil for Planting
- Message-ID: <fXsfkKy@quack.sac.ca.us>
- Organization: The Duck Pond public unix: +1 408 249 9630, log in as 'guest'.
- References: <1992Dec29.184101.19659@gvl.unisys.com>
- Date: 3 Jan 1993 05:29:37 UTC
- Lines: 60
-
- In article <1992Dec29.184101.19659@gvl.unisys.com>
- garyp@rmtc.paramax.com (Gary Palangian [RMTC/ISP]) writes:
- >Hey Now Everybody,
- > Construction on my new house will be complete in a couple of
- >months. My family has all kinds of grandiose plans for the
- >backyard landscape. The house is in the Denver, CO area and
- >the soils are very heavy (a lot of clay). To make matters
- >worse, the builder removed and discarded the top
- >18" of soil during construction.
- >I want to plant bare root trees in the Fall of '93. I want to
- >do flowers and shrubs and vegetables and stuff in
- >Spring of '94. I have read a lot of books that talk
- >about amending the soil with peat or manure. They say
- >to add in up to 50% of organic material and till it
- >under anywhere from 6" to 24". These books also make
- >it sound like you do this in a weekend.
-
- Yeah, right. A clay soil is miserable, there is *no* miracle cure. First
- off, are you sure you have clay? And what's below the surface clay? Dig
- a deep pit, say to six feet and look for a change in soil type or
- bedrock, or go to your local library and ask for local soil surveys.
-
- Ammendments for clay soils? Not peat! Peat is water and nutrient
- retentive like clay. What you need is better drainage. Peat is the
- prefered ammendment for sandy soils, it is largely a waste in clay
- soils. And 6 to 24 inches? You'll need about 4 feet for vegetables,
- deeper for trees. Raised beds are the way to go for vegetables. For
- trees, you will have to provide drainage. To see if you have a drainage
- problem, dig a hole the size of the tree you will be transplanting, roughly
- twice the size of the roots or rootball. Fill with water and let drain
- completely, then fill again. If the second fill does not drain
- completely within 24 hours, you have a drainage problem that will kill
- most trees from a lack of oxygen at the roots. The problem is solved by
- planting above ground level with garden loam soil or by draining with
- drainpipe to a lower sight. In my experience, the best ammendment for
- clay soils is ground fir bark mulch or rice hulls up to 50% to a depth of
- at least 4 feet. Compost is also commonly used, but is not as stable as
- ground fir bark mulch or rice hulls and must be added on a continuing
- basis and compost levels beyond 20% will most likely result in bug
- problems.
-
- Another problem on clay soils in arid (less than 20" annual rainfall)
- areas is salt buildup in the soil. There is a miracle cure for low
- levels of salt buildup: gypsum. If you fail the perc (perculation) test
- above the first time, try scratching gypsum into the soil in the hole
- after the water drains and fill again and see if the drainage is
- improved. If it is, then your soil will respond to gypsum. Gypsum is also
- the neutral source of sulfur and calcium. For acid soils, add lime for
- most plants. For alkaline soils, add sulfur for most plants.
-
- Never work clay soils when soaking wet. Working dry clay soils requires
- a jackhammer and produces a lot of dust. In many areas, farmers are
- delayed in spring because they have to wait for the soil to dry, not
- because of frost. And smart farmers are on loamy soils, the situation is
- far worse on clay. Working a clay soil, or any non-sandy soil, when too
- wet destroys the structure that holds air in the soil and produces poor
- quality bricks and dead plants.
-
- Or, discover the plants that were native to your site and re-establish
- them. Your library most likely will have info on native plants.
-