frontiergirl53
Garden Ornament
So I am working on soil pH levels, and getting the soil just right, and I have too much clay in the soil! Is there other alternatives to putting sand in the soil? Our Lowes doesn't carry sand.
A truckbed load of composted goat manure was also really good for loosening up the clay. Where I've added those the soil is black, and crumbly, has really good water drainage and doesn't compact when you walk on it. Sometimes nasty weed seeds come in with manure like that, so you want to be sure to stay on top of removing them until they eventually piddle out.
If you are talking about pH tests, yes. My pH is around 5.5There are several kinds of sand.
As unusual as it seems to those of us who "garden in gravel," coarse sand can be a useful addition to some soils. I could leave my gravel behind and be in soil suitable for bricks in a few miles ... where I would likely struggle to make improvements. I'd need to be sure that it wasn't fine sand like what is used in masonry.
Sand, perlite, vermiculite, or organic material - the idea would be to loosen the soil. If your part of the world gets a lot of summer rain, you might do well with sand. That summer rain is also unusual around here.
Something we've got ... is gypsum. If your soil has a high pH, it would be a better choice than limestone as a soil additive for calcium deficiency. Gypsum also improves clay.
@MontyJ would be a good one to tell us about how to deal with mineral deficit soil but I know little about it. Have you had soil tests, @frontiergirl53 ?
Steve