When my sons were younger, the youngest birthday in April always had a delivery of a couple of tons of sand. The lad loved it, had a great time playing with it, and slowly through the year I shifted it around the garden and each April he got a new load to play in. He's too old for a couple of tons of sand now though…..wonder if I can persuade him the forking and brushing it into the lawns might be fun ?
I know how much sand I bought over the years, and honestly, you'd never know with the clay soil We get masses of leaf litter every year dropped from the woodlands too, and it's still clay soil.
The Beechgrove Garden (popular tv gardening programme) once got a tipper lorry load of clay from near here to work with. They were going to show what should be done with it…….we saw the lorry load of Lanarkshire blue clay deposited on their site…..and then nothing else was ever shown. Too much work we reckoned.
It's good, fertile soil, if you can open it up.
You're right about the small stones Robson Valley. One of the reasons for adding crushed shell, crock or fine gravel to potting clay was that the 'roughage' stopped the clay splitting. Cracks form but ease around the debris instead of spreading right through/across. Same with the garden; add in organics or small gravel and sand and it allows water in and through, and roots too. It allows organic debris to be thoroughly incorporated into the soil and encourages the formation of healthy biodiversity.
It's more that any pressure on wet clay just compacts it all again, and the no dig method has a potential benefit there.
M
I know how much sand I bought over the years, and honestly, you'd never know with the clay soil We get masses of leaf litter every year dropped from the woodlands too, and it's still clay soil.
The Beechgrove Garden (popular tv gardening programme) once got a tipper lorry load of clay from near here to work with. They were going to show what should be done with it…….we saw the lorry load of Lanarkshire blue clay deposited on their site…..and then nothing else was ever shown. Too much work we reckoned.
It's good, fertile soil, if you can open it up.
You're right about the small stones Robson Valley. One of the reasons for adding crushed shell, crock or fine gravel to potting clay was that the 'roughage' stopped the clay splitting. Cracks form but ease around the debris instead of spreading right through/across. Same with the garden; add in organics or small gravel and sand and it allows water in and through, and roots too. It allows organic debris to be thoroughly incorporated into the soil and encourages the formation of healthy biodiversity.
It's more that any pressure on wet clay just compacts it all again, and the no dig method has a potential benefit there.
M