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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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Old March 24, 2014   #1
Vespertino
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Default Green Clay Soil?

I just discovered that I have clay soil- but it's GREEN. I've got about 4 inches of nice, dark, loamy soil but south of that it's sticky and green.

I'm not finding much info on green clay soils, anyone have any knowledge on it? I would have expected red or beige clay. Hrm.

I know the usual advice is to do a raised bed, but this particular area where I'm growing tomatoes is against the home foundation so I'm going to avoid that. I found a decent amount of worms as I dug through it, so at least there's living things in it.

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Old March 25, 2014   #2
Redbaron
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There are many clays that are green, but it could be a glauconite clay, nontronite clay or a montmorillonite clay? Maybe get it tested?
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Old March 25, 2014   #3
JamesL
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It's not glowing is it?
The only thing I know about green clay is that they package the French version and sell it at a huge premium for facial use.
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Old March 25, 2014   #4
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Redbaron- oh if it were gluconite that would be awesome (greensand for free!). I noticed Tx A&M will do soil testing, I may end a sample over.

James- I think I have some in my cosmetics
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Old March 25, 2014   #5
Tracydr
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Definitely get it tested.
There aren't many soil types that aren't fixable with compost. Manures,straw, leaves and food scraps can do wonders, IMO.
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Old March 29, 2014   #6
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I did a home test, mainly because a thorough set of soil tests at A&M would be around $80 and I decided I'd rather use it towards gardening (herbs, pots, tools, drip irrigation, etc).

I dug deep an pulled out a clean chunk of clay, dried it, grated it into a powder and tested ph, nitrogen, phosphorous and potassium. Ph was just slightly alkaline, nitrogen poor (I expected that), phosphorous poor, but potassium was very high.

Before I amend it with anything I'll be testing the topsoil. But if the topsoil is also alkaline I'll water down a little vinegar and hand water to get the ph down a teeny bit.
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Old March 29, 2014   #7
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Vespertino View Post
I did a home test, mainly because a thorough set of soil tests at A&M would be around $80 and I decided I'd rather use it towards gardening (herbs, pots, tools, drip irrigation, etc).

I dug deep an pulled out a clean chunk of clay, dried it, grated it into a powder and tested ph, nitrogen, phosphorous and potassium. Ph was just slightly alkaline, nitrogen poor (I expected that), phosphorous poor, but potassium was very high.

Before I amend it with anything I'll be testing the topsoil. But if the topsoil is also alkaline I'll water down a little vinegar and hand water to get the ph down a teeny bit.
Since you are doing it yourself, try this website to find out what you have. Soil Survey
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Old March 29, 2014   #8
Vespertino
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Thanks for the link, the survey app is giving me an error, but I think I have crosstail fine sandy loam.
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