One of the biggest mistakes gardeners make is trying to "work" (till up, cultivate or hoe) their high clay content garden soil before it is dry enough. When you do this, the soil structure is broken down and you end up with rock-hard crusts or clumps when the soil dries.
After tilling and raking the soil smooth, this is what your soil may look like a week or two later. This can happen even if you have tilled in a lot of compost or organic matter.
If you turn over your beds with a shovel and let it sit and dry out, it will look more like this:
You will have very hard and crusty lumps of clay on top of the ground, instead of the loose crumbly structure you were expecting. The reason this happens has something to do with breaking down some of the original structure and exposing the clay to fast drying conditions.
Many gardeners have experienced the disappointment of having their soil look worse after turning it over than it did beforehand. It happens all over the country on all types of clay soils. But, I believe that
Northern gardeners, who need to wait all winter and much of the spring for
their cold and wet soils to dry out, are probably more guilty of "premature cultivation" than
their southern counterparts. I admit, there were many springs where I jumped the
gun.
So, how do you tell when your soil is ready to be worked? It's simple. Take a handful of soil and squeeze it in your hands into a ball. Then try to break it apart between your fingers, and see if it separates easily. I like to compare it to the feel of a handful of moist raisins that will clump together when squeezed, but will break apart with a quick rub of the fingers. If your soil stays rubbery and doesn't crumble, it is still too wet to work.
Eventually your clay soil will dry out deep enough to work. It may be very late into the spring before that occurs. However,since the top inch or two of soil will warm up and dry out faster than the deeper areas, you can usually do some seeding or shallow planting a few weeks earlier. If you do plan to till, make sure the soil has dried all the way down to the depth that you plan to dig down to.
Salvaging a bad situation. Sometimes, for whatever reason, you just can't wait long enough for all or part of the garden to dry out before cultivating it. If you do till or dig up a wet soil, there is one thing you can do that will probably prevent the hard crusting on top: After cultivating, smooth out the soil and cover it with a layer of mulch about 1/2 -1 inch thick or more. Use anything that will keep the clay from drying too fast on top. Shredded bark, leaves, straw, pine needles, compost or even peat moss will do.
Improving Clay Soils. When you have improved your clay soil it will drain faster and will warm up earlier in the spring. That means it will be workable earlier in the year. There are many things you can do to improve clay soils, including raising the beds (to allow for better drainage) and, especially, adding lots of organic matter. Organic matter is critical. Without it, there is no humus. By adding organic matter and improving aeration as well, you will create an environment that allows beneficial soil life to start working to restructure the soil and form valuable humus.
Clay soil is a big problem all over the country and handling clay is one of the reasons we started our Web Store. Customers from every corner of the US and Canada can improve clay and compacted soil with our Aerify PLUS and other soil conditioning products. These are real difference makers that help make everything else you are doing for the soil work a lot better. Soil improvement is my favorite topic because whether it is a lawn or a garden, it all begins with the soil.
Stuart Franklin is President of Nature’s Lawn & Garden, Inc. (http://www.natureslawn.com) a lawn fertilizing company and on line Web Store , located in the Buffalo, NY area. He is also the author of Building A Healthy Lawn: A Safe and Natural Approach (Storey Publications 1988), available through Amazon.com
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