Bought a couple hundred rounds of .45. Also got a little more water.
Also, getting ready to start gardening. Studying up on this a bit, since I have no idea what Im doing.
Bought a couple hundred rounds of .45. Also got a little more water.
Also, getting ready to start gardening. Studying up on this a bit, since I have no idea what Im doing.
My dad always had a load of sand dumped onto the garden plot before the first tilling.....we had yellow clay ....also , planting buckwheat will break up clay....just cut it before the seeds mature and till them in...or harvest them when they're mostly black..One solid recommendation is to improve your soil with organic matter. From experience I can say that Indiana clay actually isn't that bad for quite a few plants (though it's rough on some of the root veggies like radishes or potatoes), but you really want to work in some good manure/compost over time in order to break it down into a lovely loam. If nothing else, it's much easier to water during the summer once you've got the soil past the point where it hardens into an anti-rain shield and just lets the hose water run off...