When you Grab a handful of soil in your garden, I bet that you are thinking, "this is ordinary, unexciting earth". Yet it is one of nature's miracles, and one of her most complex products. Your success as a gardener will for the most part depend on its condition, so take the first bold step in gardening.... get to understand your soil.
All soils are composed of four basic components, they are:
Water - Water is important for the support of both plant and soil life - it is also the carrier of nutrients. Water is absorbed into humus and absorbed on to the surface of particles. Water adheres tightly to clay, restricting both drainage and uptake by the roots.
Air - Air is important for the support of plant life and desirable for soil life - it is also necessary for the breakdown of organic matter to release nutrients. Movement of air is necessary for avoiding the build up of toxic gases. This movement takes place throughout the soil pores.
Mineral particles - The non-living skeleton of your soil is derived from the decomposition of rocks by weathering. The parent rock usually (but not at all times) lies under the soil and both the fertility and size of the particles are governed by the kind of parent rock.
Organic matter - Fertile soils contain at least 5 per cent organic matter. This is found present as a mixture of living, dead and decomposed organisms, both animal and vegetable. True humus is the dark jelly-like substance which binds mineral particles into crumbs.
The physical condition of the resulting blend that we all know as soil is described as its texture or structure, but these two terms donot mean the same thing.
Soil texture: refers to the proportions of the different sized mineral particles which are there. When course particles predominate, the soil is described as light. When the particles are minute, the soil is called heavy. The ideal soil lies between these two extremes. The course and minute particles need to be evenly balanced to provide the medium-texture soil often called loam. Soil scientists have recognised seventeen or more kinds of mineral soil texture, but for the average gardener there are just 8 basic types, these can be put in to 3 groups. Light soil, medium soil and heavy soil.
Soil structure; refers to the way the mineral particles are joined collectively, they may be grouped as clods, plates or crumbs. A crumb structure is ideal - it is what we call 'friable soil' with a 'good tilth'.
Your soil may be nothing like a crumbly loam. It may be a back-breaking clay or it could be sandy stuff which always needs feeding and watering. Do not despair, it is quite simple to change the structure of any soil. Organic matter will cement sand grains into crumbs. Digging, liming and organic matter achieve the same effect on clay particles.
The improvement can be spectacular, but you cannot change the basic texture unless you add vast quantities of the deficient mineral particle. So your soil will remain basically clayey, sandy etc., this means that you should, where possible, choose plants that the catalogues recommend for a particular soil type.
Author Resource:
A fantastic quantity of my time is spent in my garden, but as I am getting older things are becoming harder to do. I have decided to make use of a company called Contractor . So far they have given me all the help and advice that I have asked for. I still do a bit of pottering around my own garden when I can.