Well, dryness is pretty much the only point when we are talking chickens.....
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clay and sand are both used in cob building......the combination of sand and clay will not result in loose clay. it will become more bonding......I have clay soil and the last thing i would add to my garden would be sand
from Wash ST U
"When one mixes a sandy and a clay soil together, the
large pore spaces of the sandy soil are filled with the smaller clay particles. This results in a heavier,
denser soil with less total pore space than either the sandy or the clay soil alone."
http://www.puyallup.wsu.edu/~linda chalker-scott/horticultural myths_files/Myths/Amendments 2.pdf
where do you think the sand is going? mixing with the clay below.....try digging a hole in the run
...
Adding organic material will only make it hold more moisture, and create more odor as it rots
Wow that should result in a nice bed of concrete over time![]()
How would adding Sand to Clay make concrete? Your missing some key ingredients.
Chris
The size of the sand makes a world of a difference, one of the best thing I added to my garden to help break up the clay was coarse (1-2 Millimeter) sand.clay and sand are both used in cob building......the combination of sand and clay will not result in loose clay. it will become more bonding......I have clay soil and the last thing i would add to my garden would be sand
from Wash ST U
"When one mixes a sandy and a clay soil together, the
large pore spaces of the sandy soil are filled with the smaller clay particles. This results in a heavier,
denser soil with less total pore space than either the sandy or the clay soil alone."
http://www.puyallup.wsu.edu/~linda chalker-scott/horticultural myths_files/Myths/Amendments 2.pdf
It doesn't. Mixing fine sand (like play sand) into clay soil makes the substance even more dense and heavy which makes it harder to work with while not improving absorption or stopping puddling. You'll get an even harder crust on top when it's dry because it doesn't do anything for crusting either. Not "concrete" exactly but not fun stuff either. You can mix in larger inorganic particles (construction sand, gravel, etc.) and in large enough quantities, the water will run between those particles allowing some drainage. But what you really need to fix the problem and make a healthy soil is coarse organics. That's not peat moss, it's leaves or wood chips or something similar to create air pockets and give the beneficial microbes an environment where they can thrive. Over time, mixing compost into the clay changes it dramatically to an absorbent, non-crusting, fertile soil.