flowerbug
Garden Master
Technically, it's all soil. Not necessarily healthy soil, but soil indeed. If you can make it work for you I tip my hat .I desperately need pointers on clay. What are you able to get to thrive in that environment? My mama has a yard full of it. What's idiot dirt?
we have mostly clay here and a little sand.
pretty much you just have to keep off it until it dries well enough. add whatever you can for organic materials on top and let the worms do as much work for you as they can. i don't till or dig much in each garden (perhaps 5-10% of a garden gets disturbed each season as i bury garden debris and organic materials for the worms to work on and also to give me a bit more elevation in case of flash flooding).
i always have an extra pair of shoes for when i work in some of the gardens because of the way it sticks to them, but i just change the shoes when i have to come in so i don't track the dirt around.
for a yard/lawn of clay the problem is often that the lawn is clipped too short and the organic matter is raked or runs off because of a slope so the worms have no food. as an experiement out back i leveled an area and planted it with alfalfa and birdsfoot trefoil and let that grow for some years. i cut it back once in a while and let the worms chomp away on it. that is now some of the nicest topsoil i have. it still has a lot of clay of course, but it is much darker and there is plenty of bugs and worms in there. when i first leveled it it was hard packed, all water would run off and take all the organic matter that would grow and very few worms. i'm hoping i can get it planted with beans this year in parts because i will alternate rows with cover crops so the soil is not left completely bare...
with the negatives people have with clay there are some positives. it is very fertile soil and holds water and nutrients. we know people who have a lot more sand in their gardens and some years they give up on some plantings because they can't keep them watered while we do ok with ours and almost always get decent crops. you just may need to raise up or perch some plantings so they don't get too wet too often (depending upon your local climate/rains).
i always recommend people with primarily sand to add a little clay to their gardens to help with nutrient and water retention. it doesn't take much to make a lot of difference. and as i said above, organic materials help a lot too...