GirlWhoWantsTractor
Platinum Member
- Joined
- Apr 25, 2015
- Messages
- 948
- Location
- The Mountains of Virginia
- Tractor
- 2018 Mahindra 26XL HST, Husqv GT48XLsi & YTH48LS
I don't know what you'd call what we have here. It looks like potter's clay... a light tan color, with a slight red hue. It's not clay (I'm sure it has a little in it... but it doesn't behave like clay). It never gets that sticky stage when wet. I goes straight from hard as a brick, to a soupy mess. I don't know how my wife grew enough grass for a lawn, it's so hard.
When they did the grade work for her house (long before I was around), they didn't bother to separate and recover the top soil.
Anywho... you're right, "GirlWhoWantsATractor"... my L-series won't touch it. Just grading the driveway with the 4-way belly blade took hours. I'll give a box blade a go. I'd love to find a good used Harley rake. Problem is, they cost about $6k new... and I've never seen a serviceable used unit for less than $4,500.
Dude, I have the same kind of dirt; unimproved, it's a clay pot. How to tell if you have clay soil: when it's moist squeeze some in your hand; if it holds its shape it's clay soil.
To work it, the moisture level is key. It has to be just moist enough to work; not too wet, but not too dry. Too dry it's like concrete. Too wet you can't even walk on it without slipping. I have VERY FEW days when the soil is workable. Yep, potter's clay is about right. Actually grass doesn't mind it (this dirt is quite mineral-rich, just lacking in organic material) and once you get something growing on top, it's amazing how the soil improves. You might have a lot of sand in yours. You're technically in "ridge and valley" whereas I'm in "southern blue ridge" and there are some differences geologically. You guys have way more trilobites, for one thing.