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Originally Posted by chilehed The soil in my region is alkaline sandy loam (pH 7.9-8.1), and the best I've been able to do so far is to amend with a hefty amount of peat and combined with thrice yearly testing and amending with sulfer. This has netted me about pH 6.2-6.4 in the root zone, which is adequate for the plants that are there but the trees and shrubs I want for the new bed like it in the range of 4.5-5.5 and are rather picky about culture. Plus I'd really like to not have to monitor it. |
I live just south (about an hour drive) of the southern terminus (in GA) of the Appalachians. Here, in my part of GA, the soil is heavy with clay and has a pH of around 6.0. Perhaps you should abandon the peat and try to find some GA clay for sale. This can be mixed with some charcoal and a bit of sand/silt to create a beautiful soil mixture. You can then add a bit of sulfur to ammend the soil as needed. Unfortunately, there's no such thing as an automatic garden.
IMHO, this thread seems more appropriate for the "Earth Science" forum, as I believe it would garner more responses there.
It's a great topic though and I always love to learn more about soil chemistry, so I look forward to the responses from other informed people.
