Right, except the part where roots can't thrive in it. I love having it under there so that roots can always get down to it, but not trying to grow a pepper plant in solid clay.
I'm both a hermit, and rural - so if I want something there's a good chance even the local walmart won't have it. Or if they do there's no selection. So if I want something I hit the internet. I'll find what I want on amazon, but then look at who makes the best whatever and see if they have a better deal or promo code on their site. Most of the time the shipping cost direct from that company will eat up any savings you might get from a promo code. Since prime covers that shipping so it usually wins out - but I'll buy the name brand if they have a storefront. Like, Build-a-soil has stuff on amazon. Their products direct are cheap, but only if they have the "free shipping" tag. If not their shipping is outrageous.
Anywayyyy, I use the hell out of shredded cardboard. I can lift up a mat of half-decomposed cardboard just off my back porch and see red wigglers, fat earthworms, and fungal hyphae that look like plant roots. Lots of granit boulders and quartz rocks. My soil is legitimately awesome, and now that I know the living soil stuff it's getting better. All that dirt that went through the fence onto the sidewalk is worm castings. There's a century of old-growth hardwood mulch and soil, what hasn't washed downhill over the years. It's very rocky/rooty soil, but the dead tree in the background used to be growing where the bare spot is. There's a 10' diameter oak trunk under the flat-ish all-leaf area lower right that was ground flat. So there is about a 20x30 area that's not gonna get any bigger. What I have learned is that I have all the minerals I need if I can get the biology going to release it. So building up a terrace is really my only option. Got rain for a few days so I am stuck inside.
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