RED SOILS
Most people think clay is just a soil texture, but clay is also a group of minerals — clay minerals.
Yes, we classify soils by particle size into sand, silt, and clay, but the real behaviour of a clayey soil depends on which clay minerals it contains.
Take black cotton soils (Vertisols), for example. These soils, common in many parts of Kenya, are rich in smectite (montmorillonite) — a clay mineral with a strong negative charge that can hold nutrients like Ca²⁺ and K⁺. Smectites also have wide layers that expand when wet and shrink when dry, which is why these soils crack deeply in the sun.
Different soils may contain different clay minerals — kaolinite, vermiculite, illite, chlorite, and others. Each behaves differently.
So not all “clay soils” are the same.
My particular interest is in Vertisols (Black cotton soils). Yes, they are heavy. Yes, they can be frustrating to work with. And yes — many sites excavate and cart them away. But here’s the truth: these are naturally some of the most fertile soils we have. They are rich in smectites, the most nutrient-holding type of clay minerals.
So instead of spending money to remove them, you can condition them.
When you add organic matter—using organic manure or other organic soil amendments—the soil structure improves, drainage gets better, and you still benefit from all the nutrients the clay minerals hold.
That’s how you begin transforming “difficult” soil into a beautiful, productive garden.
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