27/03/2026
Wrong soil, wasted seeds. Every soil type has crops that thrive in it and crops that fail in it. Match them and everything gets easier.
Grab a handful from your garden and squeeze it. What you feel tells you what to plant.
π± Six soil types and what grows in each:
- Sandy soil β pale, gritty, runs through your fingers. Drains fast and warms up early in spring. Carrots grow straight, radishes size up quickly, potatoes stay disease-free, lavender and rosemary love the drainage. But lettuce, cabbage, and celery dry out before they can size up. If you're fighting to keep leafy greens alive in sand, the soil is the problem
- Clay soil β heavy, sticky, clumps into a ball. Holds moisture and nutrients longer than any other type, which is exactly what heavy feeders need. Cabbage, broccoli, beans, and squash thrive. But carrots fork when they hit resistance and Mediterranean herbs rot in the slow drainage. If your rosemary keeps dying, test your soil before blaming yourself
- Loam β dark, crumbly, holds shape but breaks apart easily. Balanced drainage, balanced nutrients, balanced moisture. Tomatoes, peppers, cucumbers, roses β almost everything performs in loam. The only soil type where plant anything is close to true
- Chalky soil β pale with white calcium fragments. Naturally alkaline, which locks out iron and makes acid-loving plants yellow and stunted. Blueberries, azaleas, and rhododendrons struggle here. But lavender, lilac, clematis, spinach, and beets handle alkalinity well
- Peaty soil β dark, fibrous, spongy. Holds enormous amounts of water and runs naturally acidic. Blueberries and azaleas thrive without any amendment. Potatoes and celery love the moisture. But anything that needs sharp drainage drowns in it
- Silty soil β smooth, fine-grained, almost silky between your fingers. Nutrient-rich and moisture-retentive. Most vegetables and fruit trees perform well. The one risk is compaction β silt particles pack tight when wet. Add compost annually and avoid walking on the bed after rain
π± The quick test:
- Squeeze a damp handful. If it runs through your fingers β sandy. If it forms a tight sticky ball β clay. If it holds shape but crumbles when you poke it β loam
- Pale soil with white fragments that fizz when you add vinegar β chalky
- Dark spongy soil that squeezes water out like a sponge β peaty
- Smooth and silky with no grit β silty
- Once you know what you have, plant what matches it instead of fighting what doesn't. The crops that suit your soil outperform anything you force into the wrong type
That handful tells you what to plant and what to stop wasting money on πΏ