Fix Compacted Soil

Good soil is about 50% air space in addition to nutrient-rich dirt. The air space allows nutrients and water to circulate as well as roots to grow. When soil particles are too close together, compaction occurs. You’ll know your soil is compacted when the soil is hard and dry, causing any plants in it to become discolored due to lack of nutrients. Water will pool since the soil can’t absorb it. Soil compaction is a vexing problem for gardeners, farmers, and landscapers that can last for years, but by breaking up the compacted area and returning air space to it, you can make the soil rich and hospitable for plants again.[1]

Steps

Protecting Compacted Areas

  1. Discover the cause of compaction. Several obvious reasons cause soil compression, such as heavy machinery and foot traffic. Less obvious reasons include over-tilling the soil, leaving the soil bare to the rain, or working with wet soil. Knowing the reason for compaction helps you take precautions to limit it now and avoid it again in the future.[2]
  2. Reroute traffic. Shift livestock, machinery, vehicle, and foot traffic away from the compacted area. Provide alternative routes and block off the area with barriers such as signs and fences. Do this long enough to give the area a rest and consider protecting the area permanently by keeping paths, roads, or stock runs to restrict traffic to one area.[3]
    • Try to designate already degraded soil for paths and household construction to limit the spread of compaction.
  3. Reduce cultivation. If you use the compacted area for farming or gardening, move your plants somewhere else for at least one growing cycle. Instead, try substituting a cover crop at the end of the season, such as winter wheat or ryegrass. The roots break up the soil, and then next season you can mow and turn it in the soil with a spade or tiller to further aerate.[4]
    • A light, non-machine compaction can often be cured by letting the soil freeze and thaw through one growing cycle.

Aerating the Soil

  1. Punch holes with a garden fork. For small, grassy areas, a small metal garden fork or sandals with spikes in the bottoms are enough to poke holes in the soil. Aeration holes let in air, water, and roots. Start on one side of the lawn and push the fork into the ground in one direction every few inches or eight to ten centimeters.[5]
    • You may need to repeat the process in a different direction to achieve aeration.
  2. Dig up compaction. Loosen the compaction by digging up two or three inches of dirt with a shovel. Take a spade and divide the soil into small rows about a foot wide. Dig small trenches behind these rows, then use the rows of soil to replace the dirt removed from the trenches.[6]
    • For poor soil, you may need to dig deeper, about two spade-lengths, to help aerate the top layer and mix it with better soil.
  3. Get a rototiller. Buy or rent a rototiller from a lawn and garden or home improvement store and consider getting an aeration attachment for it. Run the tiller over the soil, then run it over again two or three times, using it to cut deeper.[7]
    • Tillers aren’t as effective on large areas as coring machines since they only break up the top layer of soil.
  4. Remove soil cores. Plug aerators are heavy machines that are useful for large areas of foot traffic such as lawns or fields. Rent the machine from a home and garden store, then set the machine against moist soil. Use it to pull out a core of dirt, then move it two or three inches apart. Repeat throughout the area. Let the removed soil plugs dry before breaking and scattering them.[8]
    • Badly compacted areas require multiple passes of the aerating machine.
    • Mark off any areas where pipes and roots run close to the surface. The aeration plugs should only be a couple of inches deep, but it can still damage these structures.
  5. Replace the soil. This is an intensive solution and is mostly used for small areas to reintroduce grass. Dig up the compacted soil by hand or by machine. You can gather the soil into a planting mound nearby or bury it in good soil. Bring in new topsoil and spread it over the area.
    • Check with your lawn and garden or home improvement store for a soil that has the qualities to nurture plant growth.[9]
    • The larger the plant, the more replacement soil it will need to flourish. Trees and shrubs require 15 inches to three feet of replacement soil.

Preventing Soil Compaction

  1. Let soil dry before use. A particular time of danger is when gardeners go out to plant in the spring. You will be eager to go out and work, but immediately after rain, the soil is too wet. Working with soil when it is too wet causes it to lose structure and collapse in on itself. Instead, wait a day.[10]
    • To test for soil ready to be worked, form a ball of soil in your hand. The soil should break apart when worked and when dropped.
  2. Avoid overworking the soil. Aerating is beneficial for soil, but tilling it too often keeps the soil from settling. Good soil forms small clumps after being tilled once. These clumps are the pockets that give the soil the structure that permits air and water to penetrate it. It can be tempting to till the soil again and again, but this collapses the soil. Till the soil only before planting and during occasional aeration.
  3. Work in organic material. While you aerate the soil, add compost or mulch. Yard waste, wood chips, or even food scraps are a cheap option that can be added to lawns, gardens, and even around trees to refresh the soil. Make compost or buy it at a lawn and garden store. The organics are broken down by organisms such as earthworms that aerate the soil.[11]
    • For badly compacted soil, add a 50% compost blend to regular soil and 25% in sandier soils.[1]
    • Avoid amending soil with inorganic material such as sand if possible. Too little sand worsens the compaction.
  4. Limit traffic pressure. Pressure against the soil is a common way to compress it. Avoid riding lawn mowers and use vehicles with wider tires, adjusted air pressure in tires, and less weight on axles. During construction, limit vehicles to areas where the soil will be covered such as by paths or patios. Also, covering the soil with mulch and ¾-inch thick plywood or synthetic substitutes help reduce the pressure on the soil.[12]

Tips

  • Seek professional advice if you are not certain about how to handle the compaction or if the compaction is too great.

Things You'll Need

  • Material for blocking off compacted areas
  • Spade or tiller
  • Fork or machine aerator
  • Organic compost or fertilizer

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Sources and Citations

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