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Soil Sampling
Where to Sample
To obtain an accurate soil sample, all that is needed for most
gardeners is to divide your landscape into areas of unique use,
i.e., a vegetable garden, lawn, perennial flower bed, etc., and
to sample those unique areas individually. However, occasionally
one of these unique landscape areas will be made up of one or more
distinctly different soils. These soil differences may not be evident
to the untrained eye, but different soils can have different chemical
and physical properties which will result in differences in plant
growth. You will need to take your soil sample in a way that will
take into account the distinctly different soils that may exist
in your landscape.
Think of it this way. When a breeder seeks a pureblooded animal,
two animals of the same breed are mated. If you mix two breeds
you have a mix-blooded animal, one with characteristics of both
breeds. So it is with a sample that contains soil from more than
one soil type. The sample will reflect a mixture of the
characteristics of each soil and therefore not correctly
represent either particular soil. So a soil sample that results
from mixing distinctly different soils may result in fertilizer
and lime recommendations that might be high for one of the soil
types and low for another.
How can you tell if your landscape area has uniform soils?
Here are a few clues. First, you can expect differences in
soils due to vastly different landscape positions, i.e.,
hilltops versus steep slopes versus poorly drained bottom areas
as in the figure below. Sample each area separately.
A second way that different soils may be evident is by
differences in soil color. As in the figure at left, a
predominantly yellow topsoil will likely have different
characteristics than a topsoil that is dark brown in color.
The eroded area will have different characteristics than
either of the other two soils.
Soil texture is a third factor that may indicate differences
in soils. A sandy soil will have different properties than a
loam or a clay soil. For most small landscapes, it will be
unusual to find soils with significantly different soil textures.
However, severely eroded areas and soils disturbed during
building construction are two examples of how human activities
may have left soils with different textures in your landscape.
A fourth factor to consider in your landscape are those areas
which have had different treatments, perhaps by you or a previous
landowner. For example, different treatments exist if your lawn
contains two different turf types such as fescue in the front
yard and bermudagrass in the back yard. Different treatments
exist if you have a portion of a landscaped bed that has
consistently received greater amounts of fertilizer or other
soil amendment than another portion of the bed. Different
treatments will result in different properties that should be
accounted for by sampling the different areas separately.
What's the bottom line? To collect an accurate soil sample that is
representative of your landscape, you must, as much as possible,
sample from areas that are uniform. So look for changes in soil
landscape position, soil color, texture, and treatments to divide
areas into separate samples. If there are no evident differences,
then sample by unique use areas, i.e., lawn, vegetable garden,
orchard, etc.
Where not to Sample
When collecting samples, avoid small areas where the soil
conditions are obviously different from those in the rest of
the landscape. For example, in the lawn pictured at right, your
sample should not include soil from the low, wet spot.
Also, avoid yard or landscape area borders, ditch banks,
old brush piles, burn sites, severely eroded areas, old building
sites, fence rows, pet dropping and urine spots, etc. Since soil
taken from these locations would not be typical of the soil in
the rest of the landscape area, including them could produce
misleading results.
Soil Sampling as a Diagnostic Tool
If one area of your landscape seems healthy and another area
has bare or yellow areas or yields poorly, soil sampling may
help to diagnose the problem. Where poor growth exists and this
area is large enough to manage separately, then separate
composite samples should be taken from both poor and good areas.
By comparing the results, the soil test may point out troubles
that exist due to a lack of, or an excess of, nutrients and/or
an incorrect pH. However, it should be pointed out that other
factors may have a greater influence on plant growth that will
not be accounted for by a soil test. These include soil drainage,
soil compaction, insects, diseases, rainfall, and other factors.
Before we proceed let's check what you have learned about where to soil sample!
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In the picture to the left, how many soil
samples would you need to collect for the entire landscape? Assume that the
soil behind the house (the dotted line) is a loam and in front of the house
it is a clay.
Four
samples
Two
samples
Six
samples
Five
samples
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