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That's pretty neat and good to know but is it the norm? Alluvial soils aren't found in too many urban environments. Were these roots on the edge of a bank where they could get some air, or were they buried down in an environment that normally would be choked of oxygen? Was it a mass containing hairy roots or just one or two transporters?I have observed roots of oak trees as deep as 25 to 30 feet in river bottom aluvial soil. They were transport roots about 1.5" in diameter.
And the reason why soils settle in a certain manner is because that is what they do. You go breaking up the layers way down deep and yep, roots will grow down there. Yay!
Then they're gonna settle again and rob those roots of oxygen. And we're back where we started. The only dirt that's going to stay as viable, root-surviving soil space is the upper layers.
Anyone who is TRAQualified must be able to determine what the needs of the plant you are trying to assist are. How else can you consider mitigation options, and deliver a credible assessment?
and yes of course high-salt ferts are to be avoided in most cases, and/or buffered by OM. Soil work 101.
??How does one 'observe many times' this theoretical subterranean compaction in the contiguous spaces outside the void? Do you take a bite of the blue mushroom and shrink down like Alice into that Wonderland?
O and forcing compost and aggregate into the holes would tend to scarify the interfaces.
Using a soil probe can tell you exactly where those fibrous roots are, and where they can be. This is soil work 101, not the Great Unknown. Why go out of your way to speculate and criticize what you have no experience with? Kinda like me going on the Climbing forum and speculating about imaginary faults in ascenders.![]()