15
wat do
(hexbear.net)
<<<<<<< / c / g a r d e n i n g >>>>>>>
read braiding sweetgrass, lib
_ ___
_(_)_ .-' '-.
(_)@(_) / \ ,,, _
(_),,, \^^^^|^^^^/ {{{}}_(_)_
|{{{}} \ | /, ~Y~(_)@(_)
| ~Y~(@)\ | /{}} \|/ (_)
(\|/)| \Y/ \ | / ~Y~ \|/ (\|/)
\|/\|/\|/ \|/ \|/\\|//\\|//
^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
Let it grow ^.^
__
.-/ \-. If I had a flower
( \__/ ) for each time
/`-./;;\.-`\ I thought
\ _.\;;/._ /
( / \ ) of communism
'-\__/-'.-,
, \\ (-. ) my garden
|\_ ||/.-`would be full
\'.\_ |;`
'--,\|| ,
`;| _/|
// _/.'/
//_/,--'
||'-`
-^-^-^-^-^-^-^-^
Sounds like it's really heavy clay.
If you aren't planning on building a cob structure with it then I would follow the basic steps for gypsum amendment first because, although there are a lot of other good ideas in the comments here, if your soil is akin to a block of pottery clay then it's still going to be really dense and difficult to manage until you can outweigh the clay with compost and manure, which might well require a huge amount of compost and a huge amount of effort to work it in.
Gypsum will make the soil more friable and better at drainage. That's going to make life easier for when you want to work other amendments into the soil later on.