elf1 > So--back to the soil. In fact the clay soil has many many useful nutrients that go beyond what the bizarre dogs absorb when they bizarrely snack on some. It just needs organic matter added to release the nutrioids from their cruel imprisonment.
elf1 > Fortunately, a clever photographer can get dog stuff out of some photos by actually (gasp) walking over and moving the weave poles and/or changing the angle of the photo. Then it looks like gardening in a normal yard, not like some sort of off-course trap in an agility course.
elf1 > The first step is to break up the big dirty filthy spots with a spading fork. The clay soil is lovely. If it's dry, it breaks into huge pieces that won't break apart because they are like bricks. Hitting them with, say, a brick, is likely to break the brick. If it is too wet, it won't break apart beause it is, duh, clay. Plus trying to take a photo has dog stuff in it (e.g., weaving poles, jump bars).
So--back to the soil. In fact the clay soil has many many useful nutrients that go beyond what the bizarre dogs absorb when they bizarrely snack on some. It just needs organic matter added to release the nutrioids from their cruel imprisonment.
elf1 > So--back to the soil. In fact the clay soil has many many useful nutrients that go beyond what the bizarre dogs absorb when they bizarrely snack on some. It just needs organic matter added to release the nutrioids from their cruel imprisonment.
So--back to the soil. In fact the clay soil has many many useful nutrients that go beyond what the bizarre dogs absorb when they bizarrely snack on some. It just needs organic matter added to release the nutrioids from their cruel imprisonment.
See photo in gallery

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