posted 10 years ago
hau. elle, biochar will tend towards the acidity/alkalinity of the wood type(s) used to make it. Hardwoods tend towards alkaline, that's why hardwood ashes are leached to make lye. Conifer woods and particularly pine, when turned into biochar will show the acidic tendencies of these woods. It is possible to create a near perfect biochar for almost any soil type/pH by using combinations. Biochar also benefits from being mixed with other amendments. In the situation of a soil pH of 9, clay loam soil, it would be possible to design a biochar blend consisting of pine biochar and the ashes created during the burn (would lower the pH towards the magic 6.5 number) along with what ever other amendments needed to balance the soils nutrient levels to what the plants need.
In the case of not having the benefit of a USDA National soil analysis (I got very lucky, my land is some that was included in one of those survey analysis) a comprehensive soil sampling sent to an extension service with a request for a complete soil analysis will give a person most all the information needed to properly amend their soil in a block by block set of amendments. One of the ways a lot of gardeners and farmers mess up is that they don't do a comprehensive set of samples, I lay out a grid on the area I am wanting an analysis of and draw a map of that grid. Then I label each square, take five samples from each square and jar them up with proper labeling so when the results come back I know exactly the hunk of dirt the numbers apply to. This way, you can actually get all your garden amended so it comes out in the end more homogeneous and so more productive.
Yes it will be more expensive than taking a bunch of samples then blending them into one overall sample but it also more beneficial to your soil in the garden since you are actually able to "spot amend" and so bring it all closer to proper balance.