How To Identify Clay in Nature
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- čas přidán 8. 06. 2024
- This video will help you to locate clay in nature. I go out into the desert of Arizona, show you what clay looks like in its natural form and talk about what clues indicate that clay might be present. Learn to find and process your own clay from nature!
Learn about the different types of wild clay in this video - • 4 Types of Wild Clay Y...
Learn how to process clay into a usable material with this video - • Best Way to Process Cl...
Learn all about how to find and process clay in my online masterclass here - ancientpottery.how/courses/na...
📖 CHAPTERS:
0:00 Looking for clay in nature
0:40 Horizontal layers
1:31 Crackled texture
2:24 The texture of dry clay
3:27 Tracks in a dirt road
5:00 The texture of damp clay
6:28 Field testing wild clay
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Andy Ward PO Box 43601 Tucson, AZ 85733
#wildclay #clay #primitiveskills - Jak na to + styl
The one guy that didn't like this video probably found a bunch of potters, digging for clay in his front yard, the day after this was released. 😆
LOL, truth
2 buys at this time. They both meet your criterion. LOL
😂😂😂
Wish the dislike button was back. These jokes are no longer available to be made based on dislikes.
Lmao 😂😂😂😂😂
What a super cool guy, simply teaching the world about self sufficiency and craftsmanship.
Cheers to you bud 🤎
Thank you kindly
@@AncientPotteryNorth West Tennessee, USA
Red Clay is underfoot everywhere.
Ya have to rinse 8t several times to get the Premium out of it, but there's also more premium locals, down by the M River.
M = the Mississippi
Come and take All You want.
😘
You sent him a clay heart! How adorable
I went out clay hunting today. The creek I had my eye on was virtually inaccessible due to thick brush. Then I spotted a nearby irrigation ditch, bone dry...and it looked like the earth that the ditch-digger tossed up to the sides was clay. The bottom also looked like clay but was a little questionable in color. It was hard, but looked like the cracked clay; some was in odd shapes it had taken and dried. I gathered some and came home...felt good in the water. I've strained it (it had seashells in it because we live IN a prehistoric lake bed) and pillow-cased it and it's hanging. If it's clay, I've found a gold mine! lol
Sounds great, I hope it works out for you. Watch those seashells, if you get too hot in your firing they can turn into quick lime and cause spalls in your pottery.
..how did you get on?
Was it pay dirt?!
@@darz_k. no. Lol It's extremely short, and when wet, the moisture seems to want to settle to the bottom rather than being uniform moistness throughout. I managed to work some lopsided pieces and they're okay.
I had better luck at construction sites. Lol
Takeaway: lacustrine clay is weird.
Ooo there's a place i know, a narrow concreted path that runs alongside a stream which leads to a river and it's always deep in sludge / silt but it dries with cracks like that river bed 🤔 hmmmm I'm super curious if it's very clay now, oooooo!
Am I the only one that wants to hang out and run around the desert with this guy 😆 🤣 😂 Absolutely awesome 👌 👏 👍
Thank you so much for addressing the signs of natural clay in a DRY environment. So many videos feature people reaching into a stream bed, grabbing a handful of clay and showing how to do a coil test. Some of us don't have a lot of water nearby!
No kidding. I live in Arizona and clay is almost never naturally wet here.
I'm looking for video that show where to find clay in wet climate...
Yes, it seems to be more complicated in a wet climate. Nearly everything sticks together here.
I'm taking a ceramics class at my school, and I decided to look up some pottery CZcamsrs. I'm afraid I've become addicted to your channel... lol! Keep up the great work!
Awesome, thanks for watching.
There are worse things to be addicted to! 😂
I adore his channel also, just discovered it last night. 😊
WHAT IS THAT PROFILE, EXPLAIN DEMON!!!!
@@jennibeck1 😈
There’s this creek by my house that has veins of PURE gray clay! It even comes with a bit of sand mixed in!
Great video. You may also find gray clay on the sides of the rivers and streams. Clay sticks to your tools and is hard to wash off. Here you must be careful because darker, black colored sticky soil may be silver bearing soil, not a clay. Either way you win.
Not much of that around here in the desert, but no doubt a great tip for people with good rivers and streams.
A bit of silver in your pottery doesn't sound that bad.
how do you identify silver bearing soil?
Wow! New subscriber here! I use to play with Alabama "mud". I told my mom it was fun because it was like Play Doh. I was about 12 or 13. She told me it was just mud. But I think it must have been clay. I'm 65. I am going to see if I can find some clay. Thank you so much for this video! ❤️ ❤️ ❤️
@@babystepsgarden6162 the red stuff? Yeah, that's just red clay, man. I live in southeast alabama, the dirt roads are made out of it.
We fossil hunt at Wilson's Claypit in Grosvenor, TX. The clay is purple and green. Shades from lilac to aubergine and light sage to teal. As you drive to it you can see the purple and green hills of mined materials.
I gotta place to visit now!
I am from (and still live) in New Mexico. I guess I’ve been looking at clay my whole life. It all looks so similar and very familiar to me now after seeing this. Can’t wait to get out and find me some. Thank you!
There is a lot of great clay in New Mexico, have fun!
I love your channel so much
I enjoy creating art with clay so much
for so long i was convinced that BUYING clay was the only way
(and being honest i don't always have the possibility 💸)
you opened my eyes!
Not only that, but the idea of doing a little adventuring to find my own clay is amazing✨
Edit:
I live in the Patagonia, and for a long time in ancient B.C. times a large portion of the land was completely under water
I was living surrounded by clay!
That's great, I am glad I could inspire you to try wild clay.
Patagonia Argentina or US?
this video and channel is a such a blessing, clay is truly an incredible technology from nature
yes it is, thanks
Hi, I live in Oregon.
We had one of the wettest springs on record. It rained the first 3 weeks of June 2022, almost every day. The last two years were like living in California, much warmer & dryer than normal. Even got evacuated for fires in 2020.
I love putting in a vegetable garden and it was just too wet to plant my tomatoes & zucchini in my garden, except for a couple raised beds.
It was 92° yesterday. I was out trying to amend my soil in the garden so I could plant some of my tomato plants. On average I would get my garden tilled by Mothers Day. I was wanting to go no till this year. All this additional rain has made gardening nearly impossible.
As I was digging yesterday preparing soil to plant 2.5 foot tall tomato plants the soil was still hard & wet as it only stopped raining about 4 days ago. When I cut in with my shovel, it reminded me of clay in my pottery class my Senior year of high school, several decades ago.
I thought, add water to mix in this compost because
It's so hot now the tomatoes need to keep hydrated or they might die in this heat.
What a mess! Bad idea. We will see how hard it is today. Last year I had an area of my garden I didn't plant so I tilled in wood shavings as an experiment thinking after a year it would break down and loosen the clay soil, No sign of it, it disapeared.
I add compost and composted steer & chicken manure to the holes I dig for tomatoes every year. This year the clay is so expanded from months of rain I've decided I need to start extracting some of the clay every year and making things out of it. I have lots of buckets now.
It's going to be 98°+ today. So I don't know if I will get much done, but your video has given me a whole new perspective on my clay dilemma.
If life gives you lemons you need to learn how to make lemonade right?
Who knows I may have some fantastic clay here, I know I sure have a lot of it. My garden has almost no rocks, I removed the few it had over the last 20 years.
Pottery was my favorite class in high school. The only class I got A+ all year.
Happy Summer everyone!
I'm a new subscriber, Thank you for your videos!
Yes, clay can be a blessing to a potter and a curse to a gardener, I have personally been on both side so that. I hope your clay turns out to have good working properties.
you are my favorite youtube channel hands down! your videos have helped me in so many ways , financially,spiritually and, reconnecting with art and nature.
sometimes personally, being in nature isn’t enough for me to get out my head. now everytime i go out, it’s an adventure. thank you
Glad to help, this is the same for me, it gives me a reason to get outdoors and think about other things, it is very good for mental health.
The gist of this video is this: to find clay=look for craggily ground where waterbeds are/were. This was very informative and will help me survive in the future.
Glad you found this useful.
I live in norway and i will for sure be trying this out next year when the frost is gone!
Man, this is amazing info. Thank You! Watched your other vid about processing wild clay too - I had no idea clay is simply defined by particle size!
Andy, you really are just describing all the dirt in Oklahoma. Doing some research to find some natural clay to make some simple vessels as a hobby. Slowly finding out that I could likely dig a hole anywhere here in OK and find something usable.
LOL, yes, I have lived in Oklahoma and can vouch for that.
OK... so OK soil is OK? Got it :p
Haha came to CZcams trying to find out how to identify clay after having a very hard time trying to dig a fire pit (also in Oklahoma), and yes, every single one of his clues could be found by walking 50 feet from my house in any direction.
Where I live in southcentral Pennsylvania, I am located next to a creek, and off the side of the creek there is an old water raceway cut into the ground that feeds water into an old flower mill that was turned into a house.
In that raceway, there is so much water, silt, mud, and broken-down leaves that have been collected over many years, from flooding all the way back to colonial times.
It's so deep that if you walk in it, you will get stuck and sink into it up to your arms.
The water raceway never drys out, so every year a new layer is added from flooding.
I have used it for making clay once, and I was surprised at how well it worked.
I just threw a bucket in and let it sink, then dried it out, crushed it up into a fine powder to separate it from any of the decomposing leaves and sticks, and then added water to it.
Also, right next to this location, 120 yards away, there used to be a native village, and it would not be surprising if they even used it for making pottery.
I live on red clay and rock (a small mountain in the Ozarks). I have to garden above the land in raised beds.
Oh yes, clay is not good for gardening in. But you might be sitting on a treasure trove of good pottery clay.
i love your channel! just found you, and it gets me so excited to do some pottery.
I grew up next to a river, and all our garden soil was extremly clay-y. i once tried making a little pot out of the garden soils just as it was, and fired it in the wood stove. it worked out, it had one crack, but otherwise held up, which for totally unprosessed clay with no added sand is pretty darn good.
i gonna go visit my dad and steal a few buckets of dirt! :D
Awesome, thanks. Isn't it funny how our minds always go back to playing with mud as a child.
Thanks for this video, I was able to identify clay because of this!
I'm going to try making something out of it now
these are supremely well-planned videos! i love your content, and i was really shocked to see you only have 79K subs. please keep releasing great videos like these!!
I gain more subs every day. Thanks
I lived in Costa Rica for a long time and I had a house with red/brown clay, but when we dug we found deposits of white clay that the locals make stuff with a little. When we had a big hole dug with a backhoe we found enough to surprise me.
I also found a lot of fragments of old pottery shards from the indigenous people there. It was all brown.
I live in East Tennessee and all our dirt is clay, thankful it's finally useful
if you want to know if your area had a body of water a long time ago you can look up paleogeography for the area to see what the map was like a long time ago. Also if your area has lots of limestone and sandstone.
Thanks for the tip
Thank you so much!🙏
Everywhere had a body of water when the whole world was flooded
@@sijenkai3928 bible isnt real
Wow your channel is so underrated! I can tell that you really love making videos and pottery. I hope you become more popular.
Thank you. I am passionate about the subject.
Very apt comment. I've been looking for such content for a long time - professionally prepared and engaging.
In wet climate sides of roads are a great place to find clay
In dry climates too
you are a wonderful guy!! watching 4 videos of yours have solved my issues, thanks so much I have learned a lot!!🙏
In Illinois I would go to creeks to find pure grey clay. Sometimes you have to dig a bit. Other times you can find it in the creek banks
That's cool
We have literally hundreds of thousands of termite mounds on the surrounding plains here. Our village is built on clay, and so I'm wondering if these abandoned Termatoidae colonies would be suitable as pottery clay. I guess extracting and processing will determine that.
I have zero experience with termite mounds because where I live termites don't build mounds. So I would say do some experimentation and see how it works.
Several of the primitive building channels here use termite mound material as a substitute for cement, for things like sealing a swimming pool or fish pond. Based on that, I probably wouldn't want it in my pottery but would in my adobe bricks. What a neat resource to have nearby!
i use termite clay and its very plastic might wanna add lot of grog for it to not crak while it's drying.
plus the smell of decaying plant lol
Primitive technology routinely recommends termite soil as they process out alot of pebbles and twigs saving you labor.
Primitive technology has used termite mound material for wares AND primitive kiln builds.
Thank you so much! Answered all my questions
I now know how to find natural clay, thank you!
You’re welcome 😊
So grateful ❤
Thank you for the guide. This really helps to know what to look for.
Glad it was helpful!
Excellent video, as always! Thank you!!
My pleasure!
I love your clay videos ❤
I hope this man is appreciated cuz this right here is quality content
Great video. Now I know where and how to look for clay!
Glad it was helpful!
Super informative! Thank you!!
You're welcome
Excelente trabajo 👏
Thank you for the video Andy! I don't live in a dry region, I live in Pennsylvania with a lot of moisture but just the part where you talk about tire tracks etc was priceless for me. It's helped me identify the places on my property where I have clay. Fantastic. Thank you!
Glad I could help.
Thank you so much.
Thank you for this 🙂
You're welcome 😊
Incredibly helpful!!
Glad you think so!
You had me at strata ❤
I am 100% going to have to try this
Great video!
So happy I live around so much wet clay but also so happy that since I will live part time in a desert area in the next few years , I can now find clay there too❤
This video is Awsome! 😊
Thanks! 😄
Thank you for this great in depth information 🙏
You’re welcome
Great info, thanks for sharing
You're welcome
Thanks for the information and details!!! From Germany
Glad it was helpful!
This video just helped me talk my husband into going on a clay hunting adventure here in the foothills of the Sierra Nevada in Andalusia this weekend! Can't wait!!
Great, have fun
So great! Thank you so much, gentle and connected to Nature knowledge you share with us. I appreciate your humanity in the way you show us this amazing activity called ancient pottery. Yeah! I will try to find mud when i get back in Canada and do a small fire! Thanks again
So nice of you
How well does lake bottom clay perform? Does the organic matter in it cause blackening or other detriments to the finished pot?
Most of my clays have naturally occurring organic matter in them which does not effect the outcome but can leave a dark area inside the ceramic body that can only be seen when broken. This playa lakebed clay somehow does not seem to have any organic matter in it, which makes no sense to me.
great channel!
Great video, it was very informative, glad this randomly came up in my recommendations.
I've Been thinking about getting into making my own clay for awhile now as I really want to try my hand at some sculpting but don't want to invest any money into it until I find out if I'm any good or not... came across your video tonight and after hearing about how clay can differ region to region I decided to run a quick search about finding clay in my area and discovered that the piedmont region of northwest Georgia where I'm from, is apparently famous for it's "red clay" also discovered that the dirt isn't Red everywhere else you go in the world..so that's neat. 😅
I remember being a little kid and visiting my aunt who lived down a long dirt road in the foothills of the smoky mnts and how my mom always warning me not to get into that "red clay mud" that made up the driveway cuz I'd ruin my clothes... I'd totally forgotten all about that until looking it up a earlier...
Now the question is, will red clay be suitable for sculpting with? Maybe I'll find out while I'm off this weekend 😏
thank you so much for this entire channel, but specifically the tip to try dry ponds and lake beds, i found some bluish gray clay just below the surface of my friend's pond, and it gets purer gray as i dig deeper! so excited to process and age some of it. at the moment i'm doing small things, just practicing, but soon enough i'll be making the big stuff! thank you again for inspiring me and giving me a strong foundation for this burgeoning passion for pottery in me!
You're welcome, glad you are enjoying my content.
Great share, beautiful work.
Lovely Voice and Excellent instructions.
Thank you 🙏
My pleasure 😊
Thanks finaly i know what to search
Glad to help
Thank you for sharing this beautiful ideas to make some things nice again thanks ❤
You are so welcome!
made a list of a few places I can look! pretty sure I might have some good spots in my area
Thanks!
Thank you so much Sandra!
Oh my gosh. When I first saw the crackle ground, I was reminded of one of the empty lots from the neighborhood I grew up in. The cracks are deeper in this video though. Cool!
Ey! I live in Arizona and wondered where exactly to find clay. This video is perfect for me!
That's great!
Great work Andy 👍🖐
Thanks 👍
I find it in my backyard when I'm digging a hole for reason I live in Texas so its in abundance
You are fortunate, some of us have to drive many miles to collect clay.
Yes. Texas is blessed in more ways than one.
Funny i recognize your area. From bisbee. Miss the desert.
good advice
Homie spent like 30 min hammering that lake. Bed for the clip love the dedication thank you for the information my guy
You bet
Thankyou
I grew up in Willcox; dad was always teaching me of the history and geology of the area whenever we would be out hunting.
On the PNW so over saturation is typically the problem. Excellent videos with pratical info. Sub'ed♥️🇨🇦❤
Thanks ❤
Thanks Ward. You're helping me really. Greetings from other side of the planet.
other side of the planet? I,m in New Zealand
@@hugoamkreutz2081 Turkey
You are very welcome. All you Kiwis, Turks or whatever. Clay is universal.
Thank you Sir
very interesting topic, great approach on the delivery of the content, good production value. really interesting video, Sir.
Thank you very much for the effort you put into it, it really shows.
Much appreciated!
It's really helpful. I didn't know that I have so much clay around..
Glad it was helpful!
You my dude are awesome!!!!
Thanks
This is very informative thanks for the advice
Glad it was helpful!
Thank you
I live in northern georga where it's a very humid climate and most of the ground has high clay content.
Thank you. I stopped the video and went outside on my property and was able to identify clay right away on my road and in various other places around the homestead.
Cool
un video muy útil y amable, un saludo desde Colombia
I get plenty of that in my backyard here in Phoenix.
Very nice video.. hope it will help to the pottery makers
I hope so too. Thanks
The area where you live is so beautiful! 🌞🌵🌵
I think so too!
Awesome, thank you. Now i'm wondering if i have clay in my back yard! The adventure awaits :)
Maybe so, one way to find out...
I LIKE YOUR PASSION . I DID SUB WHEN U SAT ON GROUND YOU GOT MY RESPECT
Thanks!
this is a great channel
Thank you
thank you - on my land in Italy there area few types of clay depth - the blue layer is the strongest
Super Informative. I have a question, where would I look in a forest area (I know you said you lived in Arizona but I was wondering if you had any tips, thanks!)
Thank you for telling us about Identifying clay in Nature, when I have a chance to find clay in nature to identify here in my country. I do interest to know more about clay and making clay pots, mugs n others😀👍🙏
You are welcome, have fun
thanks
Get the man to 100k!
Yes please.
We have alot of clay up here in Alberta/Sask, I'll have to try making my own low fired pots this summer and maybe do some vids on it, thanks for all the info on this subject!
You're welcome. Let me know if you make a video on this subject.
Well, i thought this might be hard since i cant drive and live in an urban area, but then i remembered that i have already plastic clay in my yard that i used to dig up and make thigns with all the time. I still have a container full of clay balls cause i realpy loved rolling them out.
I see I'm going to be watching your videos for some time to come.
I certainly hope so, thanks!
So excited to start clay hunting! Thank you!!!
You're welcome
can be useful even for civil engineers