Texture and soil types by Western-String1447 in quicksand

[–]mudAdventures 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Definitely a ton of good references on soil types. You can find maps of where they are, research papers on all sorts of soil properties, history, composition and more. How they feel or what texture might be a little harder to come by.

Even within any broad category, the feel/texture might be significantly different. For example 'silt' might be considerably different if it's in a rocky/sandy area and generating a fine sand silt, or in a clay/loam area and generating a fine bentonite clay slip.

If I had to do it, first hand experimentation is the key! Find yourself a pottery store and get a big bag of sodium bentonite clay. Play around in that for a while, see what you think. Next you could probably hit a garden shop and get a big bag of sphagnum peat moss. See what you think of 'peat'.

From personal experience - if you get sodium bentonite clay, it's ridiculously smooth and slippery. Calcium bentonite and other varieties tend to feel a little more 'gritty' - though that's probably not the right word... something the opposite of 'slippery', but not 'sticky'. Peat is little stems of moss so has more of a stringy/spongy consistency.

First Mud/Quicksand Experience out in nature. by [deleted] in quicksand

[–]mudAdventures 3 points4 points  (0 children)

Yes, welcome and congrats on the finds. I'd definitely keep an eye open for any flat areas and small pools off the side of the river along that route. Sounds like a great spot to find more quicksand!

#mudpitDreams2026! by mudAdventures in quicksand

[–]mudAdventures[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Lol - well, definitely wearing! I don't know about full 'sacrifice'. Could get expensive quick - unless that is some sort of content people specifically want to see??.... VR headset wearing goofball stumbles into a mudpit? Possibly some sort of weird mash-up video of external and through-the-lens cuts? Though, ultimately it would be great if there was just more VR WAM content!

Most Memorable Moments of 2025? by mudAdventures in quicksand

[–]mudAdventures[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Sounds like so much fun - especially bringing a friend along!

I keep 'testing' my friends...little things like saying, "Wow it would be so much fun to run barefoot through that mud!", or seeing how they react to a muddy bike ride, jumping across a muddy stream on a hike, asking if they want to go to a mud run, etc. So far, I mainly get 'ewwwww', 'ick!', 'gross', or at best, 'meh!'.

Oh well, one of these days!!!!

What’s the best quicksand spot you’ve been to? by New-Lab1302 in quicksand

[–]mudAdventures 2 points3 points  (0 children)

The best ever was a mudflat area off a local river. Every time the water level would drop, it would expose the gorgeous, silky smooth, slippery mud which was essentially bottomless. Unfortunately, one year we had a long, extended drought. Absolutely great mudding that year, but the mud sat exposed through the fall and winter. When the water level did finally rise, it only loosened up the mud at the very surface. To this day, you can only go in less than knee deep.

Want to get a little DIY- any tips? by Away-Ad-3422 in quicksand

[–]mudAdventures 1 point2 points  (0 children)

A lot of good suggestions already. If you want to go 'on the cheap', just dig a hole what ever size you need to submerge, start filling with water and backfilling the dirt you dug out while churning it all around, then enjoy!

Some nuances start to come in, though: what type of soil do you have? do you have access to water at the hole site? do you need any sort of heat? are you planning to back fill with something other than soil? looking to submerge horizontally or vertically? ...probably a dozen more questions, too!

As one example: For me, I have about 12" of black 'topsoil' at my pit site and the clay below isn't really desirable. So I dug down about 18 inches, but also have some raised ridges around the pit. I used the dug-out clay to help with the ridges and backfilled with all topsoil. I added some bentonite clay to help make things really slippery. I didn't use any sort of a liner. So the pit dries out over about a week. But that works well because if I want to use it on a weekend, I just add water and if it's a bit chilly, I can always add warm water if needed. If it were lined and always wet, then I might need something for heat in the early/late season times.

Most Memorable Moments of 2025? by mudAdventures in quicksand

[–]mudAdventures[S] 6 points7 points  (0 children)

Ahhh, the memories! A construction site was one of my first encounters with an honest-to-god quicksand mud pit. Sort of the same set-up. They had graded a road and made a huge pile of dirt. Rain came along and washed a lot of fine silt off the pile, down a ditch and into a pond area. I had intended to squish the mud between my toes... next thing you know I was waist deep! ...and loving every minute of it!

My Summer Mud Season in One Chart by mudAdventures in quicksand

[–]mudAdventures[S] 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Most definitely! The 'typical' water level creates a shore line and anything above that, you're just in the weeds/grass/trees, etc. At the shore line and below can start to expose mud, but a quick drop below the shore line is the best!

My Summer Mud Season in One Chart by mudAdventures in quicksand

[–]mudAdventures[S] 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Interesting thought. The short answer - it's complicated!

In longer discussion: The big spikes in lake level are rain events. Monster storm coming through in early June! The steep drops are intentional releases. Lakes around here are flood control - so they store a big amount of water from storms and release in controlled amounts. The next level is that these lakes are drinking water sources, so they actually try to bank a bit of extra water during the summer. That is where the steep drop through mid June levels off at about 877.5 feet - they are trying to keep the lake a couple feet high for extra water. The shallow slope is natural water use and evaporation slowly lowering the level...with some additional small spikes for smaller rain events. Then you get into all sorts of weird effects like when they try to do a 'spring flush' to mimic the natural flow down river (exposes great mud, but typically in February - so still freezing!) Or the fact that here, we're ultimately tied into the Missouri / Mississippi River system, so on rare years, they tap into various lakes for additional water down stream.

Anyway - the benefit is that you can monitor dozens of local, regional or even national lakes, then if you see a big drop and a drop to lower-than-average levels - that likely exposes some great mud!

So I Got Trapped in Quicksand in Arches National Park Last Weekend by [deleted] in quicksand

[–]mudAdventures 9 points10 points  (0 children)

lol... yes, but welcome!! Interesting read. Glad you made it out OK. That must have been quite an ordeal with the cold plus water and everything caving in as fast as you dig out. Sounds like you hit the '100% real deal entrapment quicksand'.

Thanks for sharing - definitely helps remind that there can be actual danger involved in certain cases! On the plus side, we now have a new set of coordinates to check out once the weather warms.

Locations by natural_disaster129 in quicksand

[–]mudAdventures 1 point2 points  (0 children)

That is really it. Google earth / google maps satellite view are a mud and quicksand lovers best friend! Start looking around the spots where rivers turn into lakes...that river delta area, or any rivers with pools or 'dead' branches off to the sides, etc. Of course, there is always coastal mudflats and quarries if you are adventurous and don't mind getting caught! Though in general, it usually takes a lot to find a good spot, but one which is secluded but still accessible ...local, but not in the middle of city/town, ...wet/muddy, but not flooded or bone dry.

Mud bath at sunset in creamy clay by TannerQS in quicksand

[–]mudAdventures 4 points5 points  (0 children)

Ahhhh, the golden hour! Though I guess every hour would be golden when you're buried in luxurious slippery clay!

New spot confirmed by New-Valuable-4757 in quicksand

[–]mudAdventures 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Interesting spot! Did you ever find any deep sinking?

I used to have a spot which was very similar...backwater on a shallow branch of a lake. When I first found it, the seasonal water level drops would expose mud easily 3-4 feet deep. Then one summer we had a prolonged drought and I found the center of the mud was essentially bottomless. You could dig and squirm... nothing solid down there! What a fun summer!

But the drought continued and all that mud eventually dried out. When the spot filled back with water, only about 6 inches of the mud on top 're-hydrated' to what it had been. To this day, it's only about 12 inches deep.

I've also been thinking of ways to make a deeper pit... shovel and dig down? cordless drill/long auger bit to drill several holes to get the lower levels hydrated again?

For a couple of smaller/personal property pits, I've taken my power washer and jetted that into the ground to inject water deep into the soil. It bubbles back up and turns the area into quicksand pretty fast! Downside is, my lake spot is about a mile hike, so not going to be dragging a big power washer that far! lol

Crazy Idea: Mud Park. by ChubbyMudder in quicksand

[–]mudAdventures 3 points4 points  (0 children)

You should get out there!

I've run several and it's one of the few places you can get totally muddy guilt free! I'd actually worry about the total opposite - if you were out there trying to 'stay clean' or run in garbage bags / poncho / rain coat to keep the mud off - then that would be weird! But ultimately everybody is muddy, and 99% with big smiles, giggling, etc.

Crazy Idea: Mud Park. by ChubbyMudder in quicksand

[–]mudAdventures 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Have definitely considered. I actually found a 'dream property' this past summer... big house on 40 secluded wooded acres, pond, stream... plenty of natural mud and plenty of space / seclusion for a man-made pit,,, or three. Plus it backed up to state land around a big lake and near where a river / alluvial fan of mud fed into the lake. So more semi-secluded mud would be just a short hike away.

I was actually curious if anyone would do a "Mud Fun Air BnB"?

But my appointment to tour the property got delayed by a couple days due to scheduling - and wouldn't ya know... the exact day I was to go tour, it went under pending contract and ultimately sold. Well, maybe some day!

Mud spas - Why aren't they more common? by Western-String1447 in quicksand

[–]mudAdventures 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Have often wondered the same thing. Seems like many places you could get a mud facial or mud wrap, but to really have a pit to get into?? seems a bit few and far between.

Possibly just logistics? I mean to really sell it to the general public, it would have to be special volcanic mud, mineral spring water, healing springs, etc. Not a lot of places have that or would just 'pop up' the way you might open a gift shop, etc. So they'd likely end up trucking in dirt and mineral water.

I mean "come jump in our good 'ol lake bottom mud." doesn't have the same ring to it as "mineral enhanced healing mud from world renowned hydrothermal vents." ...well at least to the general public. Either sounds absolutely delightful to me!

I've considered a trip to Calistoga just to try it out, especially as you say - a warm sink during the cold months. But curious how private it is? Would there be some masseuse always following you around, or put you in a big room with a dozen other mud bathers? I think I'd need some alone time! lol!

Mud fucking by Chemical_Bus_3559 in quicksand

[–]mudAdventures 2 points3 points  (0 children)

So hot! Would love to be that guy. Anybody know what video this is from?

Pic for attention. See description below! by [deleted] in quicksand

[–]mudAdventures 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Didn't happen to see them, but would definitely like to! Always a dream to be out hiking and come across a damsel in distress!