Yes, I know this is the Grassroots Motorsports forum, but some few of you know the answer to every question. Berkeley Alexa.
Back when we first moved to this property 20 years ago, we fenced an area, built a doghouse and a lean-to for shade, and kept my wife's two crazy outdoor dogs there. Somewhere down the road, a small stand of blackberry began to thrive, and produced large, tasty blackberries. Year after year they thrived and gave us more and more berries. I would refer to them as "Jackson's Blackberries" after the stalwart Chow mix that tended them. Years passed, as did the dogs, and still the berries grew. Neighbors would come over and pick a few quarts, leaving us more than we could eat. The berry patch had grown to where it was not possible to reach the middle, and in places, it measured as much as fifteen or twenty feet across.
A few years back, we began to notice a loss of vigor in the plants. At first we chalked it up to "a bad year for berries," but a year or two more of decline convinced us that something wasn't right. Pokeweed plants, honeysuckle, and a few rogue trees would pop up in the middle of the patch, and I would prune them out, but still, the berries were in decline.
So, what to do? Did the former supply of dog pee give the plants the nutrients they needed? Or have they simply depleted whatever naturally-occurring goodness was present in the soil? What sort of nutrients might I add to the soil?