Most people fight their soil. We read ours and stopped fighting. Gum Springs is acidic sandy loam with drainage you could set a clock by. The first year I tried to grow what the big-box store told me to grow. Most of it sulked. Then I planted what the soil actually wanted and the place woke up.
Acidic soil and blueberries are a love story. We put in rabbiteye varieties because they handle the heat and the humidity better than the northern types. They took. Now we have rows that pay us in July while the lawn-people are out there dragging sprinklers. If your soil test comes back acid and you are in the South, do not amend your way to grass. Plant berries.
Figs, pears, plums, persimmons. Muscadine and blackberries on the trellis. A handful of peach trees even though the freezes nip them some years. The point was not a perfect orchard, it was food that comes back without a trip to the store. We also run companion plantings under the trees: sweet potatoes, herbs, the stuff that likes a little shade and keeps the weeds down.
Stop growing what the catalog says. Grow what your dirt is already halfway to giving you. Our acidic sandy loam is never going to be a prairie. It is a berry farm waiting to happen. Figure out yours and plant that. You will eat better and work less.