Autumn is perhaps the most mellow and reflective season of the year.
Shorter days encourage reading in the evening while crisp air and
colorful vistas invite weekend hikes and trips to the countryside.
Regrettably, too many people waste their precious weekends raking leaves
into piles or shatter the quiet peace of sunny afternoons with leaf
blowers. There is a better solution.
Rather than
trying to rid your lawn of fallen leaves, you should actually consider
leaving them where they are. It is nature’s way to recycle, after
all. Certainly no one is raking up and bagging the leaves which fall
in wooded parks and forests. Given a bit of time, all of the leaves
are transformed by worms, bacteria and other organisms into rich
humus, which will continue to feed trees, shrubs, and other plants
year after year for millennia.
Your yard is simply an
extension of the same natural process. Trees around your property
draw nutrients and minerals from the soil, converting those elements
into new leaves and branches. By raking up those leaves, you
essentially short-circuit the natural cycle by which nutrients are
returned to the soil. After a number of years, the soil will lose its
fertility. In fact, carting off leaves and grass clippings is akin to
strip mining, ultimately affecting the health of everything you are
trying to grow.
Spreading costly fertilizers on your
lawn may restore some nutrients, but not all of the vital minerals and
organic matter needed for healthy, vigorous plants. Leaves, on the
other hand, contain all of the nutrients and micronutrients your lawn
needs. The trick is getting those leaves back into the soil without
smothering your lawn in the process.
Enter the
lawnmower. For the past ten years, almost all new lawnmowers sold have
been mulching mowers. After decades of bagging clippings, a majority
of homeowners have learned that it is best to “grasscycle” their lawn
clippings when they mow. Clippings left in place quickly decompose and
provide nutrients to keep the lawn healthy.
Your
lawnmower can now do double-duty as a leaf-mulcher. Mower blades can
easily shred whole leaves into small pieces, approximately one-tenth
their original size. Your once-daunting bounty of leaves will
disappear into a thin layer of tiny particles easily digested by worms
and bacteria. In fact, a healthy earthworm population is capable of
dragging a one-inch layer of organic matter down into their
underground burrows in just a few months. Unseen by human eyes, they
are diligently loosening and enriching your soil, and feeding the
roots of your lawn for free. Perhaps you should think of your mower as
a food processor for worms!
Begin your regimen of
leaf-mulching by setting the mower to a normal three-inch height. Remove
bagging attachments and block off the chute on a rear-discharge
machine. Run your mower over the lawn while walking slowly, giving the
mower blades plenty of time to shred up the leaves. Please note that
mower-mulching works best when leaves are relatively dry and are no more
than one inch deep. Do not wait until every last leaf has fallen
before getting started.
If your mower has a side
discharge chute, you will probably want to begin on the outside
perimeter of your lawn, blowing your chopped leaves onto unmowed
areas, and continue mowing inward. This will keep the leaf particles
on the lawn, and even allow you to mow over them a few more times.
Some savvy gardeners like to direct the discharge of shredded leaves
into ground cover areas or under foundation plantings where organic
matter is also welcome.
If your first pass over the
lawn has left a significant quantity of whole leaves, go back over the
leaves while mowing at a right angle to the first cut, perhaps
walking even more slowly. Leaves take more work than grass, especially
if they are somewhat damp.
There are other options
and uses for some of your shredded leaves. For example, if your mower
does have a bagging attachment, you might want to apply the shredded
material as a mulch two to four inches thick under your trees and
shrubs. Do not pile the mulch directly against tree trunks.
Shredded
leaves can also be applied to other planting beds, such as perennial
borders and herb gardens. Avoid applying mulch until after the first
hard freeze. A two to three inch mulch layer will help maintain a
uniform soil temperature all winter and protect tender root systems. The
mulch blanket will also prevent frost upheaval caused by frequent
thawing and refreezing, which is especially damaging to bulbs, tuberous
flowers, and some half-hardy perennials.
Naturally,
the leaf mulch will also feed your plants by recycling nutrients,
conserve soil moisture during dry spells, and prevent the emergence of
weeds.
You can also add your shredded leaves to a
compost pile or bin. The smaller leaf particles decompose in about 75
percent of the time required by whole leaves, and you can further add a
astonishing volume of shredded leaves into the bin, which is useful
for properties with numerous mature trees. In addition, if you find
that you are cutting some grass while running over the leaves, you are
probably creating the perfect blend of materials to ensure an
effective, fast-working compost pile. Your shredding efforts may even
reward you with nutrient-rich compost ready for use in the Spring.
Copyright 2013, Joseph M. Keyser
Wednesday, October 09, 2013
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