Glorious
Autumn! Keat's season of mists and mellow fruitfulness. It is also
(alas) the season of the rake. It seems that you spend the better part
of your precious weekends just raking up leaves. And just when you have
gotten them under control, along comes a brisk gust of wind, a
sprinkling of rain, and your lawn is covered all over again. Groan! Time
to drag out the rake once more.
Here is a solution to simplify your fall and improve the long-term health and vigor of your lawn, trees, and garden beds:
Mulch ado about leaves.
There
are a large number of expensive, awkward, and sometimes useful
products being hawked to suck up your leaves and turn them into mulch.
There are blower-vacs which blow leaves into a pile which you can then
suck up and shred. There are chipper-shredders with elephant trunks
that also allow you to suck up and shred leaves, although you have to
rake them into piles first. And lawn jockeys with disposable incomes
can check out the over $1,200 self-propelled machines which act like
gas-powered vacuum cleaners on your lawn (watch out for small pets).
Mower for less.
These
contraptions may not be the solution for you. However, if you are like
most homeowners, you may not have realized that your lawn mower is
already a deluxe leaf mulcher in its own right. And perhaps the easiest
way to deal with leaves is to mow them right back into the lawn itself.
Forget back-breaking raking and bagging!
Please note
that mower-mulching works best when leaves are relatively dry and are
no more than one inch deep. Deeper "drifts" might need to be partially
raked first -- or plan to run back and forth over the leaves several
times. And do not worry if your model is not a dedicated mulching
mower, any type of mower will do.
Start your
do-it-yourself "mulchinator" by setting the mower to a normal
three-inch height. Remove bagging attachments and block off the
discharge chute on a rear-discharge machine. Then run your mower over
the lawn while walking slowly, giving the mower blades plenty of time
to shred up the leaves.
If your mower has a side
discharge chute, you will probably want to start on the outside
perimeter of your lawn and start mowing inward. This will keep the
leaf-bits on the lawn, and even allow you to mow over them a few more
times. Of course, some folks like to "blow" shredded leaves into ground
cover areas, under foundation plantings, or into wooded areas, adding
to the organic content of soils there, which is another option.
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.
Stay out of the gutter!
It
is important not to blow whole or shredded leaves into streets, storm
drains, or nearby streams. Those innocent-looking particles can create
problems for sensitive aquatic life by suffocating plants, fish eggs,
and insect larvae, clouding the water, tying up oxygen, and altering the
stream's pH (increasing toxic acidity). And that is also why you
should never rake leaves into the street or gutter: leaf leachate
always ends up in your neighborhood stream.
Too many leaves?
The
swirling mass of leaves may seem daunting at first, but the final
particle size will be one-tenth of the original leaf. This will make it
easily digestible by worms and bacteria. Skeptics often voice a concern
that shredding leaves into turf areas will overwhelm and kill their
lawn. Not at all! In fact, research at the Rodale Institute in
Pennsylvania found that earthworms will actually drag a one-inch deep
layer of organic matter into their burrows in just a few months,
loosening and enriching your soil, and feeding the roots of your lawn
for free.
Numerically, while you may imagine that all
of those leaves will add up to far too much organic matter for your
lawn, the fact is that 30 tall paper bags full of leaves, once
shredded, will break down within a season to about one cubic yard of
leaf mold or compost. Applied to your lawn as a topdressing, you would
only be able to cover about 48 square feet (a six foot by eight foot
patch). In fact, to topdress a lawn properly, most savvy gardeners have
to import tons of commercial compost above and beyond the compost they
make at home! Fear not: you will never have too many leaves or too
much organic matter!
Your lawn needs leaves.
For
decades, homeowners have bagged their grass clippings and leaves and
sent them off to a landfill. And lawn chemical salespeople successfully
and profitably sold the idea that healthy lawns needed bimonthly
fertilizer and pesticide applications. Times have fortunately changed.
The fact is that lawns and gardens can be maintained organically, for
the most part, and without toxic inputs, just by recycling the natural
materials already in place. When you bag up your clippings and leaves,
you are short-circuiting the natural recycling process.
Think
of the cycle this way: tree roots absorb water, minerals, and a host
of nutrients from the soil. These materials are used to add girth to
the tree trunk and boughs, set forth new branches, grow more roots, and
grow leaves, flowers, and fruits or seeds. In a natural setting, such
as a forest or woodlot, leaves, small twigs, blossoms, and fruits drop
to the ground and slowly decompose, returning all of the original
organic building blocks to the soil for future use.
What
happens when you bag up leaves? How is that organic matter going to
get back to the soil for the tree to use in coming years? You may think
that by fertilizing your lawn you are returning everything the tree
needs. Wrong! Of the more than one dozen major and minor nutrients that
plants need to grow, how many are in your bag of fertilizer? And what
about the organic matter that creates humus, the very soul of soil
itself?
Bagging leaves and grass is equivalent to
strip mining. The minerals, nutrients, and organic matter are
continually stripped away year after year. Eventually, without those
vital materials, your trees, your garden, and your lawn will start to
suffer. It is time to undo this damage by getting that organic matter
back into the soil. And you can easily start just by mowing your leaves
into your lawn.
It's in the bagger!
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
take the shredded material and start using it to mulch some of your
trees and shrubs. This is also true for gardeners with some of the
fancier shredding equipment. Apply up to four inches deep, and your
mulch layer will also act as a blanket to prevent frost upheaval in
planting beds, which is especially damaging to bulbs, tuberous flowers,
and some half-hardy perennials. You will also be feeding and protecting
your plants and preventing weed growth for almost a full year.
A
compost pile or bin is another excellent half-way point for shredded
leaves. Those smaller leaf particles break down in less than half the
time of whole leaves, and you can fit a prodigious quantity of shredded
leaves into your bin. Also, if you find that you are cutting some grass
while shredding leaves, you are probably creating the perfect blend of
carbon and nitrogen-rich materials to ensure a hot, fast-working
compost pile.
Recommended chores.
Mulching
leaves into lawns is just the first step toward a naturally healthy
lawn and environment. You should also consider aerating your lawn by
either renting a core-aerating machine (about $70) or hiring a lawn care
firm ($75 and up depending on overall lawn size). Aerating breathes
life into compacted soils and helps organic matter filter deeper into
subsoils and root zones. You should also test your soil with a kit from
your county or municipality's local Cooperative Extension Service
(costs are about ten dollars) to determine proper nutrient application
rates. Your soil test will also indicate the type and quantity of lime
your lawn needs; local soils are naturally acidic. And don't forget:
fall is the only beneficial time to consider feeding your lawn -- only
use a slow-release or organic nutrient source to feed the soil and your
lawn's roots all winter long.
Copyright 2013, Joseph M. Keyser
Friday, October 11, 2013
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