... blessed by the community support, our clients’ support, and BNI! All of you don’t understand how much that has meant to us.
’Tis the Season for Leaf Mulching
Where did all these durn leaves come from ...
... light to limit the amount of sugar being made. Trees do the same thing, aiming their leaves toward the sun when they want and away when it’s too much.
Most likely wilting does NOT mean your plant needs ...
... and the taller junipers like the Wichita’s but have also seen them on beech (Video) and ornamental pears. If you see leaves or needles disappearing on these trees and pine cones appearing, please give ...
... really anal with our leaf blow outs under the shrubs and trees. Those leaves, covered with snow, create a terrific incubator for bugs and funguses. Snow feels cold to us, but it is an insulator for little ...
... your height. There is no right and wrong decision. (Remember, limbs weighed down by leaves and/or fruit sag even lower.)
When is too late? Spring is a moving target due to soil temperatures and nighttime ...
... learn the hard way about it again in the spring.
We were really anal with our leaf blow outs under the shrubs and trees. Those leaves, covered with snow, create a terrific incubator for bugs and funguses. ...
... not the tops, without getting yelled at for extra mowing.
It’s probably only a weirdo like me who really loves to see the red leaves of Japanese maples randomly scattered over emerald green grass, but ...
... (Except the azaleas.)
This fall the leaves are simply indescribable. It was not too hot, not too cold, not too wet, not too dry. And yes, I’m starting to sound like Goldilocks. There could not have ...
... panic over normal, and that is the continuing theme. Your lawn is going to be brown. Your shrubs and trees are going to show stress signs and probably drop leaves early this year. Mother nature is tough, ...
... their leaves early this year, particularly those damaged this spring. Plants make their living making sugar. If the ground is dry and the sun bright, they protect themselves this way. In Morgantown, temperatures ...
... He uses 4 gallons of fluid per thousand square foot of turf, so if you have a normal Suncrest lawn he gives you 20 gallons of product. You cannot balance that on the leaves of grass plants; it is soaked ...
... their location with it. Yes, grass plants too.
Mow high.
Mulch all clippings and leaves back into your garden.
If you did this initially and are mowing properly, then you really don’t need to read ...
... some really cool advantages to your landscape, however.
One is that you can see your patient better without leaves. When you can see, you can easily cut the limbs that touch. Remember to leave the one ...
... your leaves into your lawn. If we expect our lawns to compost those leaves, it helps to have the grass clippings also added for nitrogen. (One day we will address composting, but not today.) Since the ...
... do not count. Fall is a great time for root growth in both trees and grass, making that water essential.
We handle leaves on site by moving them around and mulching them into your lawn. The decay of ...
... when you want to mow. The grass grows from the soil up so you will cut away the old brown, not turn the old brown green. We often do a spring cleanup blowing the leaves into the turf areas and mulching ...