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55°
Partly Cloudy | 9MPH
NEWSROOM * CIRCULATION * ADVERTISING
Wednesday
March 2010
17
For the last couple weeks, an ALL OUT WAR ON LEAVES has been waged in the Northshore Suburbs (Milwaukee and other suburbs also) ..... WHY ?
When I have asked folks WHY they are so determined to eliminate the Leaves from their Property ---
and are willing to pay Big Bucks for the municipalities to vacuum them up, haul them away, and "usually" send off to a landfill ---
I am usually told that the Leaves will HARM their Lawns and Gardens.
WRONG !!!
Following is information about mulching leaves --- and the Well Kept Secret --- that mulching the leaves and leaving on the lawn, or using around trees or in gardens is actually GOOD for your Lawn and Garden.
Soil Enrichment: Leaf mulch returns nutrients back to the soil. Your lawn and gardens will require less fertilizer and other additives.
Water Conservation: Leaf mulch helps retain moisture in soils. When soil is covered with leaf mulch, the mulch lowers the soil's exposure to sun and wind which reduces evaporation.
Banned from Landfill: If yard waste is found in regular garbage sent to
Saves Money: By managing your leaves on site, you reduce the need to buy paper yard waste bags.
Insulation: Mulch acts like an insulating barrier from the heat in the summer, from the cold in the winter and from the wind all year round. Mulch prevents compaction and erosion of soils from wind and rain.
Weed Control: Leaf mulch can help prevent the growth of weeds. Add a thick layer (5 to 7.5 cm or 2 to 3 inches) to gardens to reduce the need for herbicides.
Leave it on your lawn: Use your lawnmower to chop up leaves and leave the pieces on your lawn. It is important to make sure leaf pieces are small enough to let light get through to your grass. This may require you to mow twice where there is a lot of leaf litter.
Dig leaves into your garden: Dig leaves directly into your garden to add organic matter and nutrients to the soil.
Use leaves as mulch: Put leaf mulch on gardens and flower beds and around trees and shrubs.
Just imagine if we spent all that money and manpower on snow and ice removal, instead of the moving around of leaves!
This winter when your friend or neighbor breaks their hip or ankle when trying to traverse a snow or ice covered sidewalk --
or when you see someone in a wheelchair unable to cross the street because the crosswalk is covered in snow --
or you can't stop at your favorite shop on the street because of the mound of snow separating the street from the sidewalks and storefronts --
think how much more logical it would be to Remove Snow and Not Leaves!
WHAT DO YOU THINK ? YOUR COMMENTS ARE WELCOME !
Your assertion that leaves can be harmful is "wrong!" is, well wrong. Or at least not totally correct. When grass becomes buried beneath layers of leaves, it is deprived of the air, water, and nutrients it needs to survive, and it also becomes a breeding ground for fungi and harmful insects.
In addition, leaves shade the grass, preventing it from receiving the sunlight it needs to thrive. Sunlight is especially crucial for cool-season grasses since their prime growing time occurs in the cooler months. A thorough raking not only removes any remaining leaves, it will also remove thatch buildup, which can be equally damaging to your yard.
Mowing the leaves with a mulching mower is an alternative option, but in order to shred the leaves effectively, it must be done before the carpet of leaves becomes too thick.
Is this another idea from the "Let the chickens roost in our backyards" crowd?
You make a good point. Removing leaves, only to buy fertilizer at the hardware store in the spring, is absurd. Your leaves are fertilizer. I compost my grass clippings and my leaves (after mowing over them). It is absurd to treat leaves and grass clippings as though they were some sort of toxic waste and then buy chemicals to spray over one's lawn. Very neurotic.
MikeTWI, per YOUR 'wrong' assertion above, THIS is plainly listed in Dave's article:
What can you do with leaf mulch?
Leave it on your lawn: Use your lawnmower to chop up leaves and leave the pieces on your lawn. It is important to make sure leaf pieces are small enough to let light get through to your grass. This may require you to mow twice where there is a lot of leaf litter.
I'm just sayin'...:-D
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Tags: Leaves : Mulch : Cost : Snow Removal : Land Fill : Garden : Lawn : Northshore Suburbs
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