Showing posts with label winterizing trees. Show all posts
Showing posts with label winterizing trees. Show all posts

Friday, September 21, 2012

Prepare Your Trees for Winter

Wondering how to care for your trees once the cold weather sets in? Get started this weekend with a few tips from Tree Trust's Community Forestry Manager, Karen Zumach.  

Water, water, water! We’re in a drought and large trees need our assistance. Don’t forget your boulevard trees, they need water too! Over the next few weeks, placing your hose on a slow trickle around the dripline of your tree for 30-60 minutes will go a long way to helping your tree survive the drought. Increasing the soil moisture is the name of the game, keep your hose on a low flow to decrease the possibility of run off.

Rake. If you have spots on your leaves from fungus or other nefarious leaf issues, it’s important to rake them up and get them out. Fungus and bacteria can survive in the soil through the winter and reinfect your tree/shrub in the spring. 

Protect. Most ornamentals are quite delicious to our furry friends, so be sure to create some sort of exclusion area, either with chicken wire or plastic tubing around the trunk (be careful if you’re using chicken wire, you don’t want to knick the bark!). If you have thin-skinned, young trees like maple or basswood, wrap them before the snow flies to protect the tree from sun scald.

Plant. Fall is a great time to plant for two reasons: the weather is perfect and you can’t beat the sales at the garden centers. Stay local if you can. You don’t want to buy a tree from a big box store because chances are good that it’s spent a large portion of its life living somewhere much warmer than here meaning it won’t be acclimated to our chilly winters. Make sure you plant your tree the right way!

The cool autumn weather is a great time to do yard work. Take advantage of the great weather and care for your trees before the snow flies!
 

Thursday, October 27, 2011

Winter maintenance for trees

Hungry animals and the extreme weather of Minnesota winters are potential threats to young trees. The following includes a few tips to help prevent some of the damage that can occur in the winter months.

Sun Protection

For fruiting, flowering and thin barked trees (such as maples, honey locusts, basswoods and aspens) it is important to protect the trunks during winter months. Sun scald occurs when the sun heats up the bark to the point in which the tree's tissues are stimulated as they are in warmer seasons in order to grow. However, when the sun goes away, the temperature drops quickly and kills the active tissue. Use a light colored guard such as paper tree wrap or tree tubes. The trunks should be protected from the ground to the first branch. Install the guards in the fall and remove in the spring.

Sun scalded maple
Root Injury & Frost Heaving

Soil temperatures in winter are much higher than air temperatures. Tree roots cannot withstand as cold of temperatures as the rest of the tree. Sandy or dry soil (as in drought years such as this year) hold less heat so frost penetrates more deeply, which can damage the tree's roots. With newly planted trees there can be small spaces in the planting hole backfill that allow cold air to reach the root zone. New trees should be mulched with 6-8 inches of wood chips or straw to insulate the soil around the roots.

Additionally, freezing and thawing of the soil repeatedly in fall or spring causes the ground to expand and contract, which can damage new trees. Mulch is the solution to this problem as well, as it helps to maintain consistent soil temperatures.

Animal Damage

Hungry animals nibble on trees in winter and can cause severe damage. Wrap the trunk with mesh hardware cloth from 2-3 inches below the soil (for mice) to 18-24 inches above the anticipated snow line for rabbits.

Repellants should be used if deer are a problem.These make the tree smell or taste undesirable without harming the animal. Repellants can also be used against rodents.