In the fall we tend to get rid of all of the leaves that fall to the ground in our yards and gardens. The leaves are actually nature’s best fertilizer.
Just think: for millions of years, there were no chemical fertilizers; only the nutrients provided by nature. If you rake up your leaves and mulch them into a fine mixture and then cover your planting beds with a 2-4 inch leaf mulch layer, then you are providing most of the nutrients that your plants/grass needs.
This also goes for turf grass and lawns. If you mow a layer of the leaves into the lawn in the fall and leave it there, much of it will be broken down by spring, and the remainder will continue to break down over the year as the new grass grows through it and covers it up. Natural fertilizer.
The recommended amount is 2-4 inches per year for a healthy soil. Broken-down leaves provides food for beneficial soil inhabitants—bacteria, fungi, nematodes, worms, etc.—that in turn break down the nutrients and provide them to the roots of the plants. For best results use a variety of different leaves from different types of trees, oak, maple, elm, etc.
You can use a leaf blower/vacuum, but I have found that the best is to get a leaf mulcher. It can be placed on a trash can to contain the shredded leaves, and then used to carry the leaf mulch to the areas that you want to cover.
For turf lawns, use a lawn mower. Spread out the leaves and allow the mower to chop them up right onto the lawn, leaving them to break down over the winter. At Longwood Gardens, this is used extensively on the planting beds with a 4-to-6-inch-thick layer.
The central plant in the photo is arum italicum, or Italian Arum. It starts to put out leaves in October, and will continue to do so into the spring/summer. It blooms in late winter/early spring and will produce a thick spadix of bright red berries.
If you should have any questions, please feel free to contact me at Ferret Hollow Gardens.
Walter
- be cautious of the word "organic" used on fertilizers. The term has a very loose meaning. It really only means that a chemical such as N or nitrogen is in its basic elemental form no matter how it is derived.
Thanks, you're doing the right thing. I have found that un-mulched leaves can dry out during the winter making them susceptible to the wind that can blow them around. When you mulch them they can from a tighter mass that can hold together a bit better than loose leaves while they are being broken down.
Thanks for the comment. Earlier this year on 2/14/12 I posted an article on vermicomposting. http://collingswood.patch.com/blog_posts/vermicomposting They're also good to just add directly to your gardens to amend the soil.
Stephen Coan Stephen Coan llc at Ferret Hollow Gardens Landscape Design, Installation, and Consulting 267-251-5855 garden@ferrethollow.com www.ferrethollowgardens.com http://www.stephencoan.com/blog/ http://stephencoanllcatferrethollowgardens.brandyourself.com
Can this mulching technique be done with just grass clippings instead of leaves? If I leave them on my lawn during this time of year will it be of any benefit to the soil?
If you mow the leaves into the grass in the fall while it is dormant the leaves should mostly break down over the winter. The new growth in the spring should also grow through the remaining leaves (mulched small) remaining that will "fertilize" the soil (lawn) for you as it breaks down.