It's Easy To Winterize Your Yard
As the weather gets cooler and the days get shorter, it's time to think about preparing your yard for the chilly months ahead. Gardening expert Rebecca P. Cohen shares her tips for making sure your vegetation sprouts strong this spring.
Getting your garden ready for winter is simple! Outdoor lifestyle and gardening expert Rebecca P. Cohen of Rebecca Plants, LLC has some great tips that will ensure your trees, plants and flowers are ready to thrive when the frost breaks. Protect young trees with guardsPut plastic or wire mesh tree guards around the slender trunks of any new trees and shrubs to protect them from gnawers such as rabbits and mice. Make sure the guards you use are higher than potential snowfall gets in your area (go a few more inches than you think you need in case it's a bad winter). Continue to water treesKeep watering your trees, especially evergreens, until the ground freezes. Evergreens need a good store of moisture going into winter because they don't lose their leaves, which means they continue to transpire (give off water vapor) through the cold months. Rake up fallen leavesDon't let dry leaves stack up. Rake them up each week instead of leaving the job until all the leaves have fallen. In fall, lawn grass still needs sunlight so it can create sugars to store in its root system for good growth next spring. Allowing the leaves to stay on top of the lawn can smother the grass and weaken it. Consider shredding the leaves and using them as winter mulch on your flower beds. You can also add shredded leaves to the compost pile. In a season or so, they'll make the best treat your garden soil can have.
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