Each
fall, trees offer homeowners a bounty of free mulch.
This time of year, your trees are sending you a message.
Although I grew up in the Midwest, I’m experiencing it anew.
After spending eight blissful years in California, I’ve returned to a state
where people wear hats shaped like cheese and where leaves turn colors and drop
off the trees.
I’m not completely ignorant of the weather here in Wisconsin. I
remember having to pick a Halloween costume that could fit over a heavy jacket
when I was a kid, and I know to expect the first snowflakes around the first
week of November.
But my childhood experiences in the frigid north had little to
do with yard work. Except for the times I was forced — very much against my
will — to mow the lawn, I got off scot-free. The leaves fell from the trees,
then the leaves went away. Someone else got rid of them — grown-ups, I suspect
— and I didn’t know where they went.
Playing in leaf piles was something I did as a kid. Raking
leaves was not.
As an adult, I now see the bounty of leaves the trees are
heaping on my street through a gardener’s eyes. These leaves are a gift.
Trees, it turns out, are strategic in their leaf shedding.
Fallen leaves decompose to feed fungi that in turn nourish tree roots. So our
trees are, in effect, making their own mulch and dumping it all over the very
spot most beneficial to them: their root zones.
Unfortunately, to a suburban homeowner eager to get a head start
on next summer’s manicured lawn, mounds of dead leaves are unsightly. Mulch is
a bagged product you might buy, or have delivered in a pickup, and it must stay
within a garden bed lined with plastic or bordered with bricks. It’s not
something some tree ought to dump all over your yard.
For cities, the problem goes beyond aesthetics: Leaves that fall
in the street can clog storm drains. So each fall, millions of homeowners clear
their lawns of leaves and local governments then dispose of them.
Where do all these leaves go? If we threw them all away, leaves
and other yard trimmings would account for 13.5 percent of all the trash in our
landfills. Fortunately, over half of this yard waste is diverted
away — for example, into composting programs.
Some cities, like my new hometown of Madison, take care of the
composting for their residents. They only ask that we rake our leaves
into piles on the curb for pick-up. Fort Collins, Colorado goes
one step beyond that, connecting the people who want leaves with others who
want to get rid of them.
But that’s not true everywhere. Thanks to budget cuts, New York
City’s leaves areheaded for the
trash.
Most cities, even those with composting programs, instruct
residents that the best thing to do with your leaves is to leave them be. If
you don’t want leafy mulch covering your lawn, place your foliage in a compost
pile, or run it over with the mower. Nature will take care of it by spring.
Your trees will thank you.
OtherWords columnist Jill Richardson is the author of Recipe for
America: Why Our Food System Is Broken and What We Can Do to Fix It. OtherWords.org