We need to stop bagging and burning nature’s fertilizer
By Frank Carini / ecoRI News columnist
The task has bothered me since I was a young teenager: Why are we obsessed, every fall, with clearing leaves from going-dormant lawns and garden beds?
Of course, in those early years my concern was that the
parents-ordered chore cut into cartoon watching and sport playing.
Now, long after retiring from backyard football, I see
this annual rite of monkey see, monkey do (I mean no disrespect to any
non-human primates) for what it is: a waste of energy and the misuse of a free
lawn-care product.
We drive hundreds of miles to view the colors of fall. We
take countless photos. We fawn all over them when they are out of reach, but as
soon as the red and yellow leaves (the browns never had a chance) hit our
lifeless green carpets we reach for rakes, bags, matches, and power equipment.
We gather them into piles with fossil fuel-powered leaf
blowers, to truck away a natural mulch that helps suppress weeds while
fertilizing the soil as it breaks down. We burn the overwinter habitat of
pollinators and wildlife. We imprison the colors we briefly appreciate in
opaque plastic bags. We waste space in landfills with a material that could
enrich our lawns and gardens.
Instead, when spring arrives, we again buy plastic bags
of mulch, spray chemicals, and overfertilize to bring our yards to life.
Microorganisms are the key to soil health, but they need plenty of food and nutrients to do their job. The more leaves left on your lawn or in your garden, the more sustenance for those microorganisms to make your soil healthier and your plants stronger.
Simply, as leaves decay (or are
mulched by a mower), they add organic matter back into the soil, which reduces,
or even halts, the need for fertilizer and other mass-marketed lawn-care
concoctions.
But year after year, we mindlessly bag or burn them, because we are programmed to feed our lawns with human-made poisons and scrape them clean of natural remedies.
Leaf litter is remarkably biodiverse. Consisting of bark,
twigs, plant stalks, and, of course, fallen leaves, it helps maintain a healthy
yard by transforming into nutrient-rich mulch that feeds bacteria, fungi,
worms, soil mites, and other master decomposers.
This natural clutter also creates overwintering habitats
and provides nesting materials for frogs, toads, slugs, snails, and spiders.
Many insects and their larvae survive the winter thanks to the protection
provided by leaves and other assorted vegetative leftovers.
Decomposing leaf litter also helps store carbon. Carbon
is released when the leaves and their accompanying litter are set afire.
Methane, a potent greenhouse gas, is produced when those bags filled with
leaves are buried in landfills.
Leaves and other yard debris account for about 13% of the
nation’s annual solid waste, or some 33 million tons every year, according to
the Environmental Protection Agency.
“Pound for pound, leaves contain twice the mineral
content of manure,” according to Robin Sweetser, a longtime blogger for The
Old Farmer’s Almanac. “The huge amount of organic matter they offer can be used
to improve soil structure. Leaf humus can lighten heavy clay soils and increase
the moisture retention of dry sandy soils. No organic gardener should pass up
this opportunity for a free soil amendment.”
Perhaps it is time we leave the leaves where Mother
Nature placed them, at least until after spring’s last frost. Or if you really
need to move them, rake them into a pile and use the material for mulch and
fertilizer during the next growing season.
Think of all the time and money you will save, even if
environmental happiness isn’t your thing.
Note: That doesn’t mean you should leave the leaves
Mother Nature deposited in your gutters where they are.
Frank Carini can be reached at frank@ecori.org. His
opinions don’t reflect those of ecoRI News.