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Nature builds soil with falling leaves, and so should you! All those leaves can be turned into gardeners鈥 gold! We鈥檒l show you a variety of uses for fallen leaves, putting all their goodness to use around the garden, from protecting plants to making leaf mold and mulching.
We don鈥檛 call it 鈥渇all鈥 for nothing. The colorful foliage that delights the senses precedes the literal fall, when most of the deciduous trees send their leaves drifting to the ground. Fallen leaves rustle underfoot. They smell good. The wind sometimes whips them into a frenzy of dancing shapes.
I have one eye on the gorgeous spectacle of changing colors and the other eye on the value of these leaves鈥攁nd how I can put fallen leaves to good use right at home.
Yes, LEAVES are this season鈥檚 most abundant crop. What amazing organic matter! And free, too. The trees have mined minerals from deep in the subsoil and bought them to the surface. Leaves are a rich source of calcium, magnesium, phosphorus, potassium, and more.
The leaves of one large tree can be worth as much as $50 worth of plant food and humus. Pound for pound, leaves contain twice the mineral content of manure. The huge amount of organic matter they offer can be used to improve soil structure.
Leaf humus can lighten heavy clay soils.
They feed earthworms and beneficial microbes.
Leaves increase the moisture retention of dry, sandy soils.
They make an attractive mulch in the flower garden.
They are a fabulous source of carbon to balance the nitrogen in your compost pile.
They insulate tender plants from cold.
No organic gardener should pass up this annual opportunity.
Note: If you do not have a yard of leaves: Many communities make compost from the leaves that residents drop off at dumps and transfer stations; the larger towns and cities hold leaf- and yard-waste collections! I鈥檝e just finished spreading a pickup load of my town鈥檚 leaf compost in my vegetable garden.
Here鈥檚 how to use those fall leaves to feed your soil instead of stuffing nature鈥檚 leaves into plastic garbage bags to be dumped by the millions into landfills.
1. Improve Your Soil
Mix shredded leaves right into your garden. Next spring, your soil will be teeming with earthworms and other beneficial organisms. Note: If you add shredded leaves right to the soil, add some slow-release nitrogen fertilizers to help the leaves decompose and to ensure that soil microbes don鈥檛 use all of the available nitrogen.
Join Ben and his furry friend who shows us all the ways to use fallen leaves in the yard and garden, putting all their goodness to use around the garden, from protecting plants to making leaf mold and mulching. Hang around to the end for a great way to supercharge all the leaves you do rake up!
2. Create a Compost Pile
Make compost for a valuable soil amendment. If you are not already composting, now is a good time to start. Pile autumn leaves in the corner of your yard. Ideally, keep leaves from blowing away with chicken wire or some . To speed up composition, shred those leaves with a mulching lawnmower (or use a chipper or leaf shredder).
Layer these carbon-rich 鈥渂rown鈥 leaves with high-nitrogen 鈥済reen鈥 material such a grass clippings, dead plant matter, and kitchen scraps. The 鈥済reen鈥 feeds the bacteria that will be doing all the work of breaking down the leaves. Layer three or four inches of old leaves with an inch of fresh grass clippings or other green, leafy yard waste.
Then let the compost sit all winter, turning the pile occasionally to aerate it. If the compost pile starts to appear dry, spray it down with a garden hose and turn with pitch fork. By the time spring rolls around, you should have some nice compost to mix into your garden soil.
3. Make Leaf Mold
Composting sound like too much work? Then make leaf mold, much beloved by English gardeners. Simply rake the leaves into a big pile. If you shred them, they will decompose faster, but you can still make leaf mold without shredding. Keep the leaves moist let the fungi take over. After one to three years, the leaves will have disintegrated into a dark, sweet-smelling, soil conditioner that is high in calcium and magnesium and retains water. It鈥檚 exceptional as an amendment for veggie and flower gardens and a great addition for potting soils. See our video on how to make leaf mold.
4. Make Mulch
Leaves make an excellent protective mulch for vegetable crops, blueberries (and other berries), and ornamental shrubs. They not only suppress weeds and help retain soil moisture, but because they contain no weed seeds themselves, they won鈥檛 encourage the spread of new weeds.
We cover the beds in our vegetable garden with a layer of chopped leaves to keep the soil from washing away over the winter. Be sure to chop or shred leaves before using them as mulch. Whole leaves can form a mat that water can鈥檛 penetrate.
Leaves make a good insulating cover for overwintering tender perennials, too. The best time to mulch perennials is after the ground has frozen, so put aside shredded leaves in bags to use later in the fall.
Leaf cover allows fall-planted garlic to root without sprouting, and prevents shallow-rooted strawberries from heaving during winter鈥檚 freeze-thaw cycles.
5. Mow Into Lawn
Researchers at Michigan State University have shown that lawns actually benefit from a thin layers of leaves. Leaf litter improves the soil, lessening the need for fertilizer in the spring. They recommend a mulching lawnmower with a blade 3 inches high and mowing once a week while the leaves are falling. This will break down the leaves into smaller pieces over the winter, providing your soil with nutrients. Older mowers can be converted to mulchers by installing a mulching blade.
So, don鈥檛 be a perfectionist! Leave leaf litter to feed worms, fungi, and soil bacteria. Just don鈥檛 leave thick layers of matted leaves on your lawn, as this blocks oxygen to the soil and invites disease.
6. Protect and Store Root Vegetables
Leaves make a good insulating layer for cold-hardy vegetables and root crops stored in the ground鈥攕uch as carrots, kale, leeks and beets. Cover them and you鈥檒l be able to harvest all winter.
If you have a cool, humid spot, you can also store carrots, beets, and other root vegetables between layers of crisp, freshly fallen leaves. Sprinkle each layer of leaves with water (don鈥檛 let them get soggy). If you don鈥檛 grow your own vegetables, visit a farmers鈥 market and try to find a vendor who will sell you half a bushel or more of your favorite root crops.
7. Leave Leaves for Wildlife
Leaves aren鈥檛 just about being useful to us as humans. Fallen leaves also provide wildlife, especially pollinators, with some winter cover. Bees, moths, butterflies, snails, spiders, and dozens of arthropods and pollinators overwinter in dead plant material for protection from cold weather and predators. For example, the mated queen bumble bees burrow only an inch or two into the earth to hibernate for winter, relying on natural leaf litter to keep them insulated. Also, many butterflies overwinter as chrysalises or cocoons disguised as dry leaves. (Be careful when you throw away leaves!)
Let鈥檚 not rake, mow, and blow away a bit of nature that is essential to our natural web of life. Consider creating a leaf pile or two and allowing it to break down naturally. (Leave leaves whole; do not shred.) Leave leaves on your garden beds as mulch through the winter and don鈥檛 be in a rush to remove in the early spring. (Don鈥檛 worry; flowers have no trouble poking their heads through leaves.) Your butterflies and pollinators will thank you!
8. Have Fun!
My siblings, friends, and I used to have tons of fun leaping around in the big leaf piles we鈥檇 rake from our lawns each fall. Back in those days, our dads touched off the leaf piles in the late afternoon, and we roasted potatoes and apples while the giant piles burned to ash. Most jurisdictions rightly prohibit open leaf-burning these days to reduce air pollution, but the smell of a burning leaf still triggers powerful memories of those idyllic days.
Another fun activity with leaves is preserving them! You can press and preserve their rich fall colors by 鈥済lycerinizing鈥 a few stems of the most colorful maples. See how to preserve flowers and foliage.
So don鈥檛 just watch the falling leaves drift by your window- get out and get raking!
Margaret Boyles is a longtime contributor to The Old Farmer鈥檚 蜜桃恋人. She wrote for UNH Cooperative Extension, managed NH Outside, and contributes to various media covering environmental and human health issues. Read More from Margaret Boyles
I'd like to use my leaves as compost, but oak leaves are very acidic. I know that only works for some types of plants. (Trilliums are a wild member of the orchid family and love acid soil.) Would they help or hurt roses?
Go right ahead, Lois. It's true that fresh oak leaves contain acidic compounds, but the decomposition process neutralizes these acids and shouldn't affect the pH of your soil.
Running a lawn mower over the leaves to chop them will produce a better-quality, better-looking mulch that will decompose more rapidly and won't be so likely to blow off in the wind.
Most experts reommend having your soil tested every two or three years, not just to determine is pH, but also to check the levels of plant nutrients.
Your fact sheet confused me a bit on this: If quickly decaying organic mulches such as fresh leaves, wood chips, and straw, are used, a considerable amount of nitrogen is taken from the soil by the micro-organisms decomposing the organic matter. This reduces the nitrogen reserves in the root zone of the growing plant. If additions of nitrogenous fertilizer aren't made regularly, a nitrogen deficiency may result.
Also it says: Leaves are the least expensive mulch available but make a better mulch if composted.
How should I compost the leaves? Will the chopping up by a lawn mower let them compost in place? I figure I need to make tubes around my roses. They are "carpet roses", so they are fairly low and wide. As for soil testing, do I just take a sample to my local cooperative extension?
Lots of questions! Relative to causing a nitrogen deficit in the root zone, just keep fertilizing your roses as you always do. Your mulch will break down slowly and won't deplete nitrogen at the root zone. But check out this column that contains information specific to roses.
Compost chopped leaves as a carbon-rich addition to an ordinary compost pile. Or make leaf-mold compost鈥攋ust pile leaves (chopped or whole)and leave them alone for a couple of years.
Give your local extension office a call to see if they accept soil samples for testing. If they do, they'll give you instructions for collecting your sample. If they don't, they should have information on where you can send it.
Thank-you for this blog. I want to use my leaves for compost. Only problem s I have a lot of pine tree needles also falling. Do you think if I try to shred them with a lawn mower, I can then use the whole blend with my shredded greens??
I have so much nitrogen rich leftovers. I will put all my vege and fruit scrapes in the blender and I have pulp from juicing. Just have a problem with adequate carbon. Any suggestions greatly appreciated
Pine needles decompose very slowly, even when shredded, so don't add too much of the leaf/needle mixture to your compost pile. A better choice might be to use the shredded mixture as a weed-suppressing, water-retaining mulch in your garden.
To increase the carbon content of your compost, why not ask your neighbors if you can scrounge bags or piles of fall leaves they won't be using. Non-diseased garden debris (leaves, stems, flowers from dead plants)is another option.