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The Autumn Leaf Plan

October 17, 2003


Dear Marti,
What is the plan for leaves this year?
Signed,
Beth

Dear Beth,

Yes, the Leaf Plan. As I understand it, the first part of the Leaf Plan is pretty set: they'll change colors, inspire awe, reminiscence and possibly a little poetry and then fall from the trees onto your lawn, sidewalks and gutters. The second part of the Plan depends on you and what you want to do with what is really a gift from Mama Nature, rather than a bothersome chore. Here's the briefing on part II of the Leaf Plan:

Collections and Drop-off: Each year, most municipalities in Boulder County create a program for leaves involving curbside collection or temporary drop-off sites. Every town is different, so to get the scoop on your community's plan, including dates for collections and locations for drop-off, visit the Eco-Cycle website at www.ecocycle.org and click on the name of your town. Programs generally begin in late October and go through most of November. Each community will be turning leaves and twigs into mulch, and most offer free mulch to residents on a first-come, first-serve basis.

Mulching: Before you go to all the trouble of raking, bagging and shipping your leaves off your property, you might want to save yourself some time and money by keeping them as a mulch you can use to bed down your plants and trees for a long winter's nap. Leaves are a soil nutrient you don't have to go buy, Mother Nature delivers them to your door free of charge to create a habitat for microorganisms that will slowly digest the leaves and make their valuable nutrients available to the soil. Mulching protects soil and plant roots from temperature extremes and greatly reduces evaporation of soil moisture. A little mulch this winter can help suppress weed growth next spring and summer.

Any open ground, whether it is an unplanted bed or underneath trees, shrubs, or other plants can benefit from mulching year-round.

    Dan Matsch, Eco-Cycle's compost expert, suggests some simple application methods for mulch:

    1. Rake it and leave it. Rake the leaves from your lawn directly under the canopy of your perennial trees and shrubs or directly onto beds, to a depth of about 6 inches. Moisten thoroughly to settle them in and protect them from the wind. Leave them there all year; they'll be almost gone when it's time to re-apply. Limiting factors are exposure to high winds, amount of twigs in rakings, and degree to which bindweed is a problem (bindweed loves loose mulch).
    2. Put the news to use. To increase weed suppression, you can really make practical use of this column by taking it along with the rest of the paper and putting down a layer of newspaper at least one "section" thick (after moistening the soil). Immediately wet the newspaper, then rake and moisten the leaves. The newspaper increases weed suppression in areas where weeds (including bindweed) are a problem.
    3. Get the kids rolling. If your trees shed a lot of twigs along with the leaves, it's best to run your rakings through a chipper/shredder before use as mulch. A chipper/shredder can also be useful for reducing the size of leaves in high wind areas to create a denser mat. If you don't have access to one, you can rake dry leaves up into a tarp and then roll the tarp up into a big sausage. Got kids? Make them earn their keep by having them roll over the top of the leaf sausage several times to crunch the leaves down.

No matter what Leaf Plan you follow this year, don't make the mistake of throwing them in the garbage. After all, it's not nice to trash a gift from your Mother.