Still dry as we move into winter

There is an old adage that one should water everything real well one last time around Thanksgiving to avoid wintertime dessication.

According to Iowa State University extension, “To prevent winter desiccation, it is important to maintain adequate soil moisture by watering evergreens once a week (during dry periods) to allow them to growth vigorously throughout summer and into fall. Deep watering in fall is especially important if rainfall in late summer and fall is well below normal. Another practice that may reduce the risk of winter injury is to apply a 3 to 4 inch layer of wood chips or shredded bark around the base of evergeens. This will help conserve soil moisture and prevent deep freezing of the soil in winter.”

Summer drought reached very high levels this summer, peaking around August 28 with extreme drought in parts of the area.  The remnants of hurricane Isaac eased the drought Labor Day weekend, with total September well above normal.  However, the drought never totally ended and November rainfall has thus far been less than one inch.

We are finding dry, cracked ground in many landscapes right now.  Evergreens stressed by the summer heat and drought are now facing a winter with a dried out root system.  The straw which breaks the camel’s back may be at hand.

What can you do?

  • Water each tree and shrub one last time, about one to two inches.

 

  • Be certain trees and shrubs have 2-3 inches of bark mulch.  Keep it back from the trunk or plant base a few inches.

 

  • Consider root sytem improvement.  We aerate our lawns, why not our trees?  Research and experience shows the single most beneficial treatment to improve tree health is root systam aeration and improvement through basal tilling and radial trenching or vertical mulching.  For more information, click here>>>

 

 

  •  Contact us for more information on any service or with any questions.

Drought Impact Report

Over the past week, total rainfall has been 0.18. While temperatures have been cooler, they have still averaged quite warm with moderate to high drying rates. I am observing an overall worsening trend in drought conditions which were already severe a week ago. Even areas East of me which got more rain a few weeks ago are getting much dryer again. Un-irrigated areas are parched. Even established trees are showing early color or wilting due to the now 2 month drought. Conditions are very bad. This drought has also caused great hardship to landscapers who depend on lawn mowing during the growing season. Many lawns are dormant. This inactivity extends to mower repair shops which not only have less to repair but find that financially strapped contractors defer maintenance on other things.

http://www.cocorahs.org/ViewData/ListDroughtImpactReports.aspx

Drought continues in many areas, eases in others

It’s been yet another week of drought west of I-71 and north of the Ohio River. 

While scattered rains have helped things out in southern Ohio east of Cincinnati and in northern Kentucky, the drought beat goes on in Hamilton and Butler counties of southwest Ohio, as well as large parts of Indiana.  Incredibly, one local meteorologist has declared that most areas are drought free!  I guess he hasn’t seen the local drought monitor for this week.  Western Butler and northwestern Hamilton Counties remain in extreme drought.  Most of the rest of Butler County is in severe drought, while there is a rapid gradation over Hamilton County from extreme drought in the northwest to no drought in the extreme southeast. 

Critical stresses are being observed in trees and landscapes in the drought areas.  Severe summertime heat has combined with the drought to cause weakening of plants and mounting deaths.  Studies by the US Forest Service show that tree mortality rates increase for a decade after a drought.  We are still in the decade shadow of the droughts of 2007 and 2008.  This drought will only serve to compound the problem.