trees for winter

Tips on preparing your trees for winter

Prepare your trees for Winter so they blossom in the Spring

Your trees give you bountiful shade all spring and summer. So, it is your duty to help them withstand the harsh winter weather. As the leaves begin to shed their green color and eventually fall, you must start preparing your trees for winter. Young and subtropical trees need particular attention as they are more sensitive to a hard freeze and can suffer serious winter injury or even death.

Some of the common types of winter injuries include:

  • Frost heaving-the upward or outward movement of the ground surface caused by formation of ice in soil
  • Sun scald- freezing of bark due to high temperatures in the winter season, which results in permanent visible damage to the bark
  • Dieback-tree begins to die from the tip of its leaves or roots backwards
  • Desiccation and browning of green leaves
  • Root injury

Here is what you can do to prepare your tees and prevent winter damage

Cleanup and prune

Start with cleaning up your yard and remove all dead or fallen branches or plants from the property. Another important part of the cleanup process is pruning. Remove all dead or dying branches of the trees as it strengthens the tree. Moreover, it protects the property because heavy snow or winds can cause dying and overhanging branches to fall and damage your property or injury someone. So, you should prune the trees before the winter arrives.

Harden the trees for winter

Experts recommend that you stop watering the tress in late summer through early fall as it forces them to harden off. This is an important step when preparing your trees for Winter. Then, during mid-fall and winter, you can continue watering the trees. Give them just enough water to keep the roots moist. Do not make it wet. Once the plants are hardened for winter, regular watering prevents loss of water through leaves.

Mulching

During winters, repeated freezing and thawing cycles can cause soil to repeatedly expand and contract. This can damage roots of the trees. The best way to maintain a constant soil temperature and to reduce moisture loss is to ad 3-4 inches of mulch around the base of the tree during late fall or early winter. When doing so, make sure you leave some space around the trunk to allow the base to breathe. In places where the ground remains frozen during winter, it is better to mulch only when the ground has frozen. You can also recycle leaves. Rather than disposing of them, you can lay them around the base as mulch or use a mulch mower to blend it into the yard. This will add nutrients back to the soil.

Wrap the trunk

Fluctuating winter temperatures can cause sunscald. Warmer temperatures during winters can cause trunk cells to become active, but when the temperatures fall again, these active cells are killed. This causes an injury, which results in scarring. To prevent this, you must wrap trunks of your tress with a commercial tree wrap or a light-colored fabric before the onset of winters.

Start wrapping upward from the base, overlapping layers in a way that provides complete coverage.  Preparing your trees for Winter also means preventing critters from snacking on your tree. For even better protection against hungry pests, you may wrap a quarter inch mesh wire around the base of the tree. This will keep the pests from burrowing around your tree. You can remove this paper once the winter is over.

The technicians at Madd Beaver Tree are experts in tree care. We can help with any issues you have with your trees. We are licensed arborist (License #B3292). Whether you need a tree trimmed, taken down or a stump removed, we can safely and efficiently complete the job for you.

We will donate up to 10% of our service fees to charity (Through October 1st)