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WANTED - DEAD OR ALIVE

(All this pruning - where do I put the trash?)

Thanks to a generation or two of separation from the land and unrealistic fantasies created by gardening magazines most home owners and suburban gardeners have grown attached to a manicured neatness and unaware of the benefits of decay in their garden. As a result they throw away the incredibly valuable natural resources already provided and then have to buy artificial chemicals and fertilizers or compost and topsoil to make up for deficiencies in their yard. Seems a bit inefficient doesn’t it?

The fallen leaves, pruned twigs, and other brown dead things in your garden are a valuable part of the life cycle. If allowed to rot and decompose, they provide a vast array of humus, elements and minerals that next years growth will need. (For example, did you know dogwoods act as a calcium pump for many of the trees around it? The mycorrhiza at its roots bring it calcium from great distances. The dogwood pumps the calcium up to its leaves. When the leaves fall away and are blown under other trees they rot and provide calcium for that tree. Wow. What a system.) In addition these dead things become food for micro-organisms, fungi, beneficial insects and worms that speed up the decomposition and exchange minerals and other elements — promoting pollination, health and growth.

I admit when nature prunes she’s a bit messy for the average home owner’s taste. Visit a forest that has been taking care of by itself for ten years or so. It may not be neat, but the ground is alive. Plants grow. Wildlife finds food and habitat and make their contribution to the cycles of life. Its all there. You can touch it. You can smell it. You can see it. You can hear it. You can taste it.

Somehow we forget this magic. We think of it as trash. We remove it and send it to the landfill. For just a second, think. Yes, we know about the dogwood calcium pump, but just imagine all the wonderful things that we don’t know. All the unknown magic we are interrupting. Imagine.

If you can’t stand to let it lay where it lands, you might just put it some place else and let it do what it will do. Find a place for a brush pile. Stack, pile and arrange the brush to be bird friendly and plant morning glories all around it.

Create a compost pile. You can work the pile and it will rot faster or you can just pile it up. It will rot.

At Boxerwood we mow our leaves and blow them back toward the trees. Most small twigs get thrown out of a walkway on to the decaying leaves. Many limbs are used to outline a bed or walkway. Our walkways are grass, but the majority of the place is more like the forest floor. We have brush piles that will be there until they rot. We have small piles that are scheduled to be combined into big ones. We have brush piles that contain invasive plants and harmful insects that we intend to burn. We have piles we intend to chip up and redistribute as mulch.

Technology has been defined as speeding up nature’s processes. At Boxerwood we make every effort to blend the combination of letting nature do all she can and speeding it up when our dreams and sensibilities can’t cope.

Think about it. What can you do to let nature do what she does best?