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kl23

I had a well-respected national tree-care service help me with a few pest problems. I was a little concerned when they recommended fertilizing all my trees, because I had read this is unnecessary and even harmful by making a lot of new growth, which benefits pests. And I already fertilize the lawn with slow-release fertilizer. I know enough about lawn care to know some lawn-care services make choices that increase homeowner dependency, like sowing lawn mixes that need more frequent mowing. So I wondered if this particular branch of this tree-care service might be doing the same sort of thing when recommending extra fertilizer.
Question: all but one of my trees is in a flower bed that receives all the fall leaves in my yard. The one exception is a small swamp white oak out in my yard, so lawn grass is growing around it. Yes, I am careful not to touch it with the mulching mower. I just let the long grass grow near the base. Would experts consider the lawn to be the living mulch discussed in this article?

   
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Timi M

KL - I was advised by an arborist to remove any grass growing near the tree base, as grass will quickly absorb any available water leaving the tree thirsty. (Grass does the opposite of mulch with respect to trees.). The roots near the trunks are closer to the surface and do absorb water. She also advised watering that area during periods of high heat and low rain, even for very mature trees. I have since pulled back grass from around all of my trees and they are all thriving. It’s fine to plant some ground covers near the base that have minimal water requirements.

   
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kl23

Hi Timi, and thanks for that perspective. So water is the issue… We chose a swamp white oak for that spot mostly because there is too much water there. I guess I don't have to be concerned about that then. I think the oak is recovering from the cicadas that hit it badly last year. It seems happy anyway.

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