Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Reconsider raking those leaves from your yard

- LINDSAY SMITH

WICHITA, Kan. — It’s only a matter of time before the leaves change colors and fall to the ground, which means it’s almost time for leaf cleanup season.

“In the lawn, we typically want to make sure we don’t allow those leaves to pile up too thick because if the leaves get too thick in the lawn, they can smother out the grass that’s growing underneath and create thin spots,” Sedgwick County Extension Education Center horticultu­re agent Matthew McKernan tells The Wichita Eagle.

But before you take out your rake or leaf blower for the season, you might want to consider something other than a wholesale clear out. McKernan says there’s another way of getting rid of the leaves that’s actually better for your lawn.

“What a lot of people tend to do is they want to rake up or remove those leaves out of the lawn, but if you have a lawn mower with a mulching blade, it’s going to be great if you can mow over those leaves a couple of times. Break them up into smaller pieces, and those smaller pieces will usually fall down in between the blades of grass and kind of disappear,” McKernan suggests.

Mowing the leaves into tiny pieces creates natural mulch that will serve as fertilizer for your yard, he says.

“That organic matter is going to help increase the health of your soil, recycle some of the nutrients in those leaves back into the soil as well, so we don’t necessaril­y need to remove or haul off those leaves as long as we can sometimes just break them up into smaller pieces that are less visible and really promote soil health that way,” McKernan says.

If you don’t want to mow over your leaves, you can clean them up in other ways without wasting the nutrients they provide.

“The next best option would be to compost those leaves. Create a pile in the yard where you can put those leaves together, mix it in with a little bit of nitrogen fertilizer to kind of speed up the breakdown of those leaves so it becomes compost sooner. That will then create really good soil to put back in your gardens or put back in your lawn later on next year,” McKernan says.

What about mulch for the garden or flowerbed?

While leaves provide good mulch for your lawn, they can also give your beds a boost.

McKernan says keeping a layer of leaves in your flowerbed can actually help protect the garden when it starts getting cold outside.

 ?? (Dreamstime via TNS) ?? Before you take out your rake or leaf blower for the season, you might want to consider something other than a wholesale clear out.
(Dreamstime via TNS) Before you take out your rake or leaf blower for the season, you might want to consider something other than a wholesale clear out.

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