Wait! Two Reminders Before Your Spring Cleanup
By Naturalist and Photographer, Sharon Mammoser
If you’re like me, you can’t wait to get outside in the garden and yard once the weather starts warming up. Like a magnet, I’m drawn everyday to go looking to see what plants are popping out of the earth, making their way into the sunshine. But in the recent past I learned two things that have made me change the way I garden, especially in the spring.
When Is the Best Time to Cut Dead Plant Stalks?
Hopefully you’ve left most of your plants standing through the winter. These provide food for birds, as well as habitat and shelter for invertebrates. Plus standing dried plants provide visual interest to us humans. The stalks and dried seed heads are a lot more interesting to look at than an empty garden.
But now it’s spring and you’re wanting to cut them down, clean up the garden, right? I know the feeling! But I learned from Xerces and Agriculture Agent Debbie Roos of North Carolina Cooperative Extension that HOW you maintain your garden is just as important as what you put in it. Debbie manages a large garden featuring over 225 species of perennials, trees, shrubs, vines, and grasses, 85% of which are native to North Carolina.
She recommends cutting down your standing dead stalks in spring, at lengths varying between 8-24 inches. By doing this, native bees like mason bees, leaf cutter bees, resin and yellow-faced bees, will have choices and can nest in them. In a few weeks, the fresh, green growth will camouflage the dried stalks perfectly. It’s not hard to do and makes a big difference to our native bees, 25% of which nest in cavities like hollow stems. (The other 75% create nests in the ground. )
If you’re wondering when exactly in spring to do this, wait until temperatures are consistently above 50 degrees. Roos says, “The earliest emerging stem-nesting bees are the mason bees which start emerging in early March. Small resin bees (Heriades and Hoplitis spp.) start emerging in April. Leafcutter bees (Megachile spp.), yellow-faced bees (Hylaeus spp.), and carder bees (Anthidium spp.) usually start emerging in May.
When Can You Get Rid of Your Leaves?
A second reminder is about those leaves you’ve left on the ground. By now you’ve likely heard that many critters, including fireflies, require leaves for part of their lifecycle. But like many people, you’re wondering after what date is it safe to get rid of them? When can you haul them away, and “clean” up your garden in preparation for spring and summer? This is a common question at talks I give about native gardening.
It’s also a hard one to answer—and the answer is one that some people don’t love at first. The truth is that there is never a “safe” date to get rid of the leaves. Sure some critters might be done with them in March, and others in April or May, but there will inevitably be some critter still using the leaves throughout the year. Firefly larvae live in the soil and leaf litter for all but about two or three weeks of their life! Learn more about how to create habitat in your yard for fireflies.
Yellow spotted millipedes and common pillbugs live in them all the time too, so when you remove the leaves, you eliminate these critters from your habitat. The best thing you can do is just leave the leaves. And forget about them! They will decompose, increasing organic matter and putting those nutrients right back into your soil. The leaves also suppress weeds and improve the moisture retention of your beloved plants. It is essentially free fertilizer—a fact that many, many homeowners ignore every fall and spring.
Of course for some neighborhoods, leaving your leaves where they fell is not going to be possible. Maybe you’ve put them around your flowers for the winter, but now you want them gone. In those cases, I recommend raking up the leaves and moving them—whole—to put in a wild area, such as around trees or on your property line, or in another area in your yard where the leaves can just be left alone. It’s an unfortunate fact that fallen leaves have been given the name leaf litter since they are anything but litter. Do the wildlife in your yard a favor and just leave the leaves! The more biodiversity your yard can support, the more you’ll be part of the solution, instead of the problem.