Michigan Officials Say Don’t Rake All the Fall Leaves
If you don’t feel like raking your fall leaves, maybe you should go with the gut instinct and not rake them. As it turns out, some nature experts are saying that raking your fall leaves can actually be worse for your lawn and wildlife than just letting them sit naturally. There are actually some major benefits to leaving leaves in their natural state, both when it comes to decomposition and protecting the cold ground and critters under those leaves over the winter months.
‘Leaves Are Not Litter,’ So Maybe Don’t Rake So Much
When you’re cleaning up the yard before it gets chilly, keep it a little messy. We’re taught in life to keep everything neat and orderly, but nature isn’t that way.
“As you wrap up the garden year and pack away hammocks and outdoor furniture, try not to be too orderly – nature likes a bit of mess,” noted the Michigan DNR. They emphasize the idea to “consider leaving fall leaves where they land or raking them into your garden beds instead of burning them” and add that those fallen leaves “will provide nutrients and control soil erosion while creating spaces for winter dwellers to snuggle up until spring.”
Some people may see leaves as being some kind of litter or garbage on a lawn. But, that’s not the case. Fallen leaves are part of the ecosystem. They’re also pretty, and Michigan has beautiful fall colors.
“Leaves are not litter,” Matthew Shepherd, the director of outreach and education at Xerces Society, told Outside Online. “They provide critical food and shelter for butterflies, beetles, bees, moths and other invertebrates, and we need to stop thinking of these tiny creatures as pests but rather as heroes. Instead of banishing them from our spaces, we need to roll out the welcome mat.” Also, those butterflies, beetles, bees and critters are important to humankind, “because they transfer pollen from plant to plant, which helps plants and crops reproduce, according to Outside Online.
Fall leaves on the lawn are also a sort of fertilizer that can help your soil.
“Dead leaves play a major role in infusing soil with new nutrients,” PBS notes. “The invertebrates that come along to munch on the leaves start the process of breaking them down before microbes help finish the job.” Theresa Crimmins, director of the USA National Phenology Network, also told PBS that “when trees take in carbon dioxide in order to photosynthesize, it’s stored in their bark, trunks, roots, as well as their leaves, said Theresa Crimmins, director of the USA National Phenology Network.