Seasonal Tips
Check out this page for articles on seasonal-related tips.
Snowplowing Tips
Iron Chlorosis
Drought Stress and the Landscape
Salt Injury to Landscape Plants
Soil Test, Don't Guess
Snowplowing Tips
When clearing driveways and parking lots of snow, please remember
to not push the snow into the roadway and be mindful of stacking of
the snow too high, creating dangerous sight restrictions.
If you have fire hydrant located on your property, please ensure
that it is easily identifiable in the event of an emergency and not
covered by snow.
Please remove parked vehicles from streets to allow snow plows to
properly clear roadways.
If your mailbox was damaged due to snowplowing, please contact
the Department of Public Works at (248) 735-5640.
Iron Chlorosis
Bright yellow leaves with a network of dark green veins could
indicate an iron deficiency (iron chlorosis) in your landscape
plants.
For more information, click here.
Drought Stress and the Landscape
A tree or shrub in a suburban environment is
often a plant under stress. Many suburban trees are growing on sites
where roads, sidewalks or other structures restrict root growth. A
root system whose growth is restricted is very susceptible to
drought stress and flooding stress. Suburban sites that restrict
roots usually are prone to drastic changes in the water table. Also,
competition for water by lawns can reduce water available to trees
and shrubs.
Recognizing Drought - Watering Priorities
Of course, the primary problem with drought is the water
shortage, usually from low rainfall. Complicating this situation
even further are sprinkler bans and/or voluntary water conservation
programs. The establishment of a watering priority management
program can minimize drought effects on your landscape plants.
Priority #1: Newly Planted Trees, Shrubs, Lawns
Newly planted trees and shrubs and newly sodded or seeded
lawns should receive most of the supplemental water during drought
conditions. Because these plants have not had sufficient time to
develop deep root systems and adapt to their new surroundings, they
depend on surface water for their survival. They can also be quite
expensive to replace, so they should receive top priority.
Priority #2: Young Trees and Shrubs
Because young trees and shrubs are not as well established
as older trees and shrubs, they will require more water to survive.
Typically trees and shrubs planted within the past two years will
require irrigation during drought, though not as much as newly
planted trees and shrubs. During severe drought conditions,
plantings up to five or six years of age may also require
supplemental watering.
Priority #3: Flowers, Gardens and Older Plants
Most flower and vegetable gardens will require watering to
stay attractive and productive. Mulching will help to retain
moisture in the soil around the roots. Most well-established trees
and shrubs can withstand a prolonged period without rain or
watering. Some established trees and shrubs are more susceptible to
drought than others. Birch and dogwood, for instance, tend to be
very susceptible to drought and will require more water. Trees and
shrubs suffering from other stresses, such as a disease or insect
attack, will be more susceptible to drought injury. High value
specimen plants may also be targeted for watering.
Priority #4: Lawns
Older, well-established lawns can tolerate long periods of
drought by becoming dormant. Dormant lawns can be damaged by foot
traffic. During drought conditions, lawns should be watered
regularly or allowed to go dormant. Irregular irrigation that causes
lawns to repeatedly enter into and recover from dormancy can
severely weaken them.
Watering Practices
How you water your plants can drastically affect the efficiency
of water usage as well as the ability of plants to survive.
Lawns
During drought, lawns should either be watered regularly
(every day or every other day), or be allowed to go dormant.
Watering once a week can create a weaken lawn because the plants can
repeatedly enter into and break out of dormancy. The best time to
water is the early morning. Evening watering leaves turf plants damp
most of the night and may allow diseases to attack. However, the
benefits of watering can offset the threat of disease attack. Water
lawns so that moisture penetrates at least a couple of inches. Hint!
Lawns use about 1½ inches of water per week. The best results are
obtained by replacing this amount of water through frequent
watering. Cans placed in the irrigation zone can be used to measure
the amount of water. If there is no significant rain in about three
weeks, a dormant lawn should receive a soaking watering. The
objective is not to revive the dormant plants, but to re-hydrate the
roots and crowns. Without this moisture, the grass plants may not
recover from dormancy.
Shrubs
Lawn sprinklers generally should not be used to water
shrubs. Contrary to popular belief, wetting the leaves and stems
increases the humidity only for several minutes. Wetting the foliage
can also encourage disease infection. The best method of watering
shrubs is to direct a stream of water near the base of plants until
soil is moistened to a depth of 6 to 8 inches. Heavy, infrequent
watering of shrubs could promote deeper root development. Directing
streams of water at the foliage can dislodge insects such as aphids
and spider mites, which tend to build up during drought conditions.
Otherwise, it is not advisable to wet plant foliage when irrigating.
Trees
Unless they're allowed to operate for many hours, lawn
sprinklers do not water trees. Water small trees by allowing a hose
to run near the base until the soil is saturated. Water large trees
by allowing the hose to run water at various locations staggered
around the drip line (the ends of branches) for several hours.
During drought, large trees should require watering only every three
to four weeks. As with shrubs, do not wet the foliage of trees
except to dislodge large populations of insects.
Caution
Even during drought conditions, recently planted trees and
shrubs can be over-watered. If your soil is clay, water can drain
slowly from the planting holes. Frequent, soaking watering can flood
the developing root zone and damage the developing root system by
displacing oxygen with water. Plants that are drowning can develop
symptoms similar to drought stressed plants. Hint! You can check the
root zone moisture by probing the soil with a metal rod or pipe.
This process is similar to checking a baking cake for excessive
moisture with a toothpick.
Additional Assistance
For additional assistance on yard and garden plant care and
pest management, call the MSU Extension - Oakland County, Gardening
Hotline at 248-858-0902.
Edited by Greg Patchan, Horticulture Agent, MSU
Extension - Oakland County, from MSU publications.
Salt Injury to Landscape Plants
Over the past 40 years, amounts of salt used for deicing roadways
in winter have increased with greater traffic flow and growing
concern for public safety. On heavily traveled highways, 40-80 tons
of salt per lane mile per year may be applied. Most people are only
too aware of the corrosive effects of salt on automobiles and road
surfaces. In addition, salt injures many plants growing along
roadsides. The following information describes the nature and
symptoms of salt injury to plants and suggests measures to minimize
it.
What Is Deicing Salt?
Most deicing salt is unrefined rock salt containing about 98.5%
sodium chloride, 1.2% calcium sulfate, 0.1% magnesium chloride, and
0.2% rock. In some cases, a trace (0.02%) of sodium ferro-cyanate
may be used as an anticaking agent. Calcium chloride is applied to
roads alone or in addition to rock salt when extremely low
temperatures are expected. Calcium chloride is 8 times more
expensive than rock salt, however, and is used sparingly. Unless
otherwise specified, the term salt as used in this bulletin refers
to rock salt (sodium chloride).
How Does Salt Injure Plants?
Salt causes plant injury if it accumulates to excessive amounts
in soil near the root system. This frequently happens when
salt-laden snow is plowed off of streets and sidewalks and onto
adjacent landscapes.
Anyone who has tried to get table salt out of a wet shaker knows
that salt readily absorbs water. Rock salt exhibits the same
property in the soil, and it absorbs much of the water that would
normally be available to roots. Thus, even though soil moisture is
plentiful, high amounts of salt can result in a drought-like
environment for plants.
When salt dissolves in water, sodium and chloride ions separate,
and the chloride ions are readily absorbed by roots. These ions are
carried through the sap stream to actively growing portions such as
leaf margins and shoot tips where they accumulate to toxic levels.
In leaves, this toxic buildup results in a characteristic marginal
scorch.
Excess sodium in soil decreases plant health and vigor in several
ways. High amounts of sodium cause soil to lose its capacity to
aggregate into clumps and it easily becomes compacted. Thus, access
to water and oxygen is severely restricted, and roots cannot
function to their full potential.
Besides restricting the amount of water and oxygen available to
plants, excess sodium also obstructs the availability of important
nutrients. Most plants only need a small amount of sodium in order
to survive. They need considerably larger amounts of magnesium and
potassium. All three of these elements use the same chemical route,
a shuttle system of sorts, to move from the soil into the plant.
Excessive sodium from dissolved salt can tie up the shuttle system
and restrict uptake of magnesium and potassium, two chemicals that
are essential for making chlorophyll. Potassium deficiencies, in
particular, are common in plants suffering from salt injury.
When salt is deposited on plants by spray from passing cars and
trucks, salt may enter plant cells or the spaces between cells
directly. One result of salt application by this route is that buds
and small twigs of some plant species lose cold hardiness and are
more likely to be killed by freezing.
In addition to the direct effects that salt has on plant growth,
affected plants also suffer reduced vigor. They are more susceptible
to attack by insect pests and diseases and are more sensitive to
other adverse environmental factors such as drought and air
pollution.
Symptoms of Salt Injury
Symptoms of excessive salt resemble those caused by drought or
root injury. Stunted, yellow foliage, premature autumn leaf
coloration, death of leaf margins (scorch), and twig dieback are
common. When conifers are injured by winter deposits of salt spray,
the affected foliage turns yellow or brown in early spring. If spray
is the primary means of salt deposit, discolored needles are soon
masked by the new year's growth. However, if salt is also excessive
in the soil, the new needles may die as chloride ions accumulate in
them. This could be lethal to the entire plant if it happens for
several consecutive years.
One characteristic of salt injury that aids in diagnosis is that
it is often confined to branches facing the road. Trees closer to
the road suffer more damage than those set farther back.
How Can Salt Damage Be Prevented?
If salt were not used to deice roads in winter, salt damage to
plants would be minimal. However, the expense of this solution in
terms of human life and safety precludes it. (One might also
speculate on the number of roadside plants killed or maimed by
errant, skidding vehicles during a snow storm.) Thus, the problem is
one of adapting to an undesirable but necessary circumstance.
Calcium chloride is reported to be less toxic than sodium
chloride. However, serious problems with the handling and storing of
calcium chloride preclude its use by many road maintenance agencies.
Foremost among these is that calcium chloride absorbs moisture and
cakes even more readily than sodium chloride. It must be kept
absolutely dry until use, or it will plug conventional application
equipment. Calcium chloride is also much more expensive than sodium
chloride -- a limiting factor for many agencies with restricted
road-clearing budgets.
In many cases, sand, light gravel, or cinders provide adequate
traction for pedestrian and vehicular traffic. These materials are
being used with increasing frequency in place of or in combination
with salt to minimize plant injury.
Late-season salt applications (after March 1 ) are most
detrimental to vegetation and should be kept to a minimum. That time
of year is when plants are breaking dormancy and their roots are
actively absorbing nutrients and water from the soil to provide an
adequate supply for the soon-to-follow new leaves. Toxic chloride
ions, which are usually leached from soil rapidly, are most likely
absorbed at this time.
Avoid piling salt and snow around plants or in places where the
resulting salt water will drain into plants when the snow melts. If
weather permits, it is a good idea to flush the area around roots
exposed to salt with fresh tap or well water as soon as the snow
melts. The root zone area on young trees is approximately equal to
the area contained within the dripline of the crown. On older trees,
it may be twice as large.
Where new trees and shrubs are to be planted and where exposure
to salt is likely, select species or cultivars resistant to salt
injury (see listing). This list was compiled from a number of
sources, and tolerance testing was not uniform. Tolerance varies
with many factors, including exposure, soil texture, and plant age.
Thus, the list should be used only as a guide. Intolerant species
should not be planted within 30 feet of roads or on slopes below
roadbeds. Some injury may still occur on moderately tolerant and
tolerant species along heavily salted roads.
Proper planting is important when attempting to establish trees
or shrubs along often-salted roads. Newly planted trees are under
some stress as a result of the transplanting process itself and are
less able to cope with external factors (such as salt) until new
roots are established. The well created by settling of new
transplants is an excellent place for salty water from melting snow
to accumulate. Such wells should be leveled as soon as new
transplants become established.
Tolerances of Plants to Deicing Salt
Acer platanoides (Norway maple)
Aesculus hippocastanum (Horse chestnut)
Betula alleghaniensis (Yellow birch)
B. Ienta (Cherry birch)
B. papyrifera (Paper birch)
B. populifolia (Gray birch)
Caragana arborescens (Siberian pea tree)
Elaeagnus angustifolia (Russian olive)
Fraxinus americana (White ash)
Gleditsia triacanthos (Honey locust)
Larix decidua (European larch)
L. Ieptolepis (Japanese larch)
Lonicera tatarica 'Zabelii' (Zabel's honeysuckle)
L. xylosteum (European fly honeysuckle)
Parthenocissus quinquefolia (Virginia creeper)
Picea glauca (White spruce)
P. pungens (Colorado blue spruce)
Pinus mugo (Mugo pine)
P. nigra (Austrian pine)
P. ponderosa (Ponderosa pine)
Populus acuminata
P. alba (White poplar)
P. balsamifera (Balsam poplar)
P. deltoides (Cottonwood)
P. grandidentata (Big tooth aspen)
P. nigraP. nigra 'Italica' (Lombardy poplar)
P. tremuloides (Trembling aspen)
Potentilla fruticosa ' Jackmani i ' (Jackman's potentilla)
Quercus alba (White oak)
Q. macrocarpa (Bur oak)
Q. rubra (Red oak)
Ribes alpinum (Alpine current)
Robinia pseudoacacia (Black locust)
Rosa rugosa (Rugosa rose)
Salix fragilis
S. viminalis (Common osier)
Shepherdia argentea (Buffaloberry)
Spirea X Vanhouttei (Vanhoutte's spirea)
Symphoricarpus albus var. La evigatus (Garden snowberry)
Tamarix pentandra (Fiuestamen tamarisk) Ulmus glabra (Wych elm)
Moderate Tolerance
Acer ginnala (Amur maple)
A. negudo (Boxelder)
A. saccharinum (Silver maple)
Alnus glutinosa (Black alder)
Fraxinus pennsylvanica (Green ash)
Juniperus virginiana (Red cedar)
Pinus sylvestris (Scots pine)
Prunus serotina (Black cherry)
Rhus glabra (Smooth sumac)
Salix alba (White willow)
S. pentandra (Laurel-leaf willow)
Spirea bumalda 'Froebeli' (Froebel's spirea)
Synnga vulgaris (Common lilac)
Thuia occidentalis (Eastern white cedar)
Ulmus amencana (American elm)
Low Tolerance
Acer rubrum (Red maple)
A. saccharum (Sugar maple)
Alnus rugosa (Smooth alder)
Abies balsamea (Balsam fir)
Carpinus caroliniana (American hornbeam)
Carya ovata (Shagbark hickory)
Celtis occidentalis (Hackberry)
Cornus stolonifera (Red Osier dogwood)
C. stolonifera 'Flaviramea' (Yellow-twig dogwood)
Euonymus alatus (Winged euonymus)
Juglans nigra (Black walnut)
Ligustrum vu/gare (Common privet)
Malus 'Hopa' (Hopa crabapple)
Picea abies (Norway spruce)
Pinus resinosa (Red pine)
P. strobus (White pine)
Pseudotsuga menziesii (Douglas fir)
Sambucus racemosa (European red elder)
Tilia americana (American linden)
Tsuga canadensis (Eastern hemlock)
Viburnum trilobum (American highbush cranberry)
Written by: George Hudler, Cornell University,
Information Bulletin 169
Prepared and edited by: Greg Patchan, Horticulture
Agent, Michigan State University Extension, Oakland County
Michigan State University Extension is an
Affirmative Action, Equal Opportunity Institution. Michigan State
University Extension programs and materials are available to all
without regard to race, color, national origin, sex, disability,
age, or religion.
Soil Test, Don't Guess
Soil testing is crucial to growing healthy plants and protecting
the environment. A soil test will determine the nutrient content of
your soil and other conditions and will produce a specific
fertilization program for your soil and plants.
From Saturday, March 31 through Sunday, April 15, you can obtain
a Michigan State University Soil Test by bringing 2 cups of soil to
participating retailers. For a list of participating retailers and
additional information about soil testing check
www.landscape.org. Each test is $12. A separate test is required
for different gardening sites or soil management plans. Each sample
should be composed of at least 6 sub-samples taken from normal
rooting depth, lawns about 2-4 inches deep, gardens 2-6 inches deep.
Do not include roots or other plant material. Mix the sub-sample in
a clean pail to obtain the final sample. Samples will be processed
by the MSU Lab and the recommendations returned to you by mail
through your county MSU Extension office.
For additional information, call the MSU Garden Hotline at
248-858-0902 or MSU Extension, Oakland County, at 248-858-0880.
