5 Reasons to Never Cut Back Your Garden in Fall

Here’s why you should wait to clean up your garden until spring.

Traditional garden management has dictated a fall clean up of planting beds as a way to tidy and prepare for spring. However, this approach can actually create more overall work for you and has several environmental downsides. Leaving your plants standing is a big part of rethinking how we can tend a more sustainable landscape in autumn and all year round. Here are five reasons why you shouldn’t cut back your garden in fall and what to do instead.



<p>Laurie Black</p>
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Benefits of Not Cutting Back Plants in Fall

Waiting until spring to do your garden clean up has several advantages for both you and the larger ecosystem.

1. Free Plants

If you allow desirable species to self sow and fill in, you’ll get free plants that can cover the ground and combat weeds, increase soil moisture, reduce erosion, improve soil, and so much more. If you cut down and clean up flower heads in fall, you’ll lose that free source of seeds. Of course, you may want to deadhead aggressive plants that are too prolific, but if that’s the case, removing and replacing that plant altogether may be the lower-maintenance option for you in the long run.

2. Supporting Wildlife

Those flower heads filled with seeds are bird food in winter. No need to stock a bird feeder when you have lots and lots of plants with lots and lots of seed heads, as well as the seeds that fall to the ground to forage. Leaving plants standing until spring also gives birds cover from predators and shelter during winter storms, not to mention other wildlife who need the same protection.

Tips

Don’t worry about seeds from your plants attracting vermin. These types of animals don’t eat seeds; they prefer food waste in our trash.

3. Flood Control

Standing plant stems and grasses hold a decent amount of moisture in winter. If your neighborhood is prone to urban flooding, leaving your plants standing keeps more rainfall (or snowfall) from quickly running off because all that plant material holds onto the moisture. Shrubs and trees provide the same benefit. The more leaf and stem mass you have, the less water will be flooding off all the hard urban surfaces that can’t absorb precipitation.

Related: 8 Things You Should Always Do in Your Yard After It Rains

4. Natural Snow Fence

Piggybacking off the benefit of reducing water runoff, plants left standing act as a snow fence to reduce drifting across sidewalks, roads, and driveways. This also helps to gather more snow around the plants, which in turn insulates roots during really cold spells. And then those drifts will hydrate soil during the spring melt.

5. Winter Interest

Brown is a color, too, and old stems and flower heads can be very architectural in the doldrums of winter. Consider how to design and plan for winter interest, learning to savor the many hues of brown and black, copper and umber in the landscape. Once you do, you’ll never want to cut back a perennial plant or ornamental grass again.

Tips

Do cut back diseased plant material in fall and properly dispose of it (don’t compost). Removing this plant material helps slow the spread of fungi, bacteria, and viruses among your plants the following year, and can help reduce pest issues too.

When to Cut Back Your Garden

So, when should you cut back your perennials and ornamental grasses? In spring you might see social media posts saying to wait until daytime temperatures reach 50°F, but that’s not quite accurate. Studies have found that it’s the soil temperature, not the air temperature that matters.

Once soil temperatures stay at or above 50°F, microbial activity increases in the soil and plants and many creatures (e.g. overwintering insects, spiders, and frogs) start to wake up and become active.

In some areas of the country, the soil may become warm enough around tax time in April, or when fruit trees bloom, or when the lawn needs consistent mowing. But with climate change and variable weather patterns in the mix, it’s tough to pinpoint the exact moment when you should cut back your garden in spring.

A soil thermometer is an inexpensive way to gauge when to get out your pruning shears. Or, most states offer soil temperature readings and maps to help farmers know the best time to plant. Check with your local land-grant public university programs for this information. The National Weather Service also supplies a map on its website.

Related: 12 Perennials to Cut Back in Fall



<p>Susan Gilmore</p>
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How to Cut Back Plants (or Not)

When you do cut back your perennial plants in spring, use pruning shears to cut stems back to the ground. Or you can use a string trimmer, hedge trimmer, or mulching mower depending on the site, plant density, and types of plants. You may find that in some areas of your landscape you don’t need to cut down plants in spring at all because winter snows have flattened or broken stems. You can let old stems and leaves stay where they have fallen in your garden beds to act as free mulch.

Tips

If you choose to mulch mow a small backyard meadow or other area where you want plants to self sow more, raking up and removing the cut material every 2 years is a good idea to allow more sunlight to hit the soil to help seeds germinate.

Related: The 7 Best Lawn Mowers of 2024 to Keep Your Yard Tidy, According to Testing

Plants to Always Leave Standing

The dry stems of some native perennial plants make superb nesting habitat for the 25% of native bee species that nest in cavities. The following species are often quite active in spring through midsummer for various bee species:

Leaving these plants 12-18 inches tall in spring means native bees will have enough material to nest in. Aesthetically, this may bother some people but in a few weeks, new growth will have covered them up.

Autumn in a garden doesn’t have to mean a lot of yard work. With all this in mind, let the garden (and yourself) rest a bit instead. Then you can enjoy the many ecosystem services it will provide for the next several months, from shelter and food for wildlife to reducing snow drifts and urban flooding when soils are frozen and shed water more easily.

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Read the original article on Better Homes & Gardens.