Does My Tree Need
Deep Root Feeding?
Trees
growing in their natural habitat should have access to all of the
minerals they need to survive and grow. Anything you can do to mimic
that habitat can reduce the need for fertilizer. This may include
letting leaves remain on the ground in the fall instead of raking
them up. Chances are, though, that despite your best efforts, the
need for fertilizer will not be entirely eliminated.
When Should I Fertilize
My Tree?
A good time to fertilize
trees in most Northern temperate climates is from fall to mid-spring.
At these times the tree's roots take the nutrients from the soil and
apply them to important health-promoting functions such as root development
and disease resistance, rather than simply putting out new growth.
During the growing season,
fertilizing can help a tree overcome mineral deficiencies and fight
off infections. If you are fertilizing in mid- to late summer, avoid
formulations high in nitrogen as this will just promote weak, new
growth that may be easily damaged in the winter.
Deep root fertilizing is
a process in which a large spike is plunged into the tree’s
root ball and fertilizer is pressure pumped through the spike into
the soil.
Though any homeowner can
go to a local garden supplier and buy a special attachment for their
hose that will deliver a soluble form of nitrogen to their tree’s
roots, it will not deliver the volume and potency that a professional
rig will. The higher the pressure, the greater the spread of nutrients
throughout the root system.
Deep root feeding has been
shown by University studies to increase the growth rate of trees by
20% or more by supplying all the nutrients the tree will need for
healthy growth.
Root feeding strengthens
trees and helps the tree to cope with drought. A larger, healthier
root system can draw more water from a greater area.
Deep root feeding is especially
important in the city where there is no new source for nutrients other
than the occasional broken sewer line and in suburbs where leaves
are removed that would normally compost and feed the roots of the
tree.
These applications are
timed for late fall or early spring. It is important to remember that
tree roots remain active until the soil drops below 40-degrees Fahrenheit
-- this is several weeks after the leaves have fallen in the fall,
and a few weeks before they appear in the spring. Deep root feeding
in the spring will encourage tip and leaf growth. Fertilizing in the
fall develops roots.
Have you fed your
trees this year? If not, they may be quite hungry, if not starving.
Trees should be fertilized
in October, or in April as soon as the frost leaves the ground. By
fertilizing in the fall, some of the nutrients will have a chance
to be absorbed by the roots and will already be in the ground when
the roots resume functioning in the spring.
Since we don't see the
roots, we often don't realize that they continue growing and absorbing
nutrients long after the leaves fall, often into December, and begin
work again in the spring before the leaves return. After all, they
must be absorbing nutrients and water to enable the leaves to resume
growth.
A tree may be getting adequate
nutrients from the soil already, but it may benefit from additional
fertilizer to keep it growing at its best. A healthy, vigorous tree
is much less susceptible to attacks from disease, insects, and other
stresses.
The recent ice storm a
few years ago shows the difference between healthy and stressed trees.
One of the hardest cities hit by this storm, Montreal, lost many street
trees to ice damage-- trees stressed by many factors including inadequate
fertility. Trees in the botanic garden, however, were little affected--
trees which had received proper care.
So how do you know if your
trees need fertilizer? A tree may need fertilizer if:
1) it makes very little growth, even though it is established and
there is adequate rainfall;
2) its leaves in midsummer do not have a good green color, but are
yellowish;
3) its leaves gradually become smaller, year after year;
4) its leaves turn to their autumn color and drop in August or early
September.
Trees
benefit from all of the elements, but usually respond more to applications
of nitrogen. Often there is adequate phosphorus in soils from previous
fertility.
Trees planted in a lawn
will benefit from the same fertilizer as put on the lawn, so if you
have fertilized the lawn last spring or early fall, there is probably
no need to fertilize trees planted in it. If not, a complete fertilizer
(one such as 10-10-10 containing nitrogen-phosphorus-potassium), put
on with a fertilizer spreader at 3 or 4 pounds for each 100 square
feet, should be adequate. Just make sure you don't use a lawn fertilizer
containing herbicides for broad-leaved plants. Such fertilizer may
damage or kill your trees.
For trees not planted in
lawns, you may also broadcast fertilizer on the surface. Research
has shown this to be effective, reaching tree roots, even in lawns.
Or you may choose to root feed.
A common method of root feeding for home gardeners is to buy spikes
of tree fertilizer and drive these down into the soil. Another method
is to make holes in the soil with a crowbar, or similar tool, and
pour fertilizer into these holes. Holes should be about 18 inches
deep and 1-1/2 to 2 feet apart. They should start about 6 feet out
from the trunk of older and larger trees, and extend out about 6 feet
beyond the spread of the branches. For younger trees, make holes about
every two to three square feet
For a fertilizer containing 10 percent nitrogen (such as 10-8-6),
use 2 pounds for each inch of trunk diameter, measured at waist height.
So a tree with a 10-inch diameter should receive 20 pounds of fertilizer.
Another method of root feeding is to use a tube you attach to the
hose. On the hose end is a container to add fertilizer tablets. Simply
push into the ground, turn on the water, and the fertilizer solution
is injected into the root zone. Use similar spacing as above. This
is the method usually used by tree care professionals. Such wands
can be found in complete garden centers, and specialty garden supply
catalogs.