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December:

Recycle Your Christmas Tree
Though it may give you the blues to take down your holiday tree, you can find solace in recycling your tree in the landscape. Winter birds will appreciate using the tree for cover in your backyard, especially if you decorate it with bird food ornaments. Be sure to remove tinsel, plastic and other non-recyclable ornaments.

Roadside De-Icing Salts and Ornamental Plants
De-icing salts can save your neck this winter, but they can spell disaster for landscape plants. Whether the salt is sprayed on the plants from passing traffic near the road or is shoveled onto plants near the sidewalk, the salt can cause damage.

Snow Is Good News For Gardeners
Though your aching back may not agree, recent heavy snows actually will be good for your garden. The blanket of snow will provide good insulation from bitter cold temperatures, particularly in light of the extended warm autumn weather that caused some perennials to sprout new growth.

Harvest Holiday Greenery from Your Landscape
Give your home the festive mood of the holidays by bringing a bit of your landscape evergreens indoors. Wreaths, swags, garlands and centerpieces can all be made from plants that are commonly found in the home landscape.

Mistletoe
Mistletoe is the common name for shrubs in the Viscaceae family, most of which are parasitic. The ancients considered the plants to be mystical because mistletoe would suddenly appear in trees and did not have roots. They did not realize that fruit-eating birds distributed mistletoe seed by rubbing their beaks against the trees and via their droppings.

Holiday Greens (PDF)
You can say "Happy Holidays" with evergreen decorations you make yourself! Enhance your indoor or outdoor holiday decor or make attractive gifts. Wreaths, swags, balls, garlands, and table arrangements can all be made at home with a few simple materials and the following tips.

Living Christmas Trees for the Holidays and Beyond (PDF)
Living Christmas trees (roots and soil) are purchased for indoor enjoyment during the holidays and for outdoor enjoyment as landscape trees when the holidays are over. Purchasing a living tree and successfully establishing it in the landscape can make holiday memories live on as the tree grows each year. But success requires advanced planning and preparation.

Fall Needle Drop of Pine
Every year in late summer and fall, the PPDL receives several calls about conifers that appear to be dying. Clients complain that the inner foliage of affected trees turns yellow then brown, followed by the affected needles falling from the branches. There is no cause for alarm, however – this is a condition called normal fall needle drop.

 

 


Story Resources

After the Storm; Garden and Landscape Triage

FNR-FAQ-12-W PDF, "Storms and Trees"

FNR-FAQ-13-W PDF, "Why Hire An Arborist?"

HO-140-W Fertilizing Woody Plants (PDF)

Flooding and Trees

For More Information on Flooding and Trees

Understanding the Effects of Flooding on Trees

Flooding and Its Effects on Trees (USDA Forest Service)

Pruning Ornamental Trees and Shrubs (PDF)

Pruning Tool Should Fit the Job

Additional Resources

Trees of Purdue

Consumer Horticulture - Purdue University

Extension Entomology

 
   

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