Protecting Plants from Snow and Ice
By


You spend a lot of time attending to
your landscape plants throughout the warm months of the
year, it shouldn't be any different during the cold months.
Don't assume trees and
shrubs automatically take care of
themselves through the winter. Many landscape plants
can
tolerate cold but they can’t sustain the weight of ice and
snow on their branches. Any plant that has leaves during the
winter can suffer from drying winds. Because snow and
ice and winds, can cause significant damage to trees and
plants, it's important to take a
few extra steps to protect
landscape plants, trees and shrubs from winter's icy touch.
Here are a few tips for protecting your plants from snow and ice:
1. When removing snow from
driveways and walkways you want to make sure you don't
pile
the snow on your plants. Place posts, reflectors or
mark your plant somehow so you
can remember where they are
under a blanket of snow.
2. Take your hands and gently
remove settling snow away from plants and tree branches.
Using your hands is the best way to keep from injuring your
plant. Don't try to use a
shovel or some other object,
that is how plants sustain most damage.
3. Tie branches together that
may be susceptible to snow loads. If you have a naturally
leaning tree consider how you can tie it to a larger tree,
make sure you have padding for
the rope where it circles the
tree.
4. After the soil has sufficiently cooled, place mulch around perennials to add a little extra protection for winter. Be careful not to mulch too early as this will delay dormancy.
5. When using salt on sidewalks
or driveways, keep in mind that when mixed with snow
and
slush piles around plants, salt can seep into soil and harm
roots. Avoid piling salty
snow near plants or on lawns. If
this isn't possible, try using an environmentally safe salt
such as calcium chloride.
6. Construct a barrier to protect evergreens if they are exposed to high concentrations of salt spray from roads. Treated or synthetic burlap or canvas mounted on snow fencing makes a sturdy screening device.
7. Evergreens transpire water
even in winter. On sunny windy days when the ground is
frozen, the plants roots can't replace moisture loss. You
can make a wind screen for plants using wooden stakes and a
large piece of cloth or plastic stapled to the stakes. The
screen does not have to encircle the plant completely, but
only break the force of the prevailing wind. Also, water
evergreen plants in mid winter on a day when the
temperatures are
above freezing.

If your efforts fail and your plants
suffer some damage, all is not lost. Drooping limbs can
be
propped up, fallen trees can sometimes be pulled upright.
Dried out plants sometimes sprout back from their roots.
Many times, the best advice after a winter storm has wreaked
havoc is to simply wait and see. Spring will come eventually
and an evaluation of what
should be done can be made then.
Don’t be in a rush to prune or discard plants that show
major damage. It is amazing what a plant can do to
rejuvenate itself in only one growing season.



