All the deciduous leaves have tumbled down,
It is starkly bare around the town,
Or in the late autumn woodland and garden.
How then to ecologically avoid wastage
Of this natural, God given gift of leaves in your garden?
The Council street sweepers bag many leaves.
You could ask their permission to make use of these
Freely given leaves to be taken away.
You can easily make leaf mould for a later display,
Or of course, if you are fortunate sufficiently
To own a garden with plenty of trees,
You already have a ready made supply,
Adding these to grass cuttings to increase the nutrient content.
Let us make the most of all nature gifts us,
Recycling the leaves to make valuable compost.
An excellent mulch and perfect soil conditioner
Leaf mould offers a good top dressing material,
Plus being a beneficial winter soil warmer,
Once the leaves are sufficiently rotted into a crumbly, black mixture.
Gathering soft flimsy, deciduous leaves allows the rotting down
To be a quicker, easier purpose than with thicker leaves.
For example, sycamore or robust horse chestnut leaves
Take possibly two years or more to rot down.
Shred the evergreen leaves and scatter pine needles around shrubs.
To make best use of leaf fall in autumn,
You may set up a compost clump hidden away, out of sight,
Or you may use a compost bin for the gift of leaves,
Or even a black bin liner with holes pricked in.
Or a net of wire rolled securely into a cylinder will suffice, Then the Creator of garden ecology will begin!
It may be time about now to see exactly the result
Of last year’s full bin or compost heap piled high.
Any food hungry soil will be truly grateful
To have a layer of nourishment spread upon it.
The dark, crumbly goodness is God’s gift of leaves,
Beautiful hanging upon the trees decoratively,
But usefully gathered up as a crop when fallen.
The best foliage when fallen, breaking down rapidly
With little assistance, are the oak, beech and hornbeam. Gathering fallen leaves to make leaf mould wastes nothing, Surely this is pleasing to our wise Creator?
He who thinks of everything, following the autumn leaf fall
- Which with a warmer climate, seems to be happening later
So you may have to wait until November
When a storm or hard frost will denude the trees –
When this gift is carefully raked up for further use,
Will be pleased at the efforts gardeners make
Not to waste a natural product, but to gather a precious harvest.
But then the Lord God, our Father Creator,
Ever did make the best out of all aspects of life.
The rest He then allows us to take charge of.
Therefore whatever the size or shape of leaf,
With some attention given to its texture, once dry, crispy and fallen,
Be sure to gather according to a good plan.
Collect fallen leaves to compost for free goodness.
Note the hand of the Lord God in this, now in November,
And remember to offer thanks for this top quality soil conditioner.
Offer thanks for the mulch which feeds the soil, suppresses weeds,
Whilst giving thanks too for this soil improver.
Packed with nutrients, it improves the water holding properties,
Of any thin, sandy soil, whilst breaking up cloggy clay.
Be assured of God’s wisdom, as clearly He thinks of everything.
Leaves difficult to collect because they have fallen into borders,
Will eventually break down naturally and then,
O how magnificently, be pulled into the soil by worms!
Worms eat and secrete leaves to benefit the garden.
Whereas leaves fallen under shrubs, hedges and around edges,
Are another of God’s gift of fallen leaves,
Creating snug hideaways for hibernating mammals and amphibians.
Is not our Creator Father truly amazing!
Count on the glories of fallen leaves and you will be in no doubt.
As the garden makes itself ready for winter dormancy,
The leaves fall down from deciduous trees to make ground cover.
Remember to rake them up, especially from off the lawn,
Where a layer of leaves yellow the grass,
Due to fungal diseases and lack of light.
Thank goodness for the insight to how what to do
That efficiency shines through the task.
And if anybody asks ‘How?’ the answer is easy:
Rake up the gift of leaves, this will please your garden!
Lord, You designed all of life. Leaves are both beautiful and useful. Thank You for the care with which You create life. Amen.
25.11.20
Sue O’Donnell