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Proper Pruning & Tree Care Newsletters & Tips

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Ice-Covered Trees Hide Hazards Beyond the Obvious

The Science of Autumn Beauty

The Battle of Trees Versus Turf

Bare Trees Prime for Pruning

Fire Blight Disease

Top 10 Myths of Tree Care

Helping Trees Through the Chills of Winter

Summer Tips to Nurture Nature in Your Own Backyard

Clearing Snow And Ice Can Cause Damage To Your Tree

Live Trees Ideal for Late Holiday Decorating

Preventing Storm Damage to Trees

Careful Planning, Gradual Pruning Essential for Flowering Trees

Winter Tree Care Tips for Homeowners

Apple Tree Pruning

Winter Tree Care: Cold Stress, Branch Breakage

Forest Fire Protection

Established Tree Care

Clearing Snow And Ice Can Cause Damage To Your Trees

The winter season often brings heavy snowfall and/or ice which makes the clearing of roadways necessary. Salt is great for clearing roads, driveways, and sidewalks of ice and snow; however, a good thing for streets and walkways can be downright rotten for your trees, according to the tree experts at the International Society of Arboriculture (ISA).

"Excessive exposure to salt can cause widespread damage to your trees, leading to permanent decline and sometimes death," said Jim Skiera, Executive Director of the ISA. "The problem with salt damage is that it might not show up on your trees until summer, when deicing salt is the last culprit you would suspect."

To minimize the damage done to trees by deicing salts, Certified Arborists at ISA offer the following tips:

1. Use less salt. Mix deicing salt with abrasives such as sand, cinders, and ash, or use alternatives such as calcium magnesium acetate and calcium chloride.

2. Protect your trees from salt trucks on the street. If possible, set up barriers between the street and your trees to keep salt spray from hitting tree trunks.

3. Plant salt-resistant trees. Trees such as the sycamore maple, white spruce, willow, and birch tend to be more salt-resistant than other species. How well they fare varies from climate to climate across the country.

4. Improve soil drainage. Add organic matter to your soil to help filter salt deposits.

You can also keep your trees healthy by taking care of their basic needs. Other tips that will help combat damage that deicing salt may otherwise do:

  • Irrigate to flush the salts from the soils in spring
  • Mulch sufficiently to reduce water loss.
  • Control pest infestations and destructive tree diseases.

If in doubt, contact a local ISA Certified Arborist in your area.

© International Society of Arboriculture

Contact the ISA-Certified Arborists on staff at the Johnson Tree Company for additional advice.

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