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The end of winter marks the beginning of the crucial spring yard care season. This final winter yard cleanup is the essential step to revitalize your landscape, fix winter damage, and set your lawn and garden up for a vibrant growing season. This is where you address the effects of cold, ice, and snow. In this Redfin article, we’ll help you prep your home in Bangor, ME or Evanston, IL, to start the next season right, ready for a beautiful yard.
The importance of post-winter cleanup
It is important to focus on winter yard cleanup once the snow has melted. The spring cleanup is your first opportunity to assess and repair the damage done by winter’s freeze-thaw cycles and heavy snow loads. Raking away matted grass and debris removes the conditions that encourage snow mold and turf disease. By acting proactively, you prevent minor winter stress from turning into major problems that compromise your lawn’s health all summer.
For homeowners, a prompt and thorough cleanup maximizes curb appeal as soon as the weather breaks. A lush, well-defined yard offers an instant boost to your home’s aesthetic and value, an important detail as the busy spring real estate market approaches.
Essential steps for your spring yard preparation
The transition from winter to spring requires a shift from protection to renewal. Your winter yard cleanup should be methodical, focusing on getting your yard ready for spring by repairing damage and stimulating growth.
Assess and clear the lawn
Wait until the ground is dry enough to walk on without leaving deep footprints before starting your lawn maintenance checklist. Start by lightly raking your entire lawn. This process, often called dethatching, pulls up the dead layer of compressed grass and debris. This matted material is a barrier that prevents sunlight and oxygen from reaching the soil. Removing it encourages air circulation, helping your lawn breathe and dry out, which is vital for preventing fungus.
Prune and revitalize plantings
Inspect all trees and shrubs carefully. Use sharp shears to remove any broken, split, or dead branches that may have been damaged by ice or snow. For perennials and ornamental grasses that were left standing for winter interest, now is the time to cut them back. Trimming away old growth clears space for new shoots and improves the overall shape of the plant. Avoid pruning early spring flowering shrubs like lilacs and forsythia until after they have bloomed.
Address soil and fertilize
Preparing your lawn for a healthy spring requires a focused approach, especially after the freeze-thaw cycles of winter have compacted the soil. Michelle Woodard of Lawn & Irrigation Technologies NW provides a practical approach:
“Start the season with a gentle cleanup: remove debris and lightly rake matted grass to improve airflow without damaging new growth. Test your soil early to understand its pH and nutrient levels, and address compaction with core aeration before applying a thin layer of compost and a balanced, slow-release fertilizer once the lawn has broken dormancy. Repair winter damage by overseeding thin or bare spots and keeping the soil consistently moist until seedlings are established. Refresh landscape beds by pruning winter-damaged branches and applying 2–3 inches of mulch, keeping it clear of plant stems and trunks. Finally, avoid common setbacks by not fertilizing too early, waiting until soil is dry before heavy work, and mowing slightly higher with sharp blades to promote deeper roots and thicker turf.”
Freshen up flower beds
Define the edges of your garden beds using a sharp spade or edger tool. This small step instantly makes the yard look professionally maintained. Once the beds are cleared of any winter debris, apply a fresh, thin layer of mulch. Mulch should be applied two to three inches deep, keeping it away from the base of trees and shrub trunks to prevent rot. This layer helps the soil retain moisture as temperatures rise and keeps weeds from taking hold early in the season.
Remove invasive species
As Emily (Em) Lessard of The Plant Native states, “One of the most important things you can do in late winter is remove invasive plants before they leaf out and take over in spring. Cut invasive vines like English ivy and Chinese or Japanese wisteria back to the ground, and dig up the roots so they don’t come back. Remove invasive shrubs like burning bush and butterfly bush before they bloom (I know, it’s a shock! Butterfly bush is invasive in many states). Bag everything in contractor bags and put it in the trash, not the compost. Then get excited to plant something new and native in their place this spring.”
Final Thoughts: After winter care
Nick Tarlowski, residential account manager of Summit Lawns, offers a concise breakdown of the process:
“For us in the Midwest, the standard spring clean-up is pretty simple: Blow out all remaining leaves from gardens and beds into the lawn. Use mowers to grind up and bag the leaves to take away or compost. Cut back any tall grasses or soft plants that need dead material removed for spring growth. Prune dead wood from roses to help them pop when spring arrives, and basically clean up any debris/branches and clutter from the lawn that could hinder grass growth. Consider using steel blade edgers to set concrete edges, so weekly trimming looks nice and sharp with little effort, and try to the concrete every month during the year and trim vertically once a week.”
“The application of a good pre-emergent will help the lawn stay weed-free for two to three months in the spring when crabgrass and foxtail like to germinate. Post-emergent weed spraying can knock these weeds out if any break through the pre-emergent barrier, but it’s best to prevent them before they get a foothold in your lawn. There’s a lot of other things you can do to make your landscaping pop — bed preparation, mulch installation, hardscaping projects — but at a minimum, you want debris cleaned up, soft plants cut back, and pre-emergent put down to keep the weeds out.”
Frequently asked questions: Post-winter yard cleanup
When is the best time to start spring cleanup?
You should start your winter yard cleanup as soon as the snow has completely melted and the ground is firm enough to walk on without causing soil compaction. For most regions, this is in early to mid-spring.
Should I use fertilizer during my spring cleanup?
Yes, applying a spring fertilizer after your cleanup helps provide the nutrients needed for new growth. Look for a balanced fertilizer that promotes shoot and root development. Apply it when the grass is beginning to show signs of greening.
What is the best way to handle winter-killed plants?
If a plant is clearly dead and shows no signs of life, it should be removed. For plants that are partially damaged, cut the stems back to just above a healthy bud or a point where you see new green growth. This allows the plant to focus energy on recovery.
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