Plants & Gardening

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Garden Stories

Overcoming Winter Scorch

After severe winter weather, gardeners face bigger challenges than usual in the spring, due to a 鈥減erfect storm鈥 of weather conditions that scorch evergreens, protect plant predators, elicit heavy use of road salts, and encourage snow molds. A  scorch or burn can leave patches of brown on arborvitae (Thuja), yews (Taxus), boxwoods (Buxus), and other evergreens. Branch damage from voles and rabbits can also be bad, and heavy and prolonged snow cover can promote snow molds, creating bleached-out patches of lawn. Road salts put additional environmental stress on our landscaping.

Although slow-growing, this boxwood (Buxus microphylla) should make a full recovery.

The bad news is that more plant damage is likely to appear once the weather is consistently warm, though many plants will recover from the long, hard winter. While plants may have to be severely pruned or removed altogether, a polar vortex gives us a few important reminders about growing in the Chicago area and could ultimately make us all better gardeners.

Winter was particularly hard on this Heatherbun white cedar (Chamaecyparis thyoides&苍产蝉辫;鈥楬别补迟丑别谤产耻苍鈥).

During the cold winter months, evergreens continue to lose water vapor through their leaves or needles. The leaves must replace the water by pulling it up from the roots. But when the ground is frozen, the plants鈥 roots cannot absorb water to resupply the leaves.

If the weather turns warm and sunny while the ground is frozen, evaporation from the leaves increases and the water cannot be replaced. The resulting symptoms, discolored or 鈥渂urned鈥 foliage, tend to show up quickly in spring, when days are sunny and warm.

Bright winter sun and strong winds can accelerate evaporation, and it鈥檚 typical to see the worst burning on the west- and south-facing sides of a bush or tree. Signs of winter burn include needles or leaves that have turned golden or brown. Sometimes a plant has an overall yellowish or off-green color. Leaves may appear bleached. Salt sprayed up by passing traffic can exacerbate the problem and accentuate damage on the road-facing side of the plant.

Many evergreens鈥攑articularly fast-growing varieties such as yews鈥攚ill be fine after a light pruning. Deeply scorched plants will require heavy pruning, leaving unsightly 鈥渉oles.鈥 Slower growing evergreens may take years to recover from a severe winter burn, and gardeners must decide on a case-by-case basis whether it鈥檚 best to remove the specimen.

Unfortunately, some evergreens will be a total loss. This is especially true for plants grown at the edge of the hardiness zone. To determine whether a bush is going to make it, look for new buds or lightly scratch a branch to look for signs of green wood. Patience is often a virtue in gardening, so if you have any doubt about a plant鈥檚 viability, give it some time. 

This Emerald Arrow Bosnian pine (Pinus leucodermis 鈥楨merald Arrow鈥) also shows hard winter damage.

The deep drifts of snow and prolonged snow cover are a boon to such plant predators as voles and rabbits. The blanket of snow shield voles, mouse-sized creatures that travel under the snow, from hawks and other predators, leaving the creatures free to gnaw on branches and trunks. The drifts also provide a stepladder for rabbits, which feed on top of the snow, allowing them to reach higher into bushes. Signs of rabbit damage include a 45-degree cut in branches. Severe rabbit damage often looks like a bad pruning job, but gardeners can improve the situation by evening out the bush. Branches that have been girdled鈥攐r chewed all the way around鈥攁re likely to die and should be pruned back.

White drifts can also promote snow molds, which can leave large patches of dead-looking lawn. Typically, lawns will bounce back after raking and light fertilizer. Lawns damaged by salt spray might not recover as quickly, and strips growing along roads might need to be replaced altogether.

Grass showing winter damage will recover fairly quickly with attentive watering and care.

It鈥檚 never good to lose a plant or shrub to the elements, but a polar vortex does provide the type of reality check that can lead to best gardening practices. In a relatively mild winter, Chicago-area gardeners may have success with plants growing at the edge of their hardiness, but these plants can be killed or severely damaged in typical USDA Zone 5 conditions. Perhaps you鈥檒l think twice in the future before putting something less-than-hardy in the garden. Good mulching and watering habits, and planting in the spring to give plants an entire growing season to become established, will increase the vigor of your plants and may help minimize winter burn.

Another virtue of gardening is that it forces you to look forward. So keep the winter's lessons in mind as you clean, prune, maintain, and perhaps replant this spring.

For more information about gardening in winter, go to our free public Plant Information Service: .