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PAG E 2 <br />SUSTAINABILITY NEWSLETTER <br />Fall yard care tips for pollinators, water quality, and more <br />The leaves are falling, and soon many species of pollinators will be looking for <br />places to nest over the winter. If you have a yard, there are many ways you can <br />help them hibernate safely, and help set up your yard for a productive spring! <br />Drought <br />After a record -breaking rainy summer, most of Minnesota is now experiencing <br />moderate drought conditions. Our trees are especially stressed, between a dry <br />winter, soggy summer and spring, and now back to persistent drought. Give your <br />trees and plants a boost by getting the sprinkler out a few times for them before <br />the first frost. <br />Photo by Bruno Guerrero on Unsplash Leaf care <br />• Leave some areas of leaf litter in areas protected by wind, where pollinators <br />and other creatures will shelter for the winter. <br />• If you have heavy leaf cover on your yard after the trees drop their leaves, it's a good idea to remove the <br />leaves, as it can smother the lawn. <br />• Lighter leaf cover can be mulched by a mower. Mulching makes it easier for the pieces of leaves to <br />remain on the grass and decompose, providing nutrients and keeping leaves out of our local waterways. <br />• Keep leaves out of the street) Dead leaves are high in nutrients, and when they oversaturate our lakes <br />and ponds in Roseville, the excess nutrients create algal blooms that threaten fish and invertebrates. <br />• Remove leaves the old-fashioned way (with a rake), or try an electric leaf blower) Gas -powered <br />landscaping tools are run by motors that lack catalytic converters, which are installed on automobiles to <br />help neutralize some of their pollution — a California Air Resources Board study found that using a gas <br />leaf blower for one hour emitted the equivalent amount of air pollution as driving a Toyota Camry 1,100 <br />miles. <br />Flowerbeds <br />Leave some seed heads and stems standing! Stems provide places for cavity -nesting pollinators to <br />overwinter, and birds and other critters will snack on the additional seeds when food is scarce over the <br />winter. <br />Garden beds are a great place to leave extra leaf litter, which acts as both a natural mulch and fertilizer <br />for your plants. <br />Lawn <br />• Fall is a great time to over -seed your lawn with additional grass seed, or even better, native prairie seed <br />mixes. <br />• Avoid use of fertilizer on your lawn, or choose zero -phosphorus fertilizers. Excess nutrients from <br />fertilizers are one major reason why we see algae blooms on our lakes and ponds in Roseville. <br />Yard Waste <br />Keep lawn clippings and leaves out of streets and storm drains) <br />ADOPT <br />When decomposing plants and leaves get into storm drains, it <br />leads to harmful algae blooms in our local ponds and wetlands. <br />A STO R M <br />Adopt a drain to keep our waterways clean) Use a broom or leaf <br />blower to brush grass clippings back into your yard, or if you <br />D R A I N <br />have large amounts of clippings and leaves, bring them to <br />Roseville's leaf recycling center from October 7—November 27. <br />Page 16 of 78 <br />