KENTUCKY CHRISTMAS TREE PRODUCTION WORKBOOK:
GROUND COVERS
ISSUED: 7-86
REVISED: 8-91
Bonnie L. Appleton; Deborah B. Hill
Christmas trees typically are planted
into the planting site's existing vegetation (rescue, annual and perennial
weeds). While many growers make preplant site preparations such as mowing
or applying herbicides to kill bands or spots of vegetation, the grower
can establish a different cover on the site before planting.
Several factors should help determine
whether the time and money involved in changing the cover are justified.
1.Competitiveness of the existing cover.
Fescue and dense stands of weeds can severely hinder young trees' growth
rate and may cause poor form to develop.
2.Maintenance required by existing
cover. A dense stand of grass and/or weeds may require frequent mowing
and/or use of herbicides.
3.Fertility level and organic matter
content of soil. Sites with low fertility levels and low organic matter
content may greatly reduce the trees' growth rate.
4.Cash crop potential of existing cover.
Evaluate harvesting the cover to increase cash returns from the land (e.g.
pasture grasses and alfalfa). Spacing of tree rows can be changed to allow
more area for an annual cash crop.
5.Earlier tree harvest. Cover crops
that enhance the trees' growth rate may pay for themselves if the trees
can be harvested at least one year earlier.
Thus, a desirable cover is noncompetitive
or minimally competitive for nutrients, light, water and space, requires
little maintenance, returns organic matter and nutrients to the soil, and
has potential as a supplemental or additional cash crop.
Few cover crops have all of these characteristics. Consider the following:
•Wheat. (A combine could be
used while the trees are young if spacing is adequate.)
•Alfalfa. (Could be mowed and
baled as above. Since it is a legume, it will return nitrogen to the soil.)
•Dutch white clover, dwarf sericea
lespedeza, birdsfoot trefoil. (These legumes return nitrogen to the
soil. They require an inoculum at time of planting.)
•Strawberries. (In rows or between
rows. Berries require added maintenance but are a high value cash crop
as U-pick.)
•Vegetables. (As above. Good
potential for farmers' market.)
If you change the vegetative cover,
do all land preparation and seeding or transplanting well before tree planting.
It may be necessary to seed clovers and some of the other legumes either
in combination with benign grasses like red top or bluegrass or at extra
high rates to ensure a complete cover when replacing young rescue. Christmas
tree seedlings should be planted into the new cover, not at the same time
or in advance of the new cover. For example, if you plant a clover crop,
the land should be plowed and disked, and the clover seeded the fall before
spring tree planting.
Another possibility is to use a green
manure crop before planting. A crop such as wheat, soybeans or hybrid sudan
grass can add organic matter to the soil, improve aeration and drainage,
and increase soil moisture retention. This may be particularly important
in heavier soils or ones with high clay content. Christmas trees can then
be planted into a green manure crop under a no-till regime.