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Twenty-some years ago, fresh out of college with a horticulture degree in-hand, I started teaching adult education classes at a local botanic garden. For many years, I taught a class called Preparing Your Garden for the Winter. It was all about how to clean up the garden every fall. I would show slides (remember those?) of how well-kept gardens should look in January. In the images, every plant was cut to the nub, except for the ornamental grasses and butterfly bushes, and the whole garden was snug under a thick layer of mushroom soil mulch. The roses were neatly trimmed to two feet and wrapped in a blanket of burlap, folded and stapled closed to keep them protected from freezing winds. There was nary a fallen leaf in sight; everything was raked up and hauled off.
You see, that’s how we gardeners used to roll in the early ’90s, before we knew better. Before we knew all the reasons NOT to clean up the garden. We’d cut everything down and perform a big, end-of-the-season gardening clean up until there was no shred of nature left behind. We’d turn the place into a tidied, controlled, and only slightly dirtier version of our living room. Everything was tucked and trimmed and in its place. Most of us weren’t interested in supporting wildlife much beyond hanging up a bird feeder, and the phrase “wildlife habitat” was only used in places like zoos and national parks.
Unfortunately, many gardeners still think of this kind of hack-it-all-down and rake-it-all-up gardening clean up as good gardening, but in case you haven’t already noticed, I’m here to tell you times have changed. Preparing Your Garden for the Winter is a completely different class these days. We now understand how our yards can become havens for creatures, large and small, depending on what we plant in them and how we tend to our cultivated spaces. Thanks to books like Doug Tallamy’s Bringing Nature Home, we now know how important native plants are for insects, birds, amphibians, and even people. Our gardens play an important role in supporting wildlife and what we do in them every autumn can either enhance or inhibit that role.
To that end, I offer you these six important reasons NOT to clean up the garden in the fall.
1. The Native Bees:
Many of North America’s 3500-plus species of native bees need a place to spend the winter that’s protected from cold and predators. They may hunker down under a piece of peeling tree bark, or they may stay tucked away in the hollow stem of a bee balm plant or an ornamental grass. Some spend the winter as an egg or larvae in a burrow in the ground.

All native bees are important pollinators, and when we remove every last overwintering site by cutting everything down and completely cleaning up the garden, we’re doing ourselves no favor. We need these bees, and our gardens can provide them with much-needed winter habitat.

Related post: Supporting native bees
2. The Butterflies:
While the monarch flies south to overwinter in Mexico, most other butterflies stay put and take shelter somewhere dry and safe until spring. Some butterflies, like the mourning cloak, comma, question mark, and Milbert’s tortoise shell, overwinter as adults. They nestle into rock fissures, under tree bark, or in leaf litter until the days grow longer again and spring arrives. Butterflies that overwinter in a chrysalis include the swallowtail family, the cabbage whites and the sulphurs. Many of these chrysalises can be found either hanging from dead plant stems or tucked into the soil or leaf litter. You can guess what a fall gardening clean up does to them.

And still other butterfly species, such as the red-spotted purple, the viceroy, and the meadow fritillary, spend the winter as a caterpillar rolled into a fallen leaf or inside the seed pod of a host plant. If we cut down and clean up the garden, we are quite possibly eliminating overwintering sites for many of these beautiful pollinators (and perhaps even eliminating the insects themselves!). Another excellent way you can help butterflies is to build a caterpillar garden for them; here’s how. Declining butterfly populations are one of the best reasons not to clean up the garden.

3. The Ladybugs:
North America is home to over 400 different ladybug species, many of which are not red with black polka-dots. While the introduced Asian multicolored ladybug comes into our homes for the winter and becomes quite a nuisance, none of our native ladybug species have any interest in spending the winter inside of your house. Most of them enter the insect world’s version of hibernation soon after the temperatures drop and spend the colder months tucked under a pile of leaves, nestled at the base of a plant, or hidden under a rock. Most overwinter in groups of anywhere from a few individuals to thousands of adults. Ladybugs are notorious pest eaters, each one consuming dozens of soft-bodied pest insects and insect eggs every day. Leaving the garden intact for the winter means you’ll get a jump start on controlling pests in the spring. Skipping a fall gardening clean up is one important way to help these beneficial insects.

Related post: Lost ladybugs
4. The Birds:
Insect-eating birds, like chickadees, wrens, titmice, nuthatches, pheobes, and bluebirds, are very welcome in the garden because they consume thousands of caterpillars and other pest insects as they raise their young every gardening season. Not cleaning up the garden means there will be more protein-rich insects available to them during the coldest part of the year. These birds are quite good at gleaning “hibernating” insects off of dead plant stems and branches, and out of leaf litter. The more insect-nurturing habitat you have, the greater the bird population will be. Your feathered friends will also appreciate feasting on the seeds and berries they can collect from intact perennial, annual, and shrub stems. Song birds are one of the best reasons skip the garden clean up!
5. The Predatory Insects:
Ladybugs aren’t the only predatory insects who spend the winter in an intact garden. Assassin bugs, lacewings, big-eyed bugs, minute pirate bugs, damsel bugs, ground beetles, and scores of other pest-munching predatory insects spend the winter “sleeping” in your garden as either adults, eggs, or pupae. They’re one of the best reasons not to clean up the garden in the fall because they help you control pests. To have a balanced population of these predatory insects, you have to have winter habitat; when spring arrives, they’ll be better able to keep early-emerging pests in check if they’ve spent the winter on-site, instead of over in the neighbor’s yard.

Related post: The best plants for beneficial insects
6. The People:
If the previous five reasons aren’t enough to inspire you to hold off on cleaning up the garden, I’ll add one final reason to the list: You. There is so much beauty to be found in a winter garden. Snow resting on dried seed pods, berries clinging to bare branches, goldfinches flitting around spent sunflowers, juncos hopping beneath old goldenrod fronds, frost kissing the autumn leaves collected at the base of a plant, and ice collected on blades of ornamental grasses. At first, you might not consider yourself to be one of the reasons not to clean up the garden, but winter is a lovely time out there, if you let it be so.
Delaying your garden’s clean up until the spring is a boon for all the creatures living there. Instead of heading out to the garden with a pair of pruning shears and a rake this fall, wait until the spring temperatures are in the 50s for at least 7 consecutive days. By then, all the critters living there will be emerging from their long winter nap. And even if they haven’t managed to get out of bed by the time you head out to the garden, most of them will still manage to find their way out of a loosely layered compost pile before it begins to decompose. Do Mother Nature a big favor and save your garden clean up until the spring. And, when spring does arrive, please use these pollinator-friendly tips for cleaning up the garden the right way.
To learn more about how to encourage beneficial insects in your garden, please read the following articles:
- Tachinid flies
- Black and yellow garden spiders
- 5 surprising facts you don’t know about ladybugs
- Spring garden clean up done right
Tell us how you enjoy your garden during the winter months.
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The problem is that professional yard gardeners do not get paid to NOT do fall cleanup.
You will never convince them of this unfortunately.
Which is why I don’t have one outside of someone who mows the grass. Hire one for big jobs and not easier routine care.
I have milkweed for the butterflies, but don’t want it to reseed all over the yard. Is it ok to cut down the dead stalks before the seed heads pop? Or does something eat the seeds or overwinter in the plants?
Hi Mary. Rather than cutting down the entire stalk, I would just snip off the seed pods if you don’t want the plant to reseed in your garden. You may find a fellow gardener interested in growing milkweed whom you could pass the seeds along to.
I’m really new to gardening, so this was quite interesting. I feel bad when I leave the garden looking messy in fall. Thanks for offering these insights, though!
I feel i have to clean up in autumn. Our winters can get very cold here -50 below with lots of snow, even though spring is in march sometimes we have to wait some years till may for it all to melt and it is very wet/mucky. but warm enough to sprout the plants and when they start growing the old is still dried up on top of the new foliage the dried up leaves doesn’t look so nice on the day lilies. iris, hostas ect. I did try leaving it it a few years but it was triple the work to get it cleaned up. Also on the leafs that were left on top of the grass over winter there was a white mold that grew.
This post has relieved a lot of my anxiety. My gardener just dropped me from his route because of health issues forcing him to cut back. Since my lawn is in transition, there’s almost nothing there to grow. I’ve only watered my ornamental beds during this hot summer. My plan is to cut back any branches on my shrubs that will grow too big to prune if I don’t cut them back. They will get too big to handle if I leave them until spring.I won’t feel so guilty now about leaving leaves on the ground. The biggest problem I have with not cleaning up is all the unwanted trees that spout invisibly from my Goldenrain Tree and the oak across the street. But they manage even when I have tried to clean them up.
Barbara, I planted a baby Golden Rain Tree this year. Having read a bit about it after planting, I am wondering if I want to dig it up. Are you happy with yours? It sounds like the sprouts are a nuisance?
Otherwise, I am completely on board with the suggestions in this post! Thank you Jessica for educating me with so many good reasons to wait until spring to tidy. In particular I have some overgrown Forsythia bushes – moved in last October, and pruned just a bit this year, but planning a big clean-up at the end of winter. Wondering if it is best to wait until then for that?
In addition to what not to do, here are several things you should do. Clean up all leftover debris from squash. Especially if you are subject to squash borers. I find tree trimmings in the neighborhood. If big enough, I collect it for firewood. Small tinder I stack at the end of my woodpile as a brush pile. Small birds love this shelter. I cover it with a single layer of burlap, then put 2 or 3 more branches on top to keep it from blowing away. The open space below the burlap is free of snow. Yard leaves are raked onto the garden, and limed. They will not be turned with the soil until spring. The only thing I do with flower gardens is to plant new bulbs in the fall.
Does this advice though apply in areas where the winters are mild and rather then the ground freezing and staying that way, it rains constantly and everything gets soaked. You can guess probably that I live on the We(s)t Coast of Canada.
If I leave everything on the ground including fallen leaves it turns into a wet slimy mess and harbours slugs and snails. So I do cleanup plants that die down in winter.
If I leave certain seed heads I will end up with those seeds spreading everywhere in the garden.
Yes; the advice applies for all climates. We have a lot of moisture in the winter here, too, and though the fallen leaves and stems that remain in my perennial beds do turn slimy and sometimes harbor slugs, they also harbor ground beetles, firefly larvae, and lots of other good bugs that eat those slugs (Oregon State University has done some excellent research on creating habitat for ground beetles). Leaving winter habitat in place will encourage more good bugs than bad ones, in turn keeping things in balance. That’s what it’s all about; bringing balance back to the garden. I know it’s a complete about-face from what horticulturists like me have taught for many years, but it’s a shift that needs to happen if we want our gardens to be havens for pollinators, beneficial insects, birds, and other species of wildlife. As for your comment on self-seeding plants, yes, if you have a plant species that is a prolific self-seeder, then you’ll probably want to deadhead it before it drops seeds to keep the plant from becoming invasive. In my own garden this isn’t an issue because I like for most of my plants to self-sow, but if you don’t, simply deadhead them but leave the stems standing.
Does this apply to vegetable gardens as well?
This is a really good question, Stev. And my answer is “it depends.” If you had a known pest issue, then you’d do best to pull the pest-infested veggie plants out of the garden in the fall, to prevent any of those pests or their eggs from overwintering in the garden. Same goes for any plants that were plagued by a fungal disease, like powdery mildew or blight. The veggie garden is really a different space, so I leave any plants that were healthy and fairly pest-free, but remove any that were in poor health. BUT, I always let all my herbs stand for the winter in the vegetable garden. I grow many herbs in a central island in my vegetable garden and those are left to stand through the winter for all of the reasons mentioned in this article. Thanks for the great question.
These tips are all really legit and useful. Frankly I too have always though cleaning up your garden for the winter is not all that good. The beneficial insects suffer the most in one such cleaning and I have always tried to attract them to my garden.
Great article! All of this totally makes sense as it will not ruin any of the natural balance that occurs in a garden during the fall season. Thank you for sharing this valuable information.