The Bizarre Reason to Cut Down Your Bradford Pear Tree

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Why you should cut down these trees right now
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When I started blogging many years ago and began chronicling my experiences making homemade deodorant and other sundries, I never thought I’d write a passionate post about why you should immediately cut down any Bradford Pear trees… but here we are.

Cut Down the Bradford Pear Tree?

I know that is a strong statement:

Go cut down any Bradford Pear Trees you have right now and never plant another one!

But why? They are so pretty with their gorgeous white flowers. Sure, they smell something fierce when they bloom, but they are so pretty!

You know what else is pretty? Dingo puppies:

Why these cute little dingos are a reason to cut down Bradford Pear Trees

and Mountain Laurel flowers:

Why mountain laurel flowers are a reason to cut down your bradford pear trees

But both of those can kill you. Those cute little wild puppies will bite your throat when they grow up. Those delicate little flowers can drop your blood pressure low enough to kill you.

Just being pretty doesn’t mean something is good or beneficial and while the harmless-looking Bradford Pear Tree may not bite your throat like a Dingo or lower your blood pressure dangerously like the Mountain Laurel, it is certainly problematic in its own way. In fact, they’ve even been called an environmental disaster.

Here’s why:

Where Did Bradford Pear Trees Come From?

To understand why these trees are a problem, you have to understand where they came from.

The Bradford Pear Tree originated in China and were introduced in 1964 by the US Department of Agriculture as an ornamental tree. This flowering tree was assumed to be sterile (spoiler alert- it isn’t!) and was known for its weak branch structure. They have a lifespan of only 20-25 years, as anyone who has seen these trees in an ice storm can attest.

Now, normally, if you wanted to plant a weak and sterile tree in your yard, that wouldn’t bother me at all… so why do I hate the Bradford Pear so much? (and why am I even bothering to write about this tree in the first place?)

Here’s why:

Why Bradford Pears are Dangerous?

It turns out, they aren’t sterile as it was assumed.

Sure, they don’t pollinate among themselves, but these promiscuous and stinky little trees like to pollinate with EVERYTHING else out there.

This leads to some major environmental problems:

Because of the cross pollination problem, pear trees have now proliferated exponentially across our environment. And, to make matters worse, the evil offspring has reverted to the ancient Chinese Callery pears which form impenetrable thorny thickets that choke the life out of pines, dogwoods, maples, redbuds, oaks, hickories, etc.

When you see those fields of white flowering trees, please don’t get giddy with excitement over pretty white flowers. What you are looking at are Callery pears destroying nature. Callery pears have 4 inch thorns. They can’t be mowed down. Those thorns will shred John Deere tractor tires. They can only be removed by steel tracked dozers, decreasing the value of agricultural or forest land to the tune of $3,000 per acre. (source)

Did You Catch That?

They may not be hurting your yard, but they are causing major damage for farmers and choking out beautiful (and valuable) hardwood trees. Which is why I’m writing about this topic today. In fact, all reputable nurseries know about the problems with these trees. Good landscapers refuse to plant them.

I’ve been on hikes and encountered these Callery pears and their 4-inch thorns myself and they aren’t nice.

Those pretty little white trees in your yard are cross pollinating and causing these problems all over.

We brought these trees over thinking they wouldn’t reproduce and now they are doing just that and taking over native species. We tampered with nature and like the Kudzu taking over the South or the Burmese Pythons taking over the Everglades and eating alligators, we created a big problem.

Let’s try to fix this one. Cut them down… now!

Other Problems with Breadford Pears

Not only are these trees causing serious damage to native plants and shredding tractor tires, but they come with other problems as well.

Structurally weak:

Bradford Pear trees are structurally weak. Many people love them because they are perfectly symmetrical and grow in a beautiful shape. They even maintain this gorgeous shape for about 2 months until rain, snow or even a mild breeze causes them to break in half.

Seriously… they have a lifespan of only about 20 years and will usually die as a result of ice, snow or even rain making their branches too heavy.

We’ve all seen these trees cracked in half after a storm. Why plant a tree that will just be a mess to clean in the yard in a few years?

Prevent grass from growing:

Grass has trouble growing underneath Bradford Pear trees and often the area under these trees is bare and muddy.

Get too big:

These were supposed to be small, ornamental trees that only grow 25 feet tall and equally wide. Unfortunately, no one informed the trees themselves, as they sometimes get twice as big and overtake the small yards they are planted in.

And they stink:

As an irrelevant side note, they also smell really, really bad. Their smell has been compared to various foul smells including rotting fish (as well as a couple other smells I’ll avoid listing for the sake of any younger readers). Do you really want that in your yard?

Does the Bradford Pear Tree Produce Fruit?

Now, all of those negatives could potentially be less of a problem if the tree at least did something beneficial, like produce fruit that you could eat.

But it doesn’t.

It was originally created to be sterile and so produces no fruit. Instead, it cross pollinates with other species and creates all kinds of problems.

How to Cut Them Down

I’ve seen anti-Bradford Pear campaigns from various cities around the country encouraging people to cut these trees down. Some cities, like Pittsburgh, have gone so far as to ban them completely.

If you are considering planting trees in your yard, please choose other options. If you already have some of these in your yard, consider cutting them down and replacing with something less harmful.

Unfortunately, this won’t be the easiest tree to eliminate. Cutting it down is the first step, but getting rid of it completely requires some extra effort. Now is a great time of year to do this before they bloom in the spring and Fall is a great time to plant new trees.

Here’s What to Do

  1. Cut down the tree.
  2. Grind out the root.
  3. Prepare for battle: These trees don’t give up easily and they will send out hundreds of suckers, or shoots, from the roots for up to two years after you cut it down until the roots finally give up and die.
  4. During this time, you can do things like: drill holes in the root and pack salt into it (this will help a little).
  5. Mow often so the sprouts can’t get big or go to seed.
  6. If grass isn’t growing anyway, consider covering with black plastic to choke out the roots and then re-seeding once the roots are gone.
  7. Replace the stinky Bradford Pear tree with a beneficial and equally beautiful tree (suggestions below).

Alternatives to the Bradford Pear Tree

Thankfully, these are dozens of better alternatives that you can plant in your yard. Choose alternatives based on your needs:

  • Shade: Plant bigger trees that will create shade as they grow. Maples and Oaks are good options.
  • Flowers: Try Redbuds, Serviceberry or Carolina Silverbell.
  • Looks: Consider Japanese Maples or Peggy Clark Maples.
  • Food: Or, plant a tree that actually produces something useful, like an apple, peach, or cherry tree.

Your yard and our native species of plants will thank you!

Do you have any of these trees? Did you know about the terrible effects of them?

Katie Wells Avatar

About Katie Wells

Katie Wells, CTNC, MCHC, Founder of Wellness Mama and Co-founder of Wellnesse, has a background in research, journalism, and nutrition. As a mom of six, she turned to research and took health into her own hands to find answers to her health problems. WellnessMama.com is the culmination of her thousands of hours of research and all posts are medically reviewed and verified by the Wellness Mama research team. Katie is also the author of the bestselling books The Wellness Mama Cookbook and The Wellness Mama 5-Step Lifestyle Detox.

Comments

92 responses to “The Bizarre Reason to Cut Down Your Bradford Pear Tree”

  1. Steve Avatar

    “Bradford” is just one of several ornamental cultivars of the callery pear (some others being Cleveland Select, Aristocrat, and Chanticleer). But Bradford was the first, so people kind of use it as a generic name for name for all of them, even though it’s imprecise — kind of like how people use “Kleenex” for any brand of tissues. You may have one of the other cultivars in your yard –perhaps one with a better branch structure, less stinky flowers, etc., but you still have a callery pear.

    The real problem with all callery pears, including yours, happens when they cross-pollinate with one another. They produce fruit, which birds (usually starlings by the way; another invasive species), spread to fields and woody margins. These new mutant, cross-pollinated trees are the ones with the horrible thorns you can’t get rid of, reproduce like rabbits, and choke out all the native wildlife. And yes, your tree IS contributing to the problem.

    1. Katie Avatar

      This! Right here!

      This comment explains why your “perfectly fine, pretty, non-thorny tree you planted 50 years ago” is contributing to the problem. Just like the cedar trees planted in the windy, central plains are considered a “dirty tree” because they essentially become fire bombs when the wild fire season starts. An already dangerous situation is made even more dangerous for firefighters to control because people wanted a “fast growing, wind block” that is now all across the state of Oklahoma. Simply driving along the highways, where land is hardly touched, there are cedars popping up everywhere.

      Those trees that are perfect for your yard, are cross-pollinating with everything else and making thorny. fast-growing undergrowth, choking out hardwood forests and invading native lands and pastures. My case in point, A 10-year-old land plot map of my property that I purchased 3 years ago had no trees on the acre lot. Sometime within 7 years, this property gained about 35 male/female wild, thorny pear trees in just the backyard. I’m unsure how many were removed in the front yard of the home before we moved in.

      Three years after moving in, we have spent countless weekends slowly removing these trees from our property because we refuse to pay someone to do it. Luckily, we can control burn the limbs and stumps on our property because its not in city limits. But, I can only imagine the amount of trips to the dump we would have to make. We have it finally under control to where we might not have to repair/replace our lawn mower tires this year because of the thorns. The end goal is to remove all of them and sod over the stumps and roots until they finally give up after 3-5 years of the tree being chainsawed to the ground.

      This is just one acre. I can’t even imagine what a land owner has to deal with. When I see them popping up along the fence lines when I am out running errands, it makes me cringe. All of this because of a gigantic, probably 30+ year-old, Bradford Pear tree from my backyard neighbor from an older, more established neighborhood. I would like to note that, the mother tree has split in half, and is still lying on the ground since at least the time we moved here 3 years ago. It still flowers on the ground.

      There are plenty of other trees homeowners can plant in their yard. Just to name one, Redbud trees have beautiful spring flowers, they don’t smell, they hold up well to strong storms, and they have nice, waxy, hearty-shaped foliage.

      Like a previous commenter, I also call these wild pear trees weeds.

  2. Tracy Avatar

    Well. Darn. We just bought a home with 10… yes, TEN… of these trees in the front yard. 🙁 Your article has given us more info than others and will be referenced quite frequently in the near future.

  3. Mary Avatar

    I just read an article online — sorry already forgot the title or author, google “why get rid of bradford pear” or something, (prolly how i came across katie’s article). Among many reasons, the ones that stood out most were the stinky smell (omg, good on Katie for leaving that part out!!), the relatively short life, the inherent growth style all pears have: deep V crotches that lend themselves to sudden breakage (onto your car? Your mailman? Your Granny?) But the worst and most troubling is the thorny wild Pears that are the result of “sterile” Bradfords crossing with ANY other pear, which then chokes out wild stands of forests, with thorny briar patches of impenetrable thickets, which go on to multiply amongst themselves, so yet more! Actually Katie did describe this in the body of her piece. You know that chair/throne on Game of Thrones? Made entirely of BRADFORD PEARS!!! Or their wild cousin, i suppose.
    I’m so glad i came across this article, Katie! You really do help mamma earth, though some may resist your efforts. Thats really unfortunate. Keep doin’ what ya doin’!

  4. Mary Avatar

    “Mountain Laurel” to be exact. Per the text/photo caption. I learned something today!

  5. Mary Avatar

    If uou think the city won’t let you cut them down, you may have to stage a series of vehicle mow downs (one per night until theyre GONE, lol) and this means all the evidence is cleaned up and hauled away before anyone’s the wiser. Anyone who complains is told the tree “required removal due to dangerous conditions”. OK, that’s not meant to be serious…) If you’d like to be more civil about it (highly recommended in today’s Trumpy climate), you could host a neighborhood meeting to discuss the whys n wherefores of removing them all. If your HOA requires their approval, get on the discussion list for next meeting, and present your argument in a calm straightforward manner. If you are rejected, then everyone should “prune” every single branch off so all thats left is an ugly trunk nub. Knock any sprouts down as they appear. Meanwhile, come up with a plan to replace the hated trees, so everything is in place when you gain approval. (Hint- dont plant liquidambers, they litter seed balls that are dangerous and spiky, plus their roots will destroy the sidewalk, just my 2¢)

  6. Marie Avatar

    Thanks so much for your great explanation of why these should be banned from the earth! My neighbor has 10 of them and I am actually paying to have them removed with his permission, of course. They are everywhere in fields here in my area of MD because of the birds spreading the seeds far and wide.

  7. Kait Avatar

    The most I can do is water my trees with 5 gallon treatments of water apple cider vinegar and antifungal essential oils ?? my neighbor has these trees and all my trees have been suffering. Hopefully I can help them absorb botanicals with the mixture, as well as mulching with cedar and cornmeal beforehand to help microbes flourish that can cure diseases. I may try playing a ‘fungus killing bineural’

  8. richard allen Avatar
    richard allen

    I have 2 Bradford Pear Trees about 14 years old in my backyard. The trees are planted about 20 feet from the house.The roots are going under the house foundation and I am afraid it could damage my water line.and foundation. Can the roots be cut without damaging the tree?

  9. calle Avatar

    Good Morning all,

    After reading every post over the months, I am going to contact our Master Gardeners and State Foresters as we have never had a single problem.
    Ours is over 50 yrs old and maybe what I thought was a Bradford Pear is not one after all.
    Some of the fruit seed type of pods drop and plant, but mowing them kills them.
    Not one of our neighbors (addition is is 57 yrs old has ever had one grow in their yds.

    So guess I need to get to the bottom of what may not be one.
    Or it could be our climate or region does not handle the seeds as other climes do.
    On the range land in central US, The Eastern Red Cedar is considered a dirty tree.
    As are River Willows and Russian Olives.
    Some consider Stag Horn Willows as such.
    Because we lost all trees in a fire on the land and it is high Desert and so hot we want trees, erosion is a problem and the wind takes our top soil.
    And many a person also considers Ponderosa Pines as dirty trees.
    I now understand the pioneers who so wanted one tree to give them shade.
    When one surveys 100,000 of thousands of acres with not one tree, and black cattle who get so hot in the sun, even one small tree affords them some shade.
    Hope to get the answer today.

  10. Kru Satyr Avatar
    Kru Satyr

    Bradford Pears are weeds. Twenty years ago I hated them and tried to share my prejudice around my town where they were popular because of fast growth rate. The tree form is awful: short trunk, with a hundred crowded branches curving up together, like a french whip standing on the end of its handle. Each of those branches snaps easy as a rotten twig.

    I begged my wife to cut one down in our yard for years until a wind storm finally split it down the middle. I whacked it off at the ground level with joy but fought shoots from roots for ten years. Twenty years later and mushrooms come up off the decaying roots.

    I chopped a big one down at the entrance to my neighborhood to make way for an entrance monument. The roots underneath, which were as big and as extensive as the whole top of the tree, had invaded and entwined a sprinkler system and took me a week to dig out with a pick, an axe and a shovel.

  11. Mazi Avatar

    Just curious, why does everyone seem to think these trees stink? We have two of these trees in our yard and they don’t smell at all. Nor are they losing branches or have roots popping up out of the ground. Honestly, ours are the complete opposite of everything you have mentioned.

    1. Stephanie Avatar
      Stephanie

      Some people cannot smell the flowers until they are right up to them. I worked with two people who could smell them a mile away, and it made them nauseated every time they went outside. My boyfriend didn’t believe they had a smell either until he put his nose in a cluster of flowers and walked away stunned. His next response was, “why would anyone plant these!?”.
      As far as your branches not falling off they either a. Aren’t old enough yet b. Haven’t been through a good storm c. Might be an improved variety.

  12. Stephanie Avatar
    Stephanie

    When I worked at the USDA in Charleston, SC we had bradford pears planted on the property. Everyone hated them. The scientists knew they were trash trees, and the tractor drivers/ landscapers always had to deal with their broken limbs after storms. Idk why they never bothered cutting them down. Not that the USDA Agriculture Reasearch Service was really concerned about native trees, but it would’ve been a much better choice. For all the people who keep defending Bradfords there are WAY better and improved options now. Breeders realized this was a very flawed tree, and bred better alternatives. A native will always be the best choice. Native trees provide clean air, shelter and food for native species where exotics don’t. That’s a fact. A lot of exotics are essentially deserts for birds, bees, and butterflies.

  13. Jonah Dover Avatar
    Jonah Dover

    I was very curious of this article because it had such an extremist feel to it. Cut down an entire species of trees? And why specifically this kind? Are they poisonous like – maybe not to the extent of- Manchineel trees? Do they pose that much a threat?
    After removing superficial stuff like smell, sprinkler problems, and thorns, they seem perfectly harmless.
    Invasive species, why not go nazi on blackberries? Sure they produce delicious fruit (as you say, beneficial) but how many native plants do they suffocate to make them? Why so bent on a single one so desperately? I’m wondering priorities here.
    Falling trees are always a risk when planting them. Did you know? Trees planted by the city aren’t cared for enough and can get hollow from fungus and fall (imagine a 200kg behemoth) even without the slightest wind.
    And thorns, I mean really? Tell kids to stay away because it’ll hurt, or let them learn through experience and an “I told you so”, ya know? (It isn’t that easy!! Buddy, i know. If they don’t listen the first time, try try again with a different approach. Eventually you’ll find a way) Thorny trees are the LAST thing I fear children will get hurt from in this day and age.
    Maybe this article wouldn’t sound so dangerous if it just said these are the ways _I_ will murder the Bradford Pears, because these are the ways they scare _me_ after reading such n’ such books and articles. But instigating a mob to go on this crusade with you sounds awfully frightening.
    Informing people is good. Mentioning being not-so-verse in the subject opens up to discussion and learning, which is great! Spreading caution is kind in essence, but spreading hate or an act of hate is a frightening thing that I can’t stand.

    Please, think carefully lest people commit mass genocide.

    P.S. When referencing links, please for your own credibility actually read through the entire article and understand it before linking. That article literally goes against the point you are trying to make. Same with dingos I’ve read in the comments, just one word from a single person with a researcher’s badge? I’d check more sources before taking their word for it in case it was just a fresh student working there to learn more themselves.

    1. Parisa T Avatar
      Parisa T

      Thank you for your comment. I came across this article while I was trying to put together a petition to save our town’s Bradford pear trees, and I surprisingly found out today they are so hated in the online community. I don’t understand this tree hating mentality at all. it’s so easy to make the case against any trees as we all have different points of views (which is probably one of the main reasons we’re facing environmental crisis), and in the case of the environment and this preconceived notion of right or wrong landscaping decisions, exercising some humility is a must.

        1. Parisa T Avatar
          Parisa T

          Our town councils consider them non-native. many native trees hurt the environment, including the Boxelders (which we are protecting and preserving) in our backyard that are invasive and prone to boxelder bug, etc. Does that mean we have to eradicate them and start anew? because in that case half the forest has to come down. Mature trees provide a wide range of environmental and economic benefits. including increasing the market value of the residential real estate by as much as 23%, not that I care about that, but I’ll make sure to make a note of it in our petition to oppose the town’s decision for the residents who do care. What about the wildlife that are already benefiting from the so called evil trees? And can we guaranty that any native trees replacing the exotic ones will not fall victim to an opposition group such as the one you created here (“every rose has its thorn”), in the next 10 to 20 years, just when we finally get to enjoy the shades that they hopefully provide? Assuming that the town is quick enough to replace the trees with fairly mature ones to begin with, which I’m pretty sure it will be a long and disappointing process to witness. how much more time do we have to watch a young sapling replace the beautiful 50 year old tree?
          for the argument of native vs. exotic ones, native plants fare no better than exotic trees, especially if they’re planted in a disturbed compacted topsoil along our main street, where the Bradford Pears are shining as an example of the best and toughest trees at the moment. some exotic plants actually perform better in our disturbed urban sites because the environmental conditions resemble those found in their native landscapes, and because the plants insect predators are usually not imported with them. Look at the Dawn Redwood imported from China for example that is indestructible in its non-native land. why not focus on maintaining the diversity that will make the entire landscape resilient to attacks by pests and diseases. why not focus on sustainability vs. eradication and exclusivity. because let’s not fool ourselves, we only have the illusion of control.

  14. Phyllis Piontkowski Avatar
    Phyllis Piontkowski

    After they are cut down, can you use them for firewood in a stove inside your home?

    1. Silas Avatar

      Yes. if you are or going to cut them, cut them into logs that will fit in your fireplace/ fire pit/ etc.

  15. calle Avatar

    We must not have the same Bradford Pear. We have never had one thorn. No suckers, and no babies.

    Our tree is lovely, has millions of white blooms. The number depends on our winter and early spring temps. The pods do drop, at times we have independent baby trees but have pulled them up.
    I will call our Master Gardeners next week, as something is wrong here. Our tree is over 50 yrs old and we have never had any issues with it.
    It is not a flowering crab tree, Russian Olives have thorns, we have had Stag horn willows that are dirty trees and grow like mad.
    We also have a Curly Willow that died and now has a sucker coming up.
    Our huge Linden died, was cut down and has tons of suckers.
    We chose one and have to continue cutting the others.
    Sorry for all of your problems.

  16. Suzy Avatar

    When I bought my first home on 10 acres about 1/4 was packed with what I thought was an old crab apple nursery. After, AFTER the sale the sellers mother informed me they where Bradford Pears and very invasive. Thanks. The seller lied about a lot of other things, so this just went with it. Anyway, I can’t afford to clear this acre of 15′ Bradford pears. Plus the neighbors acre is full of them too since my property was a larger parcel that was pasture. I’ve tried battling on my own with clippers, chain saw, stump killer (I hate chemicals) and they sprout back with a million suckers with even more thorns! Like an aggressive cancer. Privet is easier, I can pull them up pretty easy. The Bradford makes a 5″ corkscrew tap root before it even sprouts! Try to pull it out and you can’t or just top it and it sprouts back!!!! Like something evil. I’ve been stabbed, all over and twice through my boots, nails are better to step on because they don’t break off in your foot or cause an allergic reaction. They sprout every where! In my yard, under trees where birds poop the seeds, on fence rows. For every oak, pecan, sweetgum, or pine sprout I see there is like 10-20 Bradford sprouts. Suckers/saplings can grow 4-5′ in one season!!!! Outpacing native trees. Sweet gum and short leaf pine can kinda keep up, but since bradfords grow as dense as privet they get crowded out. I’d like to sue the USDA to remove them since the created this monster. It’s basically threatening to turn my acreage into a thorny hell forest and I feel frustrated and powerless because I don’t own a bush hog and can’t afford to hire one twice a year. I just wasn’t expecting this added expense or issue. I just want to sell and run away from this. It’s a big problem in the piedmont of GA. I think they thrive on acidic clay soil. Funny, UGA doesn’t really have much to say or help to offer regarding this. But it’s seriously as bad as Kudzu and worse than privet. You really have to be willing to spend big money to keep your land clear in my area. Will goats eat them? I’m really not happy with the seller about this.

    1. Bruce Avatar

      An ecological disaster, when the the thorny masses are so dense that it is impossible to enter, is the result of our ignorance. I have been removing the smaller ones (about 14 feet is the largest so far) with a pick, buckets of water, and a prying bar and strap for the last twelve months. With the pick, I will dig around the trunk to break the horizontal roots that spread out from the trunk and then try to remove them completely. When these roots are removed, the tree is often so unstable that it leans over to the ground. I then have a “moat” around the tap root. I, then, need to determine whether the surrounding soil is loose enough to pull the thorny devil out or if a bit more pick-work is needed or if saturating the soil (which can be enhanced by driving holes around it with the pick) is best. I wrap a one-inch wide strap around the lowest portion of the root and tie it to the bar to lever the tree from the ground.
      I feel that the Bradford pear should be banned and owners given the choice of having the state cut them, removing them yourself, or a $1000 dollar fine. One thousand dollars is letting them off easily for the damage that the people who insist that their tree is not bothering anyone.

  17. Karen Johnson Avatar
    Karen Johnson

    Well, I found the Answer to my own question! Look at this! … http://edis.ifas.ufl.edu/st536

    Do you have any information on the Aristocrat Pear Tree because it was suggested to use if you have a pool nearby and the roots would not grow towards the pool; they supposedly grow downward pretty deep and are beautiful trees. I agree with you on the Bradford Pear Trees, they are pretty when they bloom but what I don’t like most about them is all of the leaning, very unattractive and that’s due to their instability. Thank you for the Article!

  18. ashleigh Avatar
    ashleigh

    Very interesting information! Me being a naturalist, I personally only like to plant native plants in our yard (and most of them are edible because I consider it a waste if it’s not lol). People have brought over so many foreign species over here without thinking of the consequences, glad you are spreading awareness to your readers.

  19. Michelle Avatar
    Michelle

    When I worked for a nursery, they said the Bradfords were trash trees too and to plant a hardwood, but I have not heard of the cross-pollination here in Texas but I assume it is just a matter of time.

    They also house grackles- so that means poop all over your yard.

    I will say though- that is not what a Mountain Laurel looks like here in Texas 🙂

  20. Tricia Avatar

    Thank you for this article. I think you could also add that people should plant other native plants as much as possible. I’m slowly eradicating our huge lawn that does nothing for nature and replacing it with native plants and noninvasive plants that are attractive to pollinators and other wildlife. Our kids are young so some grass will remain for them to run around on. It’s easier to do this than it sounds and The Know Maintenance Perennial Garden book was helpful for me.

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