Home and Landscape

Weed Management Around Fruit and Nut Trees

Keep weeds or other plants away from the base of trees with handweeding or mulching. Don’t allow your lawn to grow within a foot or two of the trunk. A mulch placed around tree trunks will help control weeds. Herbicides should not be necessary. Remove all weeds, lawn and other plants before mulching. You can use organic mulches such as wood chips, bark chips, sawdust, or compost with or without fabric barriers. Instead of a fabric barrier, you can use a newspaper mulch. Wet some newspaper and put a layer about 2 sheets thick around the base of the tree. Place a 2 to 4-inch layer of mulch on top on the newspaper. Be sure to keep mulch at least 6 to 12 inches away from the base of trees.

Weeds around the trunk of trees are difficult to mow, can harbor pests, can promote crown diseases, and can compete for water and nutrients.

More information

Tall annual willowherb, panicle-leaf or panicled willowherb or willowweed, Epilobium brachycarpum (=E. paniculatum) Onagraceae, and sowthistle, Sonchus oleraceus Asteraceae (=Compositae) in bare soil around landscape tree trunk. Davis by JKC. Credit: Jack Kelly Clark, UC IPM
Tall annual willowherb (panicle-leaf willowherb), Epilobium brachycarpum, and sowthistle, Sonchus oleraceus, growing around a landscape tree. Credit: Jack Kelly Clark, UC IPM
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