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Why You Shouldn’t Rake Your Fall Leaves in Austin

Posted on September 26, 2025   |   Updated on September 30, 2025

Francesca Dabecco

Red fall leaves on the ground in the foreground, a tree trunk is in the left hand corner

You can protect pollinators through the fall and winter. (Francesca Dabecco / City Cast Pittsburgh)

Soon, neighbors will be raking piles of crunchy foliage and putting bags out for waste pickup — but I’m here to give you permission to be lazy and leave the leaves! Actually, you’ll be doing your community a service. Your yard is an ecosystem, and these fallen leaves play a part as…

🐞 Shelter for Hibernating Insects

Where do you think insects go in the cold months? Many native bugs overwinter under fallen leaves, like ladybugs, caterpillars, and bees. Keep dead plants and wood, too — many bees create burrows in these natural cavities.

🌱 Insulation for Plant Roots

Fallen leaves act like a warm blanket over your garden, keeping plant roots protected from the cold winter winds, should those ever come our way. It's especially valuable for dormant perennials, and you can even add to the insulation with grass cuttings or other spent plants.

🍂 Compost for a Rich Soil

Leaves break down over winter to create a rich soil just in time for spring planting. They actually have the same weed suppression and moisture retention properties of shredded wood mulch, but are free.

I’m sure you know that Austin, and most of Texas, has a kind of sad fall foliage season. We don’t get those brilliant reds and oranges like those on the East Coast. But we do get some foliage! Around here, peak leaf season is in late November, according to the Smoky Mountains’ map.

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