When to water trees and shrubs
Watering frequency depends on the type of plant, the soil texture, whether you are caring for an established or a new plant, and local weather conditions. Learn the specific water requirements of your plants, monitor local weather and soil conditions, and water accordingly.
Newly-planted trees and shrubs
- Water immediately and thoroughly after planting.
- For the first 2 weeks after planting, check the soil moisture daily and water deeply if the top 6 inches of soil feels dry to the touch.
- During the first two years after planting, check the soil moisture at least once a week and water if the soil feels dry at 6 inches. This is especially important to help the roots of new plants get established in the soil.
- Be careful not to overwater. Many people have inadvertently drowned newly-planted trees by watering them too often. Water should soak in quickly; the plants should never sit in a puddle of water for an extended period of time, as that can lead to root damage.
All trees and shrubs
- Water when the soil feels dry to the touch beneath the surface. Dig into the soil with a trowel, hand shovel, or screwdriver and check your soil at a depth of about 6 inches. Soil that is moist or damp to the touch is fine. If the soil feels dry, water the plant thoroughly. Apply water to the roots, not the leaves of the plant.
- Water in the morning. Watering during the heat of the day increases the amount of water lost to evaporation by as much as 40%. Late-day, overhead watering that gets the leaves wet increases the chances of some plants being infected by diseases.
- Observe how quickly your soil dries out after rain or watering. Clay soil drains slowly, and porous sandy soil drains quickly. Adding organic matter to the soil will improve drainage in clay soil and increase water retention in sandy soil.
Evergreens
Evergreen trees and shrubs have foliage that stays alive year-round and which remains on the plant through the winter. Evergreens should be deeply watered in the fall before the ground freezes if precipitation has been insufficient. Evergreens continue to lose water during the winter, especially when the temperature is above 40°F and on sunny, windy days. If the soil is dry, the plants may become desiccated, turn brown, and die, even if those symptoms don’t become obvious until spring.
Watch summer and fall weather conditions
- Check soil moisture at least weekly during the hottest, driest part of summer and fall when plants have a higher demand for water.
- More severe droughts (local and statewide) are expected with climate change, which may require more frequent watering of young and possibly even mature trees and shrubs.
- Extended periods of drought can negatively affect most plants. Prioritize watering young trees, then shrubs, then herbaceous plants (those with non-woody stems). Large, mature shade trees and shrubs can be left alone unless the drought is severe or the trees begin to wilt or the root systems have been recently disturbed.