Our Approach
What Is Surface Feeding?
Surface feeding is a nutrient delivery method that applies professional-grade fertilizer to the soil surface within the feeder root zone of trees and shrubs. Feeder roots are the fine, hair-like roots that extend outward from the trunk or main root system, typically found in the top 6 to 12 inches of soil. These roots are responsible for absorbing the vast majority of water and nutrients that sustain the plant.
Unlike deep-root injection — which uses pressurized equipment to force liquid fertilizer into the soil at depth — surface feeding works with gravity and natural soil moisture to deliver nutrients downward into the active root zone. The fertilizer is applied in a band around the plant's drip line (the outer edge of the canopy) where feeder root density is highest.
This approach is effective because feeder roots grow toward available nutrients. When professional-grade fertilizer is placed at the soil surface within the drip line, it dissolves with rain and irrigation and moves directly into the zone where feeder roots are concentrated. The result is efficient nutrient uptake without the equipment cost or root disturbance associated with deep injection methods.
Method Comparison
Surface Feeding vs. Deep-Root Injection
Many tree care companies push deep-root injection as a premium service. Here is why surface feeding delivers equal or better results for most residential properties in Northeast Ohio.
Targets the Right Zone
Feeder roots — the roots that actually absorb nutrients — are concentrated in the top 6 to 12 inches of soil. Surface feeding places nutrients exactly where they are needed. Deep-root injection often delivers fertilizer below the active feeder root zone, where absorption is less efficient.
No Root Disturbance
Deep-root injection requires inserting a probe into the soil, which can damage fine feeder roots in the process. Surface feeding applies nutrients at the soil surface without any physical disturbance to the root system, eliminating the risk of injection-related root injury.
Consistent Coverage
Surface application provides even nutrient distribution across the entire drip line. Deep injection creates concentrated pockets of fertilizer at each injection point, potentially leaving gaps between holes. Surface feeding ensures uniform nutrient availability throughout the feeder root zone.
Trees & Shrubs We Treat
Common Species in Northeast Ohio Landscapes
Our surface feeding program benefits virtually every tree and shrub species found in residential landscapes across the Cleveland area. The nutrient formulation is balanced for the needs of ornamental and shade trees, flowering shrubs, and evergreen plantings common to Ohio's climate zone.
Deciduous shade trees like maple, oak, birch, and ash respond to feeding with improved canopy density, stronger branch structure, and more vibrant fall color. Ornamental species including Japanese maple, dogwood, redbud, and crabapple produce more abundant blooms and richer foliage when properly nourished. Flowering shrubs like azalea, rhododendron, hydrangea, and lilac develop more flower buds and maintain healthier leaf tissue through summer heat.
Evergreens including arborvitae, boxwood, yew, juniper, and spruce benefit from feeding with deeper green color, denser growth, and improved winter hardiness. Evergreens are especially important to feed in Ohio because they retain foliage year-round and face continuous stress from winter wind, ice loading, and road salt exposure.
Trees and shrubs that are newly planted, recovering from stress, or growing in poor soil conditions benefit the most from supplemental feeding. However, even healthy, established plantings respond positively to professional nutrient applications — the difference shows in canopy fullness, bloom production, and overall vigor.
Application Timing
Spring and Fall Feeding Schedule
Tree and shrub feeding in Northeast Ohio follows a two-application schedule aligned with the natural growth cycles of woody plants.
Spring feeding (April through May) provides nutrients as trees and shrubs break dormancy and enter their most active growth period. Spring is when plants are building new leaf tissue, extending root systems, and developing flower buds. A well-timed spring application fuels this growth with the nitrogen, phosphorus, and micronutrients needed for strong seasonal development.
Fall feeding (September through November) is equally important but serves a different purpose. In fall, trees and shrubs shift energy from above-ground growth to root storage. Nutrients absorbed in the fall are stored in the root system and used for the initial burst of spring growth the following year. Fall feeding is especially critical in Ohio because it builds winter hardiness — the plant's ability to survive cold temperatures, ice storms, and desiccating winter winds.
For properties with severely stressed or nutrient-deficient trees, a mid-summer supplemental application may be recommended to prevent further decline during the most stressful growing period. Our technicians assess each property individually and adjust the feeding schedule based on plant health, soil conditions, and species requirements.
Why Feed Your Trees
Benefits of Professional Tree & Shrub Feeding
Trees and shrubs in residential landscapes face nutrient challenges that their counterparts in natural forests do not. In a forest, fallen leaves and organic matter decompose and return nutrients to the soil in a continuous cycle. In a maintained landscape, leaves are raked, clippings are removed, and mulch beds are refreshed — all of which remove organic nutrients from the system.
Professional feeding replaces these lost nutrients and addresses deficiencies caused by Ohio's heavy clay soils, which often lack adequate iron, manganese, and other micronutrients that trees and shrubs need for healthy growth.
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Fuller, Denser Foliage
Proper nutrition produces thicker leaf coverage and more uniform canopy growth. Sparse, thin canopies are often a sign of nutrient deficiency rather than disease or age.
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Improved Color & Bloom Production
Iron and manganese deficiencies cause yellowing (chlorosis) in Ohio landscapes. Feeding corrects these deficiencies and supports more vibrant bloom production in flowering species.
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Stronger Stress Resistance
Well-nourished plants recover faster from drought, heat, insect damage, and winter injury. They are also more resistant to fungal diseases that exploit weakened tissue.
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Better Winter Hardiness
Fall feeding stores nutrients in the root system for winter survival and early spring growth. This is critical in Ohio where winter temperatures, ice, and salt create severe stress conditions.
Common Questions
Tree & Shrub Feeding FAQ
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