
Aeration, or more commonly known as soil de-compaction via a High Velocity Air Tool, is one of the most important treatments for a healthy tree. According to a recent Arborist survey, soil compaction is a serious issue on approximately 50% of residential properties across the DC Metro Area and contributes to 80% of urban tree decline. Don’t let your tree become a soil compaction statistic; read on to find out the 3 major reasons your tree needs Aeration to maintain its health.
1) Your Soil Has Poor Nutrients: In our urban/suburban area the soil around tree roots tends to be compacted. This means there is no room from other plants and micro-organisms to grown within it and provide nutrients to the tree.
How Aeration Can Help: Aeration gives room for micro-organisms to develop and the soil to correct back to its natural nutrient dense state. If lack of nutrients is extreme the Arborist may even recommend you go one step further with Vertical Mulching.
2) Your Soil Is Experiencing Drought: Typically most homeowners don’t worry about drought unless there is a lack of rain; however, when soil compaction is present your tree can experience drought during normal weather conditions. In compaction cases the soil is too hard and dry to let rain past the first layer of soil. This means very little amounts of water make it to the tree’s root system.
How Aeration Can Help: Because aeration breaks up the soil there is no longer a hard top layer to stop water from penetrating the soil. The increase in pore space referenced in reason #1 also gives the water more room to pass through the soil and be absorbed by the tree’s roots.

How Aeration Can Help: Soil Aeration breaks up compaction allowing more pore space. This pore space helps give your tree the moisture and oxygen it needs and helps turn your landscape into a more natural environment.

If you would like to save your tree from years of decline and ultimately death, it is best to get ahead of soil compaction by having Aeration treatments performed one to two times a year.
To learn more about soil compaction and the benefits of aeration check out our other article Soil Compaction: Are You Smothering Your Tree?