Dry January may be good for your health, but a dry January climate is not healthy for your landscape.

Your trees may need human intervention.

It may seem like an inch or two of snow here and there is adequate natural moisture for our landscape plants. We may conclude that it will snow more soon, so there is no need to be concerned about our plants. It’s winter, after all, and aren’t plants dormant and not actively growing, so they don’t need any help from us?

The short answer is that plants need our assistance in the winter just like they need watering in the heat of summer. Plants need water because they continue to use it during the winter, but in less amounts. If they are well hydrated, they not only survive tough, low water months, but also they head into spring and summer stronger and healthier.

The only way to know if your landscape soil is moist is to physically check the soil.

Find your longest screwdriver and poke it down into the ground through the mulch, the grass and especially on sunny south-, west- or southwest-facing areas. If the screwdriver doesn't go down easily, then the ground, the soil, is dry. (Betty Cahill, Special to The Denver Post)
Find your longest screwdriver and poke it down into the ground through the mulch, the grass and especially on sunny south-, west- or southwest-facing areas. If the screwdriver doesn’t go down easily, then the ground, the soil, is dry. (Betty Cahill, Special to The Denver Post)

Find your longest screwdriver and poke it down into the ground through the mulch, the grass and especially on sunny south-, west- or southwest-facing areas. Check anywhere the soil isn’t frozen. If the screwdriver doesn’t go down easily, then the ground, the soil, is dry. If you need to use more effort to get it down, then the area is extremely parched. Your plants and plant roots need attention, very soon.