By Lois Scott, Master Gardener
It was my sister that put the notion in my head that I would like a snag in my garden and the recent ice storm provided the opportunity. A standard Serviceberry cultivar was too broken to save but it left a reasonable and safe trunk for my smallish garden. It also left some small logs to tuck under shrubs.
Dead wood provides positive impacts to biodiversity as many beneficial species are on the search for dead wood. ‘Some of these species include cavity nesting birds and mammals, beetles, fungi and other plants and beneficial insects. Decaying wood positively impacts soil keeping your garden sustainable for years to come’. https://ecologicaldesignlab.ca/site/uploads/2024/12/04_good-garden-practices.pdf
Ecologically speaking a snag refers to a standing dead or dying tree, often missing a top or most of the smaller branches. A snag is also known as a den, cavity or wildlife tree. The following link (Ottawa Field Naturalists’ Club) provides an excellent description of the importance of wildlife trees to wildlife. They provide food, safe cavity nesting sites and platforms, roosting and denning sites, hunting perches, display stations and foraging sites for a wide variety of species. https://ofnc.ca/conservation-how-to/the-importance-of-snags-and-downed-logs-to-wildlife.
Safety first so have a certified arborist advise you on the appropriateness of a potential tree.

Dead wood that is lying in your garden is an excellent addition. It will be quickly colonized by natural decay fungi known as saprophytic fungi, my new word of the day! These fungi help recycle the carbon and nutrients stored in woody tissue back into the garden soil which benefits your plants. A small pile of logs can support many different insects and provide shelter for small mammals, reptiles and amphibians and shelter for over-wintering and hibernating wildlife. https://www.rhs.org.uk/wildlife/dead-wood-compost-heap-habitats This may not make everybody’s heart sing but I like the idea.

The small snag I now have may be more ecologically beneficial as a log on the ground but I have some ideas for it. I plan on providing some support on it for a vine, maybe a Apios americana (American Groundnut). There will probably be a small birdhouse attached. The new logs have joined other decaying wood that I use as garden edging and garden decoration.
One man’s garbage is another man’s treasure!
Epping here, lol I have quite the Willow snag that everyone and everything loves it though I miss its mighty branches with visits from a resident Bald Eagle and a local Osprey.
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Love it! I also have been “saving” bits from the ice storm….cedar poles, cedar branches and cedar boughs as well as a pile of lovely (sniff, sniff) birch branches will all find uses in my garden, whether as “garden art” or compost.
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