European Beech in April: monthly care
Month-by-month care — Fagus sylvatica
In April your european Beech needs attention: fertilise and watch the bloom.
- Fertilise
- Blooms

What to do this April
European beech has moderate water needs and tolerates short dry spells once established, but young trees benefit from regular watering during their first two or three summers, especially in prolonged dry weather. Water deeply every couple of weeks rather than little and often, encouraging roots to grow downward. Mature specimens rarely need supplemental watering except in severe drought. In winter, natural rainfall is almost always sufficient. Feed in March or April with a general-purpose granular fertiliser such as blood, fish and bone or Growmore, scattered around the root zone and lightly forked or watered in. A single spring application is enough; avoid high-nitrogen feeds later in the year, which promote soft growth vulnerable to frost. Maintain a mulch layer of well-rotted compost or bark chips, replenishing it each spring to suppress weeds, conserve moisture, and gradually improve the soil. Beech is fully hardy across zones 4a to 8b and needs no winter protection. It does, however, hold onto its dead leaves through winter when grown as a hedge—a trait called marcescence—providing useful screening even when dormant. Rake up fallen leaves from specimen trees in autumn if they smother lawns or borders, or leave them as natural mulch under the canopy. Pests are generally few. Beech aphids can cause honeydew and sooty mould on foliage in spring and summer; a strong jet of water or natural predators usually keep numbers in check. Beech bark disease, a combination of scale insect and fungal infection, causes dark weeping patches on the trunk and can be serious; remove and burn affected bark, and consult a professional arborist if the problem spreads.
European beech has moderate water needs and tolerates short dry spells once established, but young trees benefit from regular watering during their first two or three summers, especially in prolonged dry weather. Water deeply every couple of weeks rather than little and often, encouraging roots to grow downward. Mature specimens rarely need supplemental watering except in severe drought. In winter, natural rainfall is almost always sufficient. Feed in March or April with a general-purpose granular fertiliser such as blood, fish and bone or Growmore, scattered around the root zone and lightly forked or watered in. A single spring application is enough; avoid high-nitrogen feeds later in the year, which promote soft growth vulnerable to frost. Maintain a mulch layer of well-rotted compost or bark chips, replenishing it each spring to suppress weeds, conserve moisture, and gradually improve the soil. Beech is fully hardy across zones 4a to 8b and needs no winter protection. It does, however, hold onto its dead leaves through winter when grown as a hedge—a trait called marcescence—providing useful screening even when dormant. Rake up fallen leaves from specimen trees in autumn if they smother lawns or borders, or leave them as natural mulch under the canopy. Pests are generally few. Beech aphids can cause honeydew and sooty mould on foliage in spring and summer; a strong jet of water or natural predators usually keep numbers in check. Beech bark disease, a combination of scale insect and fungal infection, causes dark weeping patches on the trunk and can be serious; remove and burn affected bark, and consult a professional arborist if the problem spreads.