Yard Boss provides professional tree iron supplementation through direct trunk injection.
Trunk Injection Delivery
Annual Treatment
Rapid Uptake
Visible Transformation
Minimal Invasiveness
Tree Iron Injections
Custom Pricing
Trunk Injection Delivery
Annual Treatment
Rapid Uptake
Visible Transformation
Minimal Invasiveness
Seward, the county seat of Seward County and home to Concordia University, sits along the Big Blue River in south-central Nebraska. This community of historic homes and established landscapes faces the same challenge affecting trees throughout the region: alkaline soil that locks away iron in forms trees cannot use. Iron deficiency causes trees to lack the bright green color they should have, creating pale, washed-out foliage that most Seward residents have accepted as normal. Yard Boss specializes in trunk injection treatments that unlock your trees’ full potential, delivering the deep green color and vigorous health you expected when planting them. Trees most susceptible to iron deficienty:
Iron injection can be done anytime your trees are actively taking up nutrients through their vascular system. Spring (April-June) provides optimal timing with peak nutrient uptake and fastest visible results appearing in 2-3 weeks. Summer treatment (July-August) works excellently as well, with good uptake and results visible in 3-4 weeks. Early fall treatment (September) is effective though slower, with benefits often appearing the following spring. We provide day-before notification via your preferred method (text or email) and schedule treatments during the active growing season for best results.
Many Seward homeowners worry that trunk injection might harm their trees. The reality is quite different. Our injection needles are the same size as those used for drawing blood—creating tiny wounds that trees heal quickly through natural callus formation. Trees regularly experience much larger wounds from woodpeckers, storm damage, and pruning cuts without issue. The injection points seal within days and are barely visible after one growing season. The temporary, minor stress of these small injections is nothing compared to the ongoing damage of chronic iron deficiency, which progressively weakens trees year after year.
Spring (Optimal)
April – June
Tree Activity
Peak nutrient uptake, leaves expanding, & high transpiration
Treatment Effectiveness
Excellent – Fastest visible results (2-3 weeks)
Summer
July – August
Tree Activity
Active growth and transpiration high in healthy trees
Treatment Effectiveness
Excellent – Good uptake, results visible in 3-4 weeks
Early Fall
September
Tree Activity
Trees still active, nutrient storage for winter
Treatment Effectiveness
Good – Uptake slower but effective; benefits visible next spring
Late Fall
October – November
Tree Activity
Trees preparing for dormancy, reduced activity
Treatment Effectiveness
Fair – Limited uptake; mainly benefits next year
call us today to schedule your service
Iron is essential for chlorophyll production—the green pigment in leaves that drives photosynthesis. Without adequate iron, your Seward trees cannot efficiently convert sunlight to energy, resulting in reduced growth, stunted development, and overall weakness. Over multiple years, this cumulative stress makes trees vulnerable to insects, diseases, drought stress, and winter injury. In severe cases, prolonged deficiency causes twig dieback that can progress to branch death. Our annual trunk injection ensures your trees receive the iron they need for optimal photosynthesis, energy production, and long-term health.
At Yard Boss, we understand that you may have questions about our services, processes, and how we can help you achieve the perfect lawn. Whether you’re curious about our lawn care techniques, service areas, or the benefits of professional lawn maintenance, you’ll find the information you need right here. If you have any additional questions, feel free to reach out to our friendly team!
Your trees have iron deficiency because of Nebraska's alkaline soil, not because there's no iron in the soil. Here's the explanation:
How to tell if your trees are iron-deficient:
Most common on: Pin oak, river birch, red oak, silver maple—these are "acid-loving" trees that struggle in alkaline soil
Iron injection can be done anytime the tree is actively taking up nutrients, which means anytime from spring leaf emergence through early fall before dormancy.
Best Timing by Season
Our recommendation: Spring is ideal for fastest results, but summer treatment works great too. If you're noticing pale foliage in July, treat now—don't wait until next spring!
No! Trees heal from injection wounds quickly and easily. Here's why you don't need to worry:
Trees regularly survive wounds from:
Our tiny injection points are minor compared to wounds trees naturally handle. The benefit (vibrant green foliage and improved photosynthesis) greatly outweighs the minimal, temporary stress of small injection points.
Your tree will continue to struggle with iron deficiency. Here are the consequences:
Short-Term (This Season)
Long-Term (Multiple Years)
The "Opportunity Cost"
You planted this tree (or bought a property with it) because you wanted a beautiful, healthy shade tree adding value to your property. Iron deficiency means you're getting 50-70% of the tree's potential beauty and only 60-80% of its potential growth. Treatment unlocks the tree's full potential—the vibrant green color and vigorous growth you expected when planting it.
No—iron injection is an annual treatment because the underlying soil problem (alkaline pH) is permanent. Think of it like taking a daily vitamin:
Why not permanent? The alkaline soil constantly prevents root iron uptake. Annual trunk injection bypasses this problem, but only for one season. It's not that treatment wears off—it's that the tree can't get iron from soil on its own and needs the annual supplement.
If tree already has deep green foliage, it probably doesn't need iron treatment. Either:
We assess each tree individually. If foliage is already vibrant green, we'll tell you treatment isn't needed—we don't sell unnecessary services.
Young trees benefit from iron injection, but considerations:
As young trees mature and trunk diameter increases, trunk injection becomes the most effective long-term solution.
Great news—tree height doesn't matter for trunk injection! We inject at trunk at breast height (4-5 feet up), not in the canopy. Tree can be 10 feet or 100 feet tall—injection method is the same. Iron is transported throughout tree via vascular system regardless of height.