Hideous crimes are being committed all ever Texas, some in our own front
yards and many right in front of our local businesses. Unfortunately, many
have turned a blind eye to the ongoing massacre. Not me! I can take it no
more.
I am officially forming an advocacy group for plant's rights. They can't
speak, so I'm going to speak for them. My first mission…to stop Crape Murder!
Lagerstroemia indica: The Crapemyrtle. A native of China. The "Lilac of
the South". The most popular flowering tree in the southern United States.
Introduced to the U.S. by Frenchman Andre Michaux to South Carolina around
1786. Perhaps the most beautifully branching flowering tree in the world.
Crapemyrtles are among the toughest, most adaptable, and showiest plants
that we can grow in our Texas landscapes. They have very few pests. They
bloom all summer long. They require no supplemental irrigation. They have
exfoliating bark that reveals spectacular smooth trunks. And they happen
to have a branching structure that any floral designer would crave. They
pretty much do every thing but mow the lawn for us.
But for some reason, a mysterious reason that I haven't quite solved, the
majority of the "gardeners" (and ALL of the landscape crews) in Texas have
made it a horrid ritual of butchering them.
Clip this portion of the article out and take it directly to your spouse,
maintenance person, or nurseryman. I know of NO educated horticulturist or
arborist that endorses the practice of topping crapemyrtles or any
ornamental trees for that matter. Go ahead. Pick up the phone. Call Neil
Sperry. Call Dr. Bill Welch. Call the National Arboretum! You WILL NOT
find any plant expert that will condone or recommend this practice.
Then why do we do it? Actually I have several theories. But I'm not
going to share any of them with you for fear that you might some how feel
justified in your arboreal disfigurement.
I will tell you why not too, however. First of all it leaves horrible
scars and wounds that last forever. That's correct, FOREVER. I can show
you exactly where any crapemyrtle on earth was topped. It's a "teenage
tattoo" that can never be removed. It also makes a profusion of smaller
branches resulting in a lack of proportion. All trees have a
characteristic shape. It just so happens that crapemyrtles have one of the
most beautiful. Topping does create larger blooms, though fewer of them.
Unfortunately these larger blooms on new shoots have a tendency to flop
over and droop after summer rains (remember when it used to rain in the
summer?). And finally it's down right ugly. We don't hack on dogwoods,
redbuds, or Japanese maples. So why do we pick out the prettiest one of
all to maim? Surely it's not a "school girl" jealousy thing. How sick can
we be to pick out the prettiest belle at the ball and scratch her face?
This practice may look appropriate behind a chain link fence in a
Mississippi trailer park, but I can assure you it is not appropriate for
any landscape that you intend to be admired. Some of the most beautiful
homes in Texas are now marred by embarrassing crapemyrtles. On the other
hand, take a trip to Baton Rough, Mobile, or Charleston. They have an
enduring admiration for their beautiful crapemyrtles and wouldn't think of
undoing what nature has perfected.
The only pruning crapemyrtles require is to thin out the trunks on young
trees leaving somewhere around 3 to 7 permanents trunks. The fewer you
have, the more you can admire their shape and smooth texture. Each year
around early spring, all you do is remove any new suckers that appear from
the ground or from you main trunks. That's it. Yes, if the tree is small
you can remove the seedpods, but realize that this is purely for aesthetic
reason. Removing dried pods during the winter doesn't promote any more
bloom during the summer. Removing them during the summer does promote
faster re-bloom however. This nonsense of pruning back to pencil size wood
comes from recommendations from the 1960's and is outdated. People
apparently had a lot more free time on their hands then. There's no
telling how many thousands of dollars are wasted on incorrect pruning of
crapemyrtles. To be quite honest an unpruned crapemyrtle is almost always
superior in appearance to a "professionally" pruned one. Some things in
nature are hard to improve on.
In my personal opinion, any landscape maintenance firm involved in this
practice should be immediately fired! They are wasting your time and money
and obviously don't care what's best for your plants or your landscape. If
they took the time to educate themselves through seminars and reading, they
would earn your money through more horticulturally sound practices.
I'm quite sure that the few of you left reading this soapbox diatribe
can't wait to tell me what many have in the past. "But Greg, they got to
big!" Much better to cut it to the ground and start over, or pull it out
entirely, than to maim it. Most folks don't realize (but should) that
there are many, many, cultivars of crapemyrtles that have an ultimate
height range from 3 feet to 30 feet. For heavens sakes, don't plant a 30
foot crapemyrtle in a space designed for a 10 foot one.
Check with a reputable nursery. If a tree type is too large, there are
many smaller types available, including mildew resistant ones. There are a
number of improved semi-dwarf cultivars in the 6-8 foot range including
Acoma (white), Hopi (pink), Tonto (fuchsia), and Velma's Royal Delight
(purple) that make outstanding small trees. Trees that NEVER need topping,
that is.
Thanks to King's Nursery and Greenleaf Nursery, I have planted a
collection of commercially available crapemyrtle cultivars in the commuter
parking lot on University Drive on the SFA Univsersity Campus. This will
be one of the only places in the state where gardeners can come see what
each named cultivar is SUPPOSED to look like, a sort of "abuse free" zone
if you will. They won't be sprayed, irrigated, or pruned. They'll just
stand there minding their own business, looking pretty in pink (and other
colors as well, of course).
There have been articles on this same subject in Southern Living, Neil
Sperry's Gardens, and other southern magazines and newspapers.
Unfortunately, the problem here seems to be getting exponentially worse
each year. I can only assume that gardeners in Texas either don't read, or
don't care. Please prove me wrong. STOP THE CRAPE MURDER!
Greg Grant is a horticulture lecturer at Stephen F. Austin, co-author of
The Southern Heirloom Garden, a Master Texas Certified Nurseryman, and a
member of the Garden Writers Association of America, the Southern Garden
History Society, and the Lagerstroemia Jihad.
Greg Grant
SFA Mast Arboretum
Box 13000, Wilson Dr.
Nacogdoches, Texas 75963
http://www.sfasu.edu/ag/arboretum/
409-468-1729, Fax 409-468-4047, ggrant@qzip.net
Zone 8b. Hot dry summers. Mild wet winters.