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Don't commit 'crape murder'
12:00 AM CST on Friday, February 16, 2007
By LISA MARTIN / Special Contributor to The Dallas Morning News
Jimmy Turner, director of research at the Dallas Arboretum & Botanical
Society, is on a mission to stop mass murder. It kills him to see
crape myrtles hacked, chopped and topped around North Texas.

MILTON HINNANT/DMN
Stop this: Don't top crape myrtles to control their height.
" I
honestly don't know why people feel like they have to top their
crape myrtles," Mr. Turner says with a sigh. "I guess
people do it because their dad did it or their neighbor does
it, but there's nothing that can be gained by this destructive
process."
In fact, he says, you can weaken the tree and ruin its shape by
beheading it.
Mr. Turner acted as consultant with the Crape Myrtle Trails of
McKinney to create a pamphlet that lists the following guidelines
for trimming your trees:
• Never use pruning as a means of height control. Transplant
tall varieties to more spacious surroundings.
• Remove nothing (including seed heads) from the top of
a large crape myrtle.
• Remove unwanted branches from the bottom of your crape
myrtles in order to train them to grow tree-form.
• Remove damaged branches or those that rub against each
other from the interior.
If your plant has been "crape murdered" by topping it,
the quickest way to restore it is to cut the crape myrtle completely
to the ground in late winter. Retrain the vigorous growth that
comes back from the root system.
Lisa Martin is an Arlington freelance writer.
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