Pruning Crape Myrtles the Correct Way

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Crape myrtles (Lagerstroemia indica) are a popular tree or shrub in the landscape known for their bright flower display during the summer and attractive bark during the winter. With crape myrtles being a popular plant in the landscape for many people, a common question is when and how to prune them.

Crape myrtles should be pruned during the winter. Many people prune in late winter, from late February into early March. The important thing to remember is to prune crape myrtles before new growth begins in spring. A crape myrtle’s flower buds are produced on new growth. So once new growth starts in the spring, flower buds for the summer will begin to form on current new growth.

When it comes to how to prune crape myrtles, many are not pruned properly. Often you see the tops of crape myrtles cut off with only a few large branches left. This incorrect pruning is often jokingly called “crape murder”. This type of pruning is not recommended because it destroys the natural form and shape of the tree. Some do this type of pruning with the idea that it promotes flowering, however, branches that grow from these drastic cuts are weak and poorly attached to the main branches. Not only will these weak branches be easily damaged by wind and ice, but they will not be strong enough to hold flowers during the summer causing the weak branches to sag from the weight of the flowers.

Crape myrtles are actually low maintenance when it comes to pruning. Usually crape myrtles only need light pruning once the shape of the plant is established. When pruning, remember that new growth will emerge a few inches below where the limb is cut. Avoid cutting back large limbs and leaving stubs, because an abundance of new growth will emerge near the cut, looking like pom-poms on stalks instead of the natural growth habit of a crape myrtle.

Crape myrtles (Lagerstroemia indica) pruned to maintain the tree’s natural growth habit will provide beauty year-round in the landscape.

Crape myrtles (Lagerstroemia indica) pruned to maintain the tree’s natural growth habit will provide beauty year-round in the landscape.

When you first begin to prune a crape myrtle, you want to select three to five of the strongest and healthiest trunks and cut the other trunks out at ground level. Remove water sprouts you see come up from the ground any time of the year. As a newly planted crape myrtle grows, you can gradually remove lower branches from the main trunks for the first few years to raise the canopy of the tree.

When pruning, thin out areas with many branches by cutting selected branches or limbs back to where it meets another branch. This thinning will help allow for good air circulation throughout the tree canopy, which can reduce the chances of powdery mildew during the growing season.

As when pruning any plant, you should always remove the three D’s: dead, dying, and diseased branches. Eliminate any crossing branches, even if the branches are not yet touching each other. Crossing branches can eventually touch each other which will allow for the branches to rub and open wounds that can allow access for disease and insects into the tree. Remove branches that are growing toward the center of the tree canopy or growing downward. You want the branches to grow upward and outward from the tree’s center.

Even though it is often seen, remember to avoid cutting crape myrtles back so much that just large branches or stubs are left. This type of pruning will not provide you with an attractive crape myrtle in the landscape. By simply practicing some routine pruning in late winter to clean up and encourage the natural form that crape myrtles are known for, you will be provided with attractive crape myrtles in the landscape year-round.

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