cubbie
Yamadori
I almost threw this away 2 years ago when the bark split, I guess from not giving it winter protection.
What do you mean the "bark split"?
If you mean a portion died, then I see why you would have almost thrown it away.., if you are talking about sections of bark peeling off- that should happen every year for a healthy tree. Crepe Myrtles shed their smooth bark in long sheets during the Summer. It has nothing to do with winter protection...
This is a pretty cool tree, but after it flowers I'd prune it back hard! It is a little to "leggy" if Literati is your style goal IMO. They can be pruned back 5-6+ times in one season where I live if growing well... If you do that, most won't bloom or will bloom very sparse because they loom at the end of current year growth, but you can get faster/ better/ finer ramification and avoid the branches getting too thick and chunky...
Ummm... Yeah... I can SEE the dead section of trunk, that is a whole lot more than "split bark". That is half the tree dying off.. I just wouldn't have described that way I guess, that is why I was asking for clarification.Though it may seem obvious to others, and one with a very nice tree such as this would know myrtles shed, I think he is referring to the giant crack going up from the soil line all the way up to the first branch.
With all that crack...it really needs a pink thong.![]()
"what had happened was" this tree was pushed to the back of those that could be left outside during the occasional really cold Florida days. When I realized it, there was a split all the way up the trunk.
Bellota Enterprises, Inc. Paul Katich, from Jacksonville, FL. bellota.pots@gmail.com He has really neat and unusual pots at great prices, but i'm not sure if he has a web site or not. he is a vendor every year at the Florida conventionVery nice tree. Great pot too, who's it by?
I just didn't know what else to blame it on!I can't imagine that you can blame that on the cold. Mine go down to lower double and single digits every winter and usually come through fine (except last year and none of the trunks split; they just didn't resprout in the spring).