Welcome to Randy Lemmon's "KPRC TALKRADIO Gardenline" Tip of the Week Text-Only Edition Date- July 4, 2002 Issue #29 http://kprcradio.com By Subscription Only! You are receiving this newsletter because you requested a subscription. Unsubscribe instructions are at the end of this newsletter. ------------------------------------------------------------ IN THIS ISSUE ------------------------------------------------------------ => Prolonging Crape Blooms Making the 'magic' last... ------------------------------------------------------------ Gardenline Tip of the Week - Randy Lemmon ------------------------------------------------------------ For hopefully only one last time, I find myself in a unique position of re-running an email tip that we sent out last year at this same time. And again, since we have three times as many subscribers as we did this time last year, I think it bears repeating. It's all about prolonging your crape myrtles blooming season. I love Crape Myrtles, mainly because they bloom for about 3 months, but that still isn't long enough for some folks. So, for those people and the rest of you who would like to prolong your crape myrtle bloom season, this GardenLine email tip of the week is for you. First, don't wait too much longer to do this, and keep in mind this process can be done anytime during June and July. The simple concept of extending the bloom cycle of Crape Myrtles is to get rid of the expired or expiring bloom clusters. Sounds pretty simple, eh?? Yep, there's a catch. In order to get the best possible chance at a new flower cluster, you need to trim the stems that are more greenish in color. The more woody or brown the stem is, just under the bloom cluster, the less likely it will set a new bloom head for you. So, think selective pruning when you're trying to prolong this blooming season. There is one other caveat! You're supposed to prune back to where you notice new side-shoots emerging from a branch. If you don't see any, prune very long branches back about one-fourth or one-third; shorter branches prune less than that, and you will get branching as well as new buds forming. A new flush of flowers should follow. Here's one helpful hint! After the pruning clinic on these crapes, try to boost the bloom-feeding quotient. Use a water-soluble bloom-booster such as Carl Pool's BR-61, Super Bloom, Super Thrive or even Miracle Gro. By the way, there's a brand new society dedicated to our favorite flowering tree - the Crape Myrtle. They had their first meeting a couple of weeks ago in Bryan-College Station. Sorry we didn't get that information out then, but if you would like to join you still can! Just click on http://www.thecrapemyrtlesocietyofamerica.org Until next week, here's to Great Gardening from the GardenLine, heard exclusively weekend mornings from 8 to noon on Talkradio 950 KPRC. ------------------------------------------------------------ AT THE TALKRADIO 950 WEB SITE: ------------------------------------------------------------ Introducing your source for some of the best buys on the Internet. Check out The TALKRADIO Discount Warehouse every day for new brand-name merchandise ... even FREE items if you pay a few bucks for shipping. Brand names in almost every product category ... jewelry, apparel, books, computers, electronics, health and beauty products, housewares and more!!! http://www.itswholesale.com/ar/iwc.arw_reseller_home_body.jsp?id=1033 ------------------------------------------------------------ Copyright Information ------------------------------------------------------------ Copyright 2001 Clear Channel Interactive List Maintenance: To subscribe-- Send a blank email message to "kprc-epub-text@ev1.net" with "SUBSCRIBE" in the subject line. To unsubscribe-- Send a blank email message to "bobgunner@clearchannel.com" with "Remove Gardenline Tips- Text Only" in the subject line. Online TEXT issue can be found at http://kprcradio.com/listenernewsletter/GardenTalk_07-04-02.txt http://kprcradio.com