The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Trim plumeria gradually, plant 8-inch trimmings

- Walter Reeves Listen to Walter Reeves Saturday mornings on News 95.5 FM and AM750 WSB. Visit his website, www. walterreev­es.com, follow him on Twitter @walterreev­es, on Pinterest, or join his Facebook Fan Page at bit.ly/ georgiagar­dener for more garden ti

I was wondering when and how I can trim my plumeria trees this fall without killing them so I can move them back in the garage. Kell Munroe, Fayette County

I think it’s better to trim plumeria lightly from time to time, perhaps every two months, during the summer until the fall. Don’t wait until just before you take it in to do all of the pruning. If you save some eight-inch “sticks” from the trees when you prune, you can insert them into individual pots and give rooted plants to friends for Christmas. On your radio show, you talked about ladybugs and said something about not confusing them with bugs that would eat wood. What bugs did you mean? P. G. Randall, email

I spoke about the Asian ladybugs that were brought in to control pecan aphids in the 1960s. Though they are useful, they have the disconcert­ing habit of hiding behind wood siding in great masses in winter. If they find a way indoors, the beetles exude a noxious odor and leave a trail of yellowish staining fluid. They don’t do any damage to a home but they’re a nuisance when they come in the house. The best way to deal with them is to make a concerted effort to seal cracks near windows and doors where they might enter. Warning: do not try to vacuum them up! The machine will be so stinky you’ll consider throwing it away. You mentioned a tree peony a few weeks ago. Does it really grow into a tree? Max Williams, email

They are called “tree peony” but they are more like “shrub peony.” My 15-year-old tree peony, Paeonia suffrutico­sa ,is3 feet tall and 3 feet wide. The blooms appear in early spring. The common garden peony, Paeonia lactiflora, dies back to the ground in winter but a tree peony drops its leaves but keep its woody branches. An intersecti­onal peony (also know as Itoh peonies) is a hybrid of a tree peony and a herbaceous peony. I’m building a house that will be done in September. The contractor normally uses bermuda grass but I prefer a green lawn year round. What grass would you recommend for our fullsun yard with irrigation system? P.J. Hamm, Atlanta

You have two choices when it comes to having a year-round green lawn. The first choice is to use fescue grass, which is green 12 months of the year, but it can decline a bit during summer heat. The key to keeping fescue green in summer is to thoroughly till the planting area before you plant seed or sod. Add lime so the soil pH is 6.5. The good news is that the best time to plant fescue is in September.

Your other choice is to use bermudagra­ss sod and overseed it with ryegrass each winter. If you lay bermudagra­ss sod in September, it will not be establishe­d well enough to plant ryegrass the first year. But if the sod establishe­s well and you keep it healthy you could plant ryegrass in the sod next year in the fall. Check my website notes for recommende­d planting procedures in either case. shepherd who lives among horses at the family farm. Gable and Fletcher stayed home, for now. So Katz sent out an online blast, inundating Nextdoor.com sites and informing her nearly 3,000 Facebook followers.

Last week, she brought finality to a convoluted search for Bella, Laboy’s French bulldog, which had escaped his Fort Lauderdale home through an open gate on April 26. Laboy said not long after he posted a notice on his local Nextdoor site about Bella, a woman contacted him saying she saw the dog for sale on Craigslist.

After a series of back and forth phone calls, Laboy and Katz showed up at Bella’s new home and bought her back for $360 _ the same price paid to acquire the dog off Craigslist. Katz’s fee for her service: A well-spent $405, Laboy said.

“Jamie guided me through the entire process,” he said. “It was all about, let’s get the dog back. It was well spent money and I don’t regret it one bit.”

 ?? CONTRIBUTE­D BY WALTER REEVES ?? The flowers of plumeria are seductivel­y fragrant. If you save some 8-inch “sticks” when you prune, you can pot those and give rooted plants to friends for Christmas.
CONTRIBUTE­D BY WALTER REEVES The flowers of plumeria are seductivel­y fragrant. If you save some 8-inch “sticks” when you prune, you can pot those and give rooted plants to friends for Christmas.
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