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  2. On one hand it's more than a bit nasty of the nursey to do that to you. On the other hand, regardless of it's current state, it's a beauiful tree that will definitely pull through.
  3. The more I look at the website though the more convinced I am but they don't have the options I want 😭
  4. I am in North County San Diego, inland, and we have not really had a winter at all. My mulberry, and half of my plumeria, never lost their leaves. I am shocked by the pictures I am seeing from Disney World -- all of the dead cycads, and palms. How bad was the freeze in Florida for you?
  5. Silas_Sancona

    Hints of Spring ..Part 2?..

    With temps headed for the 90s this week / winter 25 -26 in the bag, ..figure it is time for an update.. When the Phacelia are all but done for the season, Glandularia gooddingii steps in fill the " blue / violet flowering thing " space on stage. On a side note, ..as much as i love 'em, decided that this will be the last year i grow out extensive plots of both Phacelia sps i've had going.. As attractive, and valuable foraging for early native rising bees as both are, many species of the Genus hide a not so pleasant " gift " when one brushes up against them ..or, in my case, goes to remove them from planting beds as they fade out for the season / trim and harvest for seed.. Essentially, ..if you're sensitive to compounds produced by Poison Oak / Ivy, you may be sensitive to similar, sticky / oily compounds these plants produce that can cause similar rashes on the skin. After a few weeks of itchy hands / arms ..and other places where the oily residue these plants produced touched while clearing them out, i decided that ..while i won't eliminate them completely, i will shift these out of the main bed out front, adding in more Lupinus for the " blue / purple " end of the color spectrum out there. Of the two species, seems P. crenulata, Notch -leaved Phacelia, may possess more of these itch -inducing compounds than P. campanularia.. Speaking of Lupinus, one of just a couple L. douglasii that managed to survive a very dry winter.. TX. bluebonnets that also held up thru the winter should be doing their thing shortly. Locally native L. sparsiflorus are just about done for the year.. Penstemon parryi w/ Ruellia californica / peninsularis in the background.. It hasn't stopped flowering since ....October.. What freshly opened seed on Bursera fageroides ( ...and the majority of other Bursera sps ) looks like when the fleshy, outer shell opens and exposes the neon, Red Orange Aril - covered seed ( An evolutionary strategy of attracting birds ) While it has been shedding seed here and there for several weeks, w / the heat kicking in, expect all the remaining seed to be ready to harvest / plant out soon. I'd say the kick off to " Cactus Season 2026 " is about to get underway but, ..whatever sp of Stenocactus it is i have started flowering about 2 weeks ago.. Beaver Tails and " old enough to bloom " Hedgehogs ( Echinocereus ) are up next. You know it has been a warm winter when -any- Adenium starts flowering ..in February.. This kid is sitting in more shade atm so it flowering, already, is a bit more of a surprise and a testament to just how warm this winter has been.. Locally native form of CA. Buckwheat with neon Orange Cape Daisies in the background. Darker colored form of Calliandra eriophylla, second flowering since the start of the year.. Aristolochia watsonii, off to the races, already.. That pretty, blue violet Mandevilla seemingly much happier w/ conditions thru the winter rather during the summer. Clitoria mariana awakening quite early this year.. I'd mentioned elsewhere how the Plumeria would likely start moving earlier than is typical this year. Well, as you can see, .." pushing off dried out leaf attempts " is the first sign of awakening from their winter naps.. The rewards of using Sulfur powder to save injured specimens.. New growth will pop from dormant buds in the leaf scars in view.. On a bench, inside.. Artemisia californica trial coming along nicely.. Same with the Cochlospermum palmatifida trial.. Potted up the next batch of seed last night.. Plan is having some to plant out around the yards, and some that i can keep in a large pot ..for seed. On a side note, ..What the roots of a true " Devilish Blonde " look like.. last October, carefully removed all the 2yr old potted specimens and installed them out front. During one of those " complete idiot " moments, i completely forgot to mark where i dropped them in the ground so, fingers crossed, they'll pop once the heat really kicks in. Emphasize carefully.. roots are easily damaged, which can lead to them completely rotting. So touchy you are, Blondie. 😁 When large enough to plant out, some of the Cochlospermum will join them in the same beds. Pappophorum vaginatum after com pot separation.. First few weeks after separating / transplanting = always a touchy time with young native grasses.. Due to how popular they seem to be with those i have shared them with, and because the mother plant may be nearing the end of her productive life span, starting more Ital. Long Peppers.. Likely not the only pepper grown this year either.
  6. FlaPalmLover

    2026 Florida Palmageddon Observations and Damage Photo Thread

    Anyone else have cordyline fruticosa totally destroyed by the cold front? I didn't know they were so cold sensitive. Mine look like they're toast. They were 3-4 feet tall already. I didn't protect them because I didn't know they were that sensitive.
  7. It is probably at least an hour and a half drive but KW Palms in Lake Elsinore is pretty good. Here is a link to his Facebook page: https://www.facebook.com/p/KW-Palms-and-Cycads-100057488287886/
  8. 20$ is a lot! 😂 10$ would be more like it! I'd be ok with a musa basjoo pup though, That website has none in stock currently 🙁
  9. There's far more to plant hardiness than a USDA hardiness zone. In this case it's most useful in terms of frost-tolerance. Ravenala is grown in many 10a areas, in California, Florida and I'm sure in warm spots in southern Arizona. They are real heat-lovers and when mature can stand in the sizzling Sonoran desert here around Palm Springs (but are best with some afternoon shade and wind protection). But in the coastal zone it's about average temperatures, soil temperature, heat units, etc. that the plant requires to grow acceptably. The plant must have enough heat to produce enough leaves each year to sustain its metabolic needs, and certainly to have a good appearance. Brookings may be 10a, and so are many areas in coastal Southern California, but that distance makes all the difference in terms of Ravenala surviving. I've seen a house with mass plantings of huge Ravenala blocks from the ocean in the rather cool Cardiff-by-the-Sea community in Encinitas, but move north and at a certain point that "cool" crosses the boundary into unacceptable chill. I suspect it may require careful siting even in Santa Barbara and very likely in coastal points north of Point Conception...just due to the much cooler days and chillier nights at all times of year as one moves northward and the Pacific gets colder and colder, and fall/winter sun gets lower and weaker, and the daylength shorter and shorter. You can grow Ravenala as a houseplant, probably with no more difficulty than Strelitzia at common household temperatures. But you'll need to pay attention to growing media (I would hose off the planting mix from the plant and replace with things like Leca, pumice, etc. and preferably in a hydroponically watered pot) and also pest control (mealybugs, spidermites, etc.). It's very easy to get the root-zone too wet (even if it feels dry on top), especially when using commercial "potting mixes" which are probably the worst thing in which you can try to grow an interior plant. The dense, rotting organic material will densify into a wet, stenchy, muddy mess in the perched water table in the bottom third or so of the pot, smothering the roots of the plant (which need copious oxygen to grow and thrive). And give it spells outside and hose the bugs off every few weeks.
  10. Today
  11. JohnAndSancho

    Mississippi Squad

    There's nothing wrong with being attracted to a woman who's way out of your league who just bought a giant yacht to celebrate a divorce.
  12. Nah I'm not gonna go there. I'm clean.
  13. JohnAndSancho

    What happened to Texas Cold Hardy Palms (Joseph Rossi)

    I'm not gonna quote everybody here, but I nuked Facebook during Covid. Not gonna get into the why, but at that point I already had to send in a photo of my driver's license because someone reported me as being fake. The email address I used on that account is long gone. I tried to make another account recently since that's apparently where 98% of this forum has gone, and despite having to do facial recognition scans and them already having my biometrics through my phone, I'm somehow banned for violating community standards of a community I haven't been part of in 6 years - but I could make an Instagram account, go figure - and the ads and "followers" it promotes to me make it really obvious just HOW MUCH they already know about me and it's disturbing as hell - I occasionally grab my mom's tablet and scroll through her Facebook and it's not much different. They know she's a boomer that will buy pretty much anything they throw in front of her, lol... But yeah, I hate it. I mean, say what you will about the owner of Twitter (and believe me, I say it), but at least the ads on there are stupid and have nothing to do with any of my private or personal info. I have no interest in buying a St Louis Cardinals jersey or a World's Greatest Grandpa coffee cup. But Meta knows where I live, they know my health status, they know my marital status, I just want an active plant and palm forum again. And I honestly hope more and more of our previously active users on here figure the shit out and see it for what it is.
  14. That's what I was thinking, Ravenala is native to Madagascar, and most images I have seen of Ravenala show it in areas such as Hawaii, Myanmar, Northern Ontario, and Kinshasa. Brookings is "10a" by the 2023 USDA hardiness map, but I have yet to see Ravenala grow in 10a. If you could give any recommendations, what would be the best way to grow Ravenala/P. amazonicum indoors?
  15. Golden10

    Northern most coconut palm tree??? Daytona beach

    I wasn’t around the area for the last freeze. I don’t think necessarily colder, i believe it was possibly windier. It’s not hard to spot exotics and tropicals these days as they are all brown. I used to have to look for them a lot of people have gotten away with exotics for years due to microclimate but this freeze nobody was safe
  16. 💪🦜🦜🌴🌴
  17. Las Palmas Norte

    Northern most coconut palm tree??? Daytona beach

    Colder this go-around?
  18. Water is a complete game changer in palm growing, if I was to be asked how do you grow palms my answer would be just water them. Of course there are a few exceptions drainage and temperature, but basically water and lots of it when it comes to my garden.
  19. Golden10

    Northern most coconut palm tree??? Daytona beach

    Obviously, but from my understanding this palm has already survived historic freezes in the past and has been around for awhile
  20. Las Palmas Norte

    Northern most coconut palm tree??? Daytona beach

    Coconut palm + freeze = toast.
  21. TropicsEnjoyer

    FAN PALM TREE

    Possibly even Mediterranean fan palm (Chamaerops humilis), and needle palm if you like palms that stay short and bushy rather than tall.
  22. Harry’s Palms

    New plantings 2026

    That’s right. Some self clean , others don’t . Harry
  23. Harry’s Palms

    FAN PALM TREE

    There are slow growing fan palms you can plant depending on your climate. I don’t know if Livistona Chinensis grows where you are but they are very slow . Sabal tend to be a bit slow , depending on species. Harry
  24. TropicsEnjoyer

    FAN PALM TREE

    Unfortunately palms tend to grow only one way and that is up. You could hold off on watering it and fertilizing it, but over time that may or may not compromise the health of your palm. I’ve never heard about plant growth regulators. I would do some research on it if you haven’t already just to make sure you’re not wasting your money. At the end of the day if you want a shorter palm your only real option is to replace it. But I don’t see why you would want to cut down a healthy palm if the only issue with it is being tall. Is it causing any risks or damages? In Atlanta I think your options for palms are quite limited so if it were me I would be happy to even have a palm tree at all.
  25. I give our palm hard-core fan boys a lot of credit . I enjoy watching them on YouTube or just see pictures of them protecting their palms . A lot of them probably have a remote job or just have a lot of time.
  26. Good Day NatureGirl, Many thanks for the special package of seeds. All are safe and have their liquid warm bath. Suppose to be blizzing today as of now only transparent flakes are falling. Weather people are guessing on how much. Time will tell by tomorrow. Enjoy your days and keep up the great work. Thank you again! ZenMan 1 🌴🌴🌴😁🌞
  27. I'm not a huge fan of Facebook ( anymore) but I know it's not just Facebook that sells your personal data. You give up your personal privacy the minute you surf on the world wide web giving social media your personal information just to sign in . It's the way it is since the existence of the internet. I have nothing to hide but that doesn't mean it's OK.
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