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All Activity

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  1. Past hour
  2. Phoenikakias
    Phoenikakias replied to Phoenikakias's topic in DISCUSSING PALM TREES WORLDWIDE
    Those are issues botanists and taxonomists can not or do not raise regularly. Because those people study many sp and genera simultaneously and inspect each sp in its habitat at a certain point of time without observing its whole life cycle. Last action is possible only within growers.
  3. happypalms
    happypalms replied to happypalms's topic in OHANA NUI  -  OFF TOPIC SUB-FORUM
    Roughly around 850 species, a true bird lovers paradise!
  4. gyuseppe
    This post is very interesting for us who live where there aren't many wild palm trees.
  5. tim_brissy_13
    tim_brissy_13 replied to tim_brissy_13's topic in For Sale
    Yep 🙂
  6. happypalms
    happypalms replied to Phoenikakias's topic in DISCUSSING PALM TREES WORLDWIDE
    Mother Nature has her own way of figuring things out. It’s only when we interfere the whole balance gets out of whack. Iam sure there is a very scientific answer as to the whole process and the plant behaviour. Mother Nature never stops, she has surprises in many different ways, plants dont talk a language we can decipher, but they do talk and feel with emotions. There one step ahead of us in many ways. We may control plants in mono culture. But they are the ones who utilise and use us for their survival in our gardens all around the globe. They know what they’re doing and do it quite well.
  7. UK_Palms
    UK_Palms replied to GottmitAlex's topic in WEATHER / CLIMATE
    Terrible upgrades overnight. My god. 3 days of 38C+ / 100F+ in London. 40C / 104F showing on the Met Office on Wednesday in places… ARPEGE now has 42C / 108F showing… I would be less surprised if this was for July, but it is for June, which is crazy. What’s even more crazy is the heat index could be pushing 48C / 118F. Some models even have nighttime minimums of 30C / 86F on Wed/Thurs. Ludicrous.
  8. Today
  9. tim_brissy_13
    tim_brissy_13 replied to Phoenikakias's topic in DISCUSSING PALM TREES WORLDWIDE
    I know they are considered ‘functionally dioecious’, but I know of many cases of Livistona sp being monoecious and setting seed without other Livistona sp nearby (or at least very unlikely to have other nearly Livistona sp). Beyond that, I can’t say I’ve dug into it enough to know anything further like what Richard is saying.
  10. Phoenikakias
    Phoenikakias replied to Phoenikakias's topic in DISCUSSING PALM TREES WORLDWIDE
    Richard, what you have reported sounds extremely interesting! Do you mean that the existence of non own pollen on the female flowers causes a hormonal reaction, which prohibits the perfection of male flowers? That would be awesome and display in another instance, how 'wise and complicated is mother nature. I had a similar occurrence this year in my garden. An otherwise male Phoenix dactylifera has produced for the first time hermaphrodite flowers (about 0.4% of male dactylifera individuals produce hermaphrodite flowers), which caused abortion of all male flowers and other spathes containing male flowers.
  11. happypalms
    happypalms replied to Phoenikakias's topic in DISCUSSING PALM TREES WORLDWIDE
    They are monoecious, having both male and female flowers. So your one lonely palm will set seeds. To help with cross pollination a single tree in a stand, will tend be either male or female, choosing this characteristic to help with cross pollination. But both male and female flowers are present on the same tree. Like a lot of plants if there are no boys hanging around they have a way of setting seeds. I guess the good old hermaphrodite works in wonderful ways.
  12. gyuseppe
    Konstantinos I have only 1 Livistona Australis, this one produces good sized seeds, when they fall to the ground, and there are many, only 1/2 germinate
  13. Phoenikakias
    How common is, that a lonely (functionally) female Livistona mariae sets fruits with fertile seeds?
  14. happypalms
    happypalms replied to The Gerg's topic in DISCUSSING PALM TREES WORLDWIDE
    Dypsis louvelli, Geonoma atrovirens.
  15. happypalms
    happypalms replied to The Gerg's topic in DISCUSSING PALM TREES WORLDWIDE
    Dypsis poiveana and a container grown kerriodoxa elegans with a few nice black petioles.
  16. Jonathan
    Jonathan replied to Daryl's topic in DISCUSSING PALM TREES WORLDWIDE
    I was just thinking the same thing...is that Wal?
  17. happypalms
    happypalms replied to The Gerg's topic in DISCUSSING PALM TREES WORLDWIDE
    Arenga westhoutii.
  18. happypalms
    happypalms replied to Brad52's topic in TROPICAL LOOKING PLANTS - Other Than Palms
    Nice Macca tree. Pretty well much one of the only Australian trees to crack the world market and make it big in the commercial horticultural industry. A great Australian rainforest tree! The company I work for has a hundred acres of them planted.
  19. happypalms
    happypalms replied to happypalms's topic in TROPICAL LOOKING PLANTS - Other Than Palms
    Absolutely gorgeous!
  20. Husain
    Beautifull palm indeed I am waiting for mine to arrive
  21. Husain
    Husain replied to realarch's topic in DISCUSSING PALM TREES WORLDWIDE
    Bismarkia
  22. happypalms
    happypalms replied to Alicehunter2000's topic in PALMS IN POTS
    A lot of palm for a good price, bargain of the week! Just treat it like any other palm in a container, if you’re worried about winter when it starts to get around 6 degrees celcius in the mornings, start to bring it indoors in the afternoon. A few days indoors in bright light area will be fine, then outside again for the day then back inside each night. Cocothrinax are pretty tough palms. Or just leave it out on a veranda all winter in a c protected spot. But in and out all winter will be the order of the day. Try not too water or fertilise your palm in the cooler months, warm feet like is in winter, it’s all about soil temperature. Iam currently doing this with a cacao tree so far so good!
  23. Husain
    Husain replied to The Gerg's topic in DISCUSSING PALM TREES WORLDWIDE
    This view
  24. kylecawazafla
    Thank you! That's a great idea! I will look into these. It's amazing how difficult it is to find palms online! I can't even find Roystonea oleracea 😩
  25. Blueman
    The Encyclopaedia of Australian Plants, vol 4, by Elliot & Jones (1986 - ISBN 0 85091 213 X) states Eucalyptus erythrocorys (large red buds and yellow flowers) while "Best results are gained in semi-arid or warm temperate zones, but success is possible in cool temperate and subtropical regions." Subtropical being hot summer-rainfall climates, such as southerm and central Florida. This book says several other eucalyptus from Western Australia that are also adaptable to subtropics: Conferruminata (yellow flowers) - "Best suited to temperate and subtropical zones...Deep or shallow soils including slightly alkaline or saline."" Grossa (yellow flowers) - "Has proved extremely adaptable but does best in semi-arid and warm temparate regions. It can succeed in subtropical and cool temperate zones if it receives plenty of sunshine...Well drained sands or loams." Mooreana (white to yellow flowers) - "Plants are suited to cultivation is dry tropical and subtropical regions...Soils with unimpeded drainage."" Perfoliata (white flowers) - "Most suited to tropical and subtropical regions... Wide range of stoney and skeletal soils." Ptychocarpa (pink, red, or white flowers) - "Has proved adaptable and grows very well in Brisbane suburbs and on the Gold Coast." (note: I've grown this from seed in 10A southern FL in sandy soil, where it's done well and produces pink flowers). Talyuberlup (greenish-yellow flowers, smooth bark) - "Trials in subtropical regions are warranted...Near neutral soils."" Torquata (pink, red, or white flowers, smooth bark on small branches) - "Ideally-suited tosemi-arid and warm temperate zones, but also grows in cool temperate and subtropical regions...Grows well in alkaline and acidic soils." This highly recommended book gives detailed information about hundreds of eucalyptus species for a wide variety of climates.
  26. Tracy
    Current state of affairs and at peak flower opening on this bromeliad from the Andes high elevation. Puya alpestris ssp zoellneri.
  27. Tracy
    That was my discussion with my wife on the walk today. Especially considering that my Leucadia home is on the southwest side of the lagoon about a half mile from it and my Carlsbad garden is about 3/4 of a mile north of the lagoon. Just a nursery to propogate weevils to attack my gardens.

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