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No problem they are yours, pm me with details of postage and name thanks.
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Copernicia Fallaensis transplant
sonoranfans replied to Tropical Toni's topic in DISCUSSING PALM TREES WORLDWIDE
sounds good, on extrea hot breezy days dont hesitate to use overhead water late in the day( 1-1 1/2 hr before sunset). -
RP77 joined the community
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elias started following aztropic
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US Botanic Garden and Washington DC Trip
PalmsInBaltimore replied to PAPalmtrees's topic in TRAVEL LOGS
You're correct they are queen sagos (Cycas rumphii). Look just as good as the last time I was there in 2024 - Today
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Cycad cones and flushes
GeneAZ replied to Urban Rainforest's topic in TROPICAL LOOKING PLANTS - Other Than Palms
Yes, they are! Mine is a female, too, and about that same size! -
🚨 POLAR VORTEX TO HIT DEEP SOUTH 🚨
JohnAndSancho replied to JohnAndSancho's topic in TROPICAL LOOKING PLANTS - Other Than Palms
Oh yeah most of them are gonna go in the ground but I will get all Bob Vila for a couple and the rest I'll just restart from pups and leave the rhizomes in the yard. Banana plantation inbound. -
ginny47 joined the community
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Hello everybody, It's that time of year. I have 2-4 inch Encephalartos cycads for sale. Lots of blue-green hybrids around 4 inches of caudex and blue on blue hybrides 2-3 inches. All are $110 dollars including shipping (bare root, leaves cut). If you are in Socal and want to pick up the plants just contact me for an appointment. Can make you a better deal without the shipping. Please message me if you are interested. I have lots of purebred species as well. Can send more pictures if you'd like. Gabriel
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Plumeria early blooms
bubba replied to aztropic's topic in TROPICAL LOOKING PLANTS - Other Than Palms
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You're right Giuseppe...its probably a bit extreme. I'll stick to growing palms and leave the law enforcement to others!
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first big palm order and it's progress
flplantguy replied to flplantguy's topic in DISCUSSING PALM TREES WORLDWIDE
So after that last post, as we all know, mother nature went haywire and sent us the smackdown reminder of what an impact freeze would be like. My yard saw 28.9 in the open on the advective night with winds gusting to 40 mph or more (inland st Leo was a windy 21 or 22) with 24.6 the second night radiational freeze (the local airport in Brooksville was 17 in the cold hole). This was after a "pre event" advective 29 and light freeze after that did some damage some few days prior. A total this winter of 12 freezes spaced out from November to late February, with only 1 radiational below 29 and two others below 30 advective. The others were all radiational and above 29, with multiple frost events. No active heating for me, just sheets and blankets (thick comforters are great by the way). The wind was the worst case we could get with a baroclinic low and cold front, so I tried a weedmat windbreak and cover for the larger bed (it worked well in a decent amount of the garden). Everyone was covered for the radiational night in some form except the already pretty dead foxtail and all non palm plants. Damage is considerable, with all taking a hit but one: Surviving heavily damaged foxtail from last year unsurprisingly is dead, seedling in back fine (covered) Pseudophoenix sargentii defoliated except the center growth, with some leaf drop and crownshaft damage. New growth looks good so far. Took frost multiple times and did not care for it at all. Spindles, 2 Alive, one likely dead, all at high risk of death now Bottle defoliated under cover, new spear is good. Chrysalidocarpus lutescens mostly defoliated, some spear pulls Chambeyronia mostly defoliated but spears and new leaves ok Chrysalidocarpus lastellianus under cover did fine until I didn't cover it one frosty night that fried the exposed leaf Chrysalidocarpus leptocheilos is defoliated but should recover. advective wimp, defoliated at 29 and wind Chrysalidocarpus lanceolata did ok, lost two fronds and the rest are almost untouched. Carefully wrapped though. Impressive performance these last two years Cyphopheonix alba/nucele (I lost one to rot, and the tag on this one got kidnapped) fried except the spear, opened nicely since. Adonidia merellii defoliated with only weedmat to cover it, new spears open and fine. Surprised with this outcome. Chrysalidocarpus basilongus survived heavily damaged and even grew, then spear pulled after being watered (big mistake that's killed a few these two years, I'll keep them dry until the heat arrives next time) Potted Bismark I left out spear pulled but seems to be pushing something out, I'm leaving it to see. Chrysalidocarpus carlsmithii did fantastic under brush and a sweater, cold spotting but no big damage at 6 inches tall with many small fronds. Chrysalidocarpus titan: HUGE success, partly covered with a dead sabal frond, and the exposed spear and newest leaf (not on purpose) are untouched by the cold and deep green still. Spear opened like nothing happened a few weeks later. Big surprise and very excited to see that. Chrysalidocarpus Prestonianus moderate damage covered in brush and a bucket (bucket may be the mistake there) newest frond is fine the others are mostly brown. Beccariopheonix alfredii has light damage to an exposed spear but has done well, 2 feet tall still. All my other garden plants also took a hit, even some that I expected only defoliating died to the ground. Jamaican caper was the one good surprise there, aost untouched by the freeze. A seedling delonix regia also survived in the back. I feel mostly lucky with the results, considering what I see in spring hill and on others' posts here, I just can't look at Holiday and points south lol. You go inland the everything is damaged or killed, including queens and pygmy dates in the coldest spots. After the learning experience I will plant in a different way and add some plants in strategic spots for blocking the cold. The first windbreak is in, and the sabal wall goes in next behind it on either side of the septic drain field to create a second layer. With that area filled in the worst wind will be stopped, then the oak/sabal forest takes over and wind drops significantly. And canopy needs to be heavy and thick and well past the edge of fronds to stop frost damage. The front yard will be desert zone 9 stuff, and some special things like some newly planted Medemia argun seedlings. I have also ordered more cold tolerant seeds for palms, as well as some tropicals for the new greenhouse (the greenhouse plants saw 43 the coldest night). That will have the sensitive stuff until it can't stay there anymore and by then I hope to have a secret palm garden for them made somewhere in the forest. -
Dypsis lutescens – Success on a 4th-floor balcony!
Harry’s Palms replied to Mazat's topic in DISCUSSING PALM TREES WORLDWIDE
Good news , for sure . Hopefully the new growth continues. Harry- 1 reply
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Your garden knows who you are
Harry’s Palms replied to happypalms's topic in DISCUSSING PALM TREES WORLDWIDE
@happypalms unfortunately it gets way too much sun there. Even the Radicalis look a bit stressed when they grow there. I tried to talk my wife into a couple of Wodyetia , but no go. They would thrive in that area! Harry -
Copernicia Fallaensis transplant
PalmatierMeg replied to Tropical Toni's topic in DISCUSSING PALM TREES WORLDWIDE
Doesn't resemble either of my known pritchardia Pacifica but I've been wrong before. Pacifica is a total cold wimp - worthless palm. Every year I regret not cutting it down the year before. -
Oops. Chionanthus
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Whether to fertilize my lipstick palm
PalmatierMeg replied to MiamiNorm's topic in DISCUSSING PALM TREES WORLDWIDE
I never had problems with Dithene 45 and both lipsticks survived for years before they outgrew the lanai -
Than started following A new Syagrus vs a Syagrus which I've had for a year
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A new Syagrus vs a Syagrus which I've had for a year
Than posted a topic in DISCUSSING PALM TREES WORLDWIDE
I got a new Syagrus today. I made a raised bed, filled with acidic sandy soil and local alkaline soil + some acidic compost and sulfur pellets. Looking at the tree I realized how chlorotic my other Syagrus are, those I've had in the soil for a year. Despite the acidic soil I have added, the humic and fulvic acids etc... probably it lacks Nitrogen? So, this time I'm trying a raised bed. Let's see. I am attaching photos of the two trees. -
San Diego Coconut Trees
SouthernCATropicals replied to SouthernCATropicals's topic in DISCUSSING PALM TREES WORLDWIDE
March 23, 2026 It’s been extremely hot like late summer. The yellow one is looking very nice. It’s extremely difficult to move around. I wonder how much longer it can stay in that pot.- 180 replies
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Sabal Lisa seedlings
LivistonaFan replied to mike-coral gables's topic in DISCUSSING PALM TREES WORLDWIDE
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Frozen palm trees in Florida update - Start trimming yet?
Skenny replied to Skenny's topic in DISCUSSING PALM TREES WORLDWIDE
Okay so cut the fronds that are completely brown? Cut back at the trunk? Some of the fronds are brown at the ends but have green middle stalk parts, not sure the right word, but like this: Leave ones that look like this alone? I'll start with cutting the ones that are fully brown and laying at the bottom. -
Sabal Lisa seedlings
LivistonaFan replied to mike-coral gables's topic in DISCUSSING PALM TREES WORLDWIDE
This is the plant from the first picture again today (very slow growth here, especially in pots) Is it still too early to tell if it's a real Lisa? I have another 8 seedlings, so there should be a few real ones among them and if I waited a little longer I would know for certain. Still, I am getting a little impatient to plant one in a nice spot of my zone 9a garden and I also hope for quicker growth in ground😅. -
Dypsis lutescens – Success on a 4th-floor balcony!
Mazat posted a topic in DISCUSSING PALM TREES WORLDWIDE
Dear Grandmasters and Palm Enthusiasts, I am erupting once again with pure botanical joy! Today, March 23th, 2026, I can confirm an absolute vertical wonder on my Balkon-Fortress in Arbon/Stachen (Lake Constance, Switzerland). Our Dypsis lutescens, situated on the 4th floor at 443 meters above sea level, is showing an incredible vitality eruption. After winter, almost all fronds were completely brown and dry. I pruned all dead material back to the base, and now I see a fresh, green spear emerging from the center! The trunk is firm. It seems the apical meristem survived under these specific conditions and the palm is pushing new life. The Exposure: Despite being in the shade at 443m, my Intertronic station in shadow recorded today a local heat pocket of 18.1°C, while the surrounding region was significantly cooler at 11-14 C. The Micro-Climate: This 4th-floor micro-climate proves that elevation and vertical positioning can create unique survival pockets for species often considered too tender for Zone 8a. The Dypsis lutescens on the 4th floor lives! The Arbon/Stachen-Sog of vertical life is unstoppable! Best regards from Lake Constance Mazat- 1 reply
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New Chambeyronia - acclimate or not?
Foggy Paul replied to Foggy Paul's topic in DISCUSSING PALM TREES WORLDWIDE
Yeah, if I knew then what I know now I wouldn't have planted them. One by one the biggest ones get cut down and the offsets replace them. Eventually I think they will go away but we'd have to hire people for that. The side yard is shaded by the neighbor's southern magnolia, and the constant drip from summer fog means the giant birds grow extremely fast, much faster than I imagined. -
I'm interested! I'll shoot you a message.
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Which palm for a constantly wet spot in the yard? (Northern California z10a)
idontknowhatnametuse replied to BayAndroid's topic in DISCUSSING PALM TREES WORLDWIDE
Bactris setosa -
Looks like one more cool down beginning of April. I'm seeing highs in low 70s for a day or two but lows only in the low 60s. As more vegetation pops, will be harder to get lows to bottom out as humidity increases at night.
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Frozen palm trees in Florida update - Start trimming yet?
Las Palmas Norte replied to Skenny's topic in DISCUSSING PALM TREES WORLDWIDE
The dry, brown parts are dead and can be trimmed off. Don't remove any of the green or slightly discolored parts of the fronds, as unsightly as it may seem. It will recover rather quickly if cared for.
