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  2. Harry’s Palms

    So What Caught Your Eye Today?

    I don’t understand putting so many Livistona Chinensis in one pot. The trunks , eventually , get pretty big . Some retailers sell palms in community pots that should have been separated at the seedling stage. Both those would be better grown as singles. Harry
  3. Harry’s Palms

    Here’s a few great ones

    Oh my , that’s quite the “shovel”. Harry
  4. Today
  5. Phoenikakias

    Chamaedorea radicalis

    Very interesting information! I have found out also a couple other distinctive features of the dwarf form compared to the trunking one. Leaves of former have a rougher texture and seeds are smaller. Latter has a more glabrous texture and a subglaucous color on petioles and leaflets, perhaps due to more sun and wind exposure. Also seeds of latter are bigger. My oldest radicalis had been bought from Germany as a plant with already pinnate leaves, which had identical texture the the rest plants from your seeds. It used to remain for ever dwarf too, but I had the impression that it had a subterranean, creeping small trunk, just like Howea belmoreana. Unfortunately it got pissed to death by my dog.
  6. SubTropicRay

    For some, Florida drought is getting very "extreme"

    Why do you think I plan on keeping this thread alive forever? 😝
  7. gyuseppe

    Chamaedorea radicalis

    Well, they were made with the first seeds that arrived in the 1980s from the USA to a friend of mine. (I hope the chamaedorea seeds I sent you yesterday arrive.)
  8. Phoenikakias

    Chamaedorea radicalis

    Absolutely no trunk. Just leaf sheathes protruding from soi, meaning that half of the leaf base remains under surface. Those plan5s are older than the nearby trunking ones.
  9. A nice row of hookeri with almost three in a row putting on show.
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  10. happypalms

    Parajubaeas In The Mist

    Dont you love getting up early just to head of to work, we spend our chiliensis getting up early just to go to school, now we do the same, only difference is we get to wonder around our garden before work. Gone are the days of sleeping in!
  11. A small Wollemi in the garden, they are very tough. So if you have one waiting to be planted dont be afraid of planting it, there super tough.
  12. happypalms

    So What Caught Your Eye Today?

    A nice satakentia tucked in for the approaching winter.
  13. Phoenikakias

    Chamaedorea radicalis

    Of course my friend!
  14. Brad52

    Kari Starfruit

    And they produce fruit in a little more than a year after planting…
  15. A few more rhapis in the collection.chojuayahme ahyame kannonchikushima
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  16. happypalms

    Here’s a few great ones

    A lot more landscaping needs to be done for all the new varieties. But I have the perfect little shovel I just purchased for the job, iam sure it is well suited to do the job!
  17. happypalms

    Here’s a few great ones

    Here’s a few more heterospathe elatadypsis sanctamariedypsis confusabeccariophoenix madascariensis
  18. gyuseppe

    Chamaedorea radicalis

    Konstantinos the low form comes from my seeds?
  19. I don’t see many sabinara on palmtalk, iam sure they are out there I just don’t see many here. I have 4 in the ground and a few seedlings. Surely iam not the only one growing them, are there any Australians in a subtropical zone growing them. Or am I the only one growing them this far south.
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  20. happypalms

    Chamaedorea radicalis

    Omg shes a trunk and a half that one, I have yet to see my trunkless ones get a trunk. So iam not sure about this myth I have heard. When you say dwarf do you mean a variety that is smaller than the other trunkless varieties or just a stocky plant without a trun?
  21. mamudiaz

    Palm Seed For Sale

    HI Len, I have sent you a mp. Thanks 🙂
  22. Looking Glass

    SWFL palm ID

    Thrinax radiata is a great palm. As a native, it’s now on the favored list, and is planted by the hundreds in every parking lot, and along every road and highway and median down here. These do look better with a little shelter and care, but they are planted out in the open right on the beach and still make it, though they get beat up there.
  23. happypalms

    So What Caught Your Eye Today?

    A couple of dasyantha seedlings!
  24. happypalms

    So What Caught Your Eye Today?

    Calyptrocalyx elegans and a iguanura broad leaf sp
  25. happypalms

    Licuala triphylla

    I can see why as well!
  26. Phoenikakias

    Chamaedorea radicalis

    Nope, there are really dwarf strains. I vouch for this! Have you come across a radicalis with such thick stem Trunking and dwarf form side by side
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