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  2. In my area up here in the Bay Area, king palms are all over the neighborhood. My own personal experience with them is that they are the easiest and fastest growing palms in the garden, sun or shade. I have groves of them as well as ones growing singularly. Seeds pop up by the thousands just as much in the winter as summer. Some of those volunteers are aver twenty feet tall. I have all the other Archontophoenix species doing well too. The first ones I planted in 2001 sailed through the 2007 freeze (26°F) with barely a scratch. Just some light bronzing on horizontal fronds and they replaced those leaves by summer’s end.
  3. Fusca

    NorCal Palm Society buying trip

    Nice! Hope you get what you're looking for!
  4. JohnAndSancho

    Sancho's Green Paws

    I try not to be too much of a troublemaker but I understand.
  5. Ok. I wanna replace my mom's ficus Elastica, but she wants a pink one. Everything I'm seeing is either way out of my price range or the seller has reviews about 2 month delays going back to before the blizzard. A small plant is cool, but I can root a cutting. Alocasia corms would be cool to play with too. I just don't wanna pay 60 bucks or wait 2 months.
  6. Today
  7. PALM MOD

    Sancho's Green Paws

    I would prefer you not to. If everyone started doing that, it would get messy. Plus - people usually assume when the communicate in DMs that it is between the two of you, and not broadcast to everyone on the internet. But thanks for asking first.
  8. MarceloCaramuta

    2026_02 - Florida Palmageddon Observations and Damage Photo Thread

    Update: it’s early still and too soon to determine full survival, but quick update. Archontophoenix Alexandreana are showing green now from the emerging spears and one has flowered. Still waiting to see any sign of life from the Adonidias. To reiterate, we recorded a low of 28 here on the southernmost side of the Conway Lakes with Schefelera showing no damage and White bird of paradise showing almost no damage. I know it was much colder elsewhere and even our front yard (farthest from the lake showed a bit more damage).
  9. Robert Cade Ross

    Texas Palms

    lol this is pathetic where’s the chainsaw
  10. MarceloCaramuta

    2026_02 - Florida Palmageddon Observations and Damage Photo Thread

  11. We’re in the same climate zone 9b/10a. Those are some healthy looking kings, they look healthier than the ones I saw in Coronado last month.
  12. I dont find archies(kings) difficult to grow at all and I am in a cool 10a right on the 9B border. I also dont plant any palm in cool soil, the developing roots will have to see more aggressive fungus behavior at lower temps. Microbes that assist in nutrient uptake are 20x less active at 55F than at 70F so many palms will not feed well and face favorable conditions for root fungus infection(wet with stagnant drainage, low oxygen, cool temp soils). There is a lot of experience growing various archontophoenix species here and we have the Aussie members who are quite familiar with them. My Archontophoenix alexandre and myolensis are from 25 to over 30' in 14 years and have been over 20' for 8 years. They have seen 30F cold snaps 2x and mostly defoliuated. They have also seen 3 hurricanes. They are pretty tough though I know they can die as small palms at 30F. I bunch mine together to improved coldhardiness a fruiting triple of alexandre and a myolensis, also currently fruiting
  13. @SCVpalmenthusiast I agree . The original post says that they are having problems in San Diego which is better climate than up here in Ventura County , for the most part . I have had a bit of burn on shade grown ones but that gets corrected quickly with new growth. I’ve been growing them in 9b - 10a zones without losing any for over 35 years. Even further north , they grow. Easy palm to grow , just add water . Harry
  14. Mazat

    The lovely lanonia dasyantha

    Yes, Richard 🤗, a really good idea
  15. Looking Glass

    Garden Visitors

    Blue jays do it at my house. Cram them everywhere. They put them in potted plants, into bromeliads, and in any crevice. Squirrels tend to bury them. The Jays “stick them” in small elevated spaces.
  16. I wouldn’t say futile, the poster from Florida showed it took 25 degrees and still survived. Some damage sure, but it survived. I guess the caveat could be that Florida’s 9b is different than California 9b. That’s why they can grow cocos. Perhaps that matters more than temperature lows.
  17. My old house that I bought in 1990 was down in the city below . We got frost every year down there . I planted two 10” King palms and never had any issues with them . There are some sky scraper A. Cunninghamiana in our city that are very healthy , they have to be very old palms , probably planted at least 40-50 years ago . I think they are pretty hardy palms . King palms are very common in this area even with non collectors , most look pretty healthy . As long as they are watered regularly , they should thrive. Harry
  18. pj_orlando_z9b

    2026_02 - Florida Palmageddon Observations and Damage Photo Thread

    Perhaps. Somebody suggested to me it might be rot on dead tissue. That makes sense too.
  19. @TropicsEnjoyer The seeds I germinated( Cunninghamiana) took several months to pop up. I don’t have a heat mat or any greenhouse , just containers under the palms with 2-3 seeds per container (4”) . After well over 6 months I was ready to give up when I saw the first sprout. I ended up with about 90% yield ! Hang in there , hopefully you can get some to germinate. The Alexandrea is a faster growing palm here than Cunninghamiana . Just my experience . My climate is listed as 9b but up here on the hill 38f is the coldest I’ve seen . I am also growing Roystonia Oleracae up here . Harry
  20. A. alexandrea is such an elegant palm. Where I used to live my neighbor has a huge one, I tried to pick some seeds from it but months later they’ve not grown. But i’ve been hesitant to consider buying one after this hell of a 9b winter.
  21. tropicbreeze

    Garden Visitors

    Flying Foxes love mangos and make quite a mess of my trees. However, mango season is over so they're stuck with Carpentaria acuminata fruit. We get a number of species of Flying Fox, these are Black Flying Fox, Pteropus alecto. During the wet season when my dam is full, Shining Flycatchers, Myiagra Alecto, build their nest over water. Both male and female share the job of sitting on and hatching the eggs. Whistling Kites, Haliastur sphenurus, are around all the time but have never seen them nesting at my place. Northern Brush-tailed Possum, Trichosurus vulpecula ssp. arnhemensis, not usually around during daytime, this one was grooming itself just outside the bedroom window.
  22. tropicbreeze

    Southern Hemisphere Growing Season 2025/26

    February continued our above average pattern of rainfall with 385.8mm, 121.2% of average. This kept February temperatures down Ave. Max 25.1 Ave. min 32.3 The sun is now to our north. UV rating is up to 15, however with the frequent cloud cover it's not so noticeable. The humidity ranges from the mid 80's to the high 90's over the 24 hour cycle. A monsoon trough has developed across the top of Australia, the fourth and strongest this season. Four tropical lows along it continue to bring lots of rain and some severe weather, but are not expected to intensify into tropical cyclones. Over the weekend one of the tropical lows will move over us, flood warnings have been issued. Next week the monsoon trough is expected to dissipate and rain to ease. This is getting back to some of the wet seasons we were having 10 to 15 years ago.
  23. Richard beautiful palms and many species to choose from, please enjoy
  24. miamicuse

    Hints of Spring ..Part 2?..

    Down here in south Florida, my Pseudobombax ellipticum has been dropping leaves the last month, and today at 5pm these six leaves in the red circle are the last leaves to fall. and flower buds about to open. and the very first flower this season already dropped.
  25. Jonathan

    Geonoma undata Seedling Question

    I'll be ashamed of you if you don't buy that Geonoma! Jokes aside...thank you kindly for organising all of the above!
  26. happypalms

    Geonoma undata Seedling Question

    Actually posted today by the wife as I drove up to get a bargain of a lifetime and that holy grail palm at the pacsoa show you always dreamt of growing, such a pity you can’t make it, oh well more palms for me to buy I guess, and yes I might even think about this Geonoma atrovirens for my collection!
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