Skip to content
View in the app

A better way to browse. Learn more.

PalmTalk

A full-screen app on your home screen with push notifications, badges and more.

To install this app on iOS and iPadOS
  1. Tap the Share icon in Safari
  2. Scroll the menu and tap Add to Home Screen.
  3. Tap Add in the top-right corner.
To install this app on Android
  1. Tap the 3-dot menu (⋮) in the top-right corner of the browser.
  2. Tap Add to Home screen or Install app.
  3. Confirm by tapping Install.

All Activity

This stream auto-updates

  1. Past hour
  2. SeanK
    SeanK replied to NC-Key-Bar's topic in COLD HARDY PALMS
    I agree about palmetto. Way underrated for creating a vibe.
  3. Today
  4. _Betking_
    _Betking_ joined the community
  5. happypalms
    happypalms replied to DoomsDave's topic in TROPICAL LOOKING PLANTS - Other Than Palms
    I thought hesperaloe at first thought, after that no idea at all!
  6. BlueMpoint23
    BlueMpoint23 changed their profile photo
  7. happypalms
    happypalms replied to happypalms's topic in PALMS IN POTS
    That’s the best thing you could have done, by changing your technique you learned what works best for you and the seeds. If one is not producing good results then it’s time to change things that your doing, sticking with the same is not going to teach oneself new things that work. This is one thing plants have taught me!
  8. happypalms
    happypalms replied to happypalms's topic in DISCUSSING PALM TREES WORLDWIDE
    I just love palms!
  9. happypalms
    A hot open area in clearing, full sun virtually. Taking extremely dry conditions to complete soil saturation that would grow a palm in the right season of rainfall. Super tough plant, I have collected seeds of them in the past and got 4 to germinate out of 8 seeds. With a male and female close to each other. Iam unsure of the pollinater, we do get the weevil in my area so possibly that or a mammal, or some other insect. A very intresting Australian macrozamia, and very cold tolerant to heat tolerant!
  10. happypalms
    happypalms replied to happypalms's topic in DISCUSSING PALM TREES WORLDWIDE
    Hi my good friend, that’s best idea Ive ever heard, good thinking 99. Only I have a better idea I move into the greenhouse and all the winter pslms get the house. Now here’s the problem, I would need a house the size of the grandest presidential building bribes could buy! And that depends on what country you’re president off! Too many plants Hu and not enough space!
  11. gyuseppe
    gyuseppe replied to happypalms's topic in DISCUSSING PALM TREES WORLDWIDE
    great job Richard
  12. happypalms
    happypalms replied to happypalms's topic in DISCUSSING PALM TREES WORLDWIDE
    Let’s see what’s cooking in the greenhouse!
  13. happypalms
    happypalms posted a topic in DISCUSSING PALM TREES WORLDWIDE
    Time for a few of the best, or at least some eye candy time!
  14. happypalms
    happypalms replied to The Gerg's topic in DISCUSSING PALM TREES WORLDWIDE
    Iguanura wallachiana and a nice little licuala triphylla, not to bad for the near the middle of winter!
  15. happypalms
    happypalms replied to The Gerg's topic in DISCUSSING PALM TREES WORLDWIDE
    The good old triangle palm in flower!
  16. happypalms
    You’re a right old Robinson Cruseo in the making!
  17. happypalms
    They are a nice palm, I have seen a few in a couple of gardens, one garden they were in a creek bed and had access to unlimited water and would have been submerged in floods for sure. The other garden they were in a gully and they were impressive in size, a group planting of 3 monsters. Either way they are beautiful palms. Still somewhat rare, and the ones I have offered for sale went quite fast. As palm conservationist or palm nuts we should prioritise getting them into as many botanical gardens we can, asap for preservation of the genus!
  18. happypalms
    happypalms replied to sonoranfans's topic in DISCUSSING PALM TREES WORLDWIDE
    I didn’t realise how much water palms like, my Oraniopsis I once thought was dry tolerant, believing that they are slow growing I assumed my one that was small was doing well, but it was lack of water that caused the small palm after 25 years in the ground, I soon realised how wrong I was. I get mulch each year about 40 cubic meters and buy topsoil at least 20 cubic meters a year and you would think where does it go, my wife says that the sand monster eats it up and she very much dislikes gum trees that drink any water that is available and they store it for dry times . I know how you feel, but in the end you look at your garden and then you say oh I see we’re all that soil, mulch and water goes., into your garden!
  19. happypalms
    happypalms replied to happypalms's topic in TROPICAL LOOKING PLANTS - Other Than Palms
    Here you go @Jonathan another for you to scrutinise and give us the thumbs up. At least this one has a name and apparently it’s rare!
  20. Tyrone
    Looking awesome. I love this species. They can handle cool to cold conditions. Not sure how much heat they can take. However they love water. The ones I’ve seen in habitat are never far from the banks of a creek or river and in flood they must be sitting in water.
  21. Hu Palmeras started following Boca Palms
  22. NC-Key-Bar
    NC-Key-Bar replied to NC-Key-Bar's topic in COLD HARDY PALMS
    A few pics from a foggy morning. I love all plants. But at some point, the silhouette of a Sabal palm hooked me for life. It was the first plant I added to the garden, and hands down my favorite.
  23. Darold Petty
    Darold Petty replied to realarch's topic in DISCUSSING PALM TREES WORLDWIDE
    Thanks Michael, that's good to know. The only Pritchardia to grow for me in my always cold, humid microclimate is P. minor.
  24. JohnAndSancho
    JohnAndSancho replied to realarch's topic in DISCUSSING PALM TREES WORLDWIDE
    Making up for lost time. Caladiums, bananas, and an Aegelsomething "Really Red"..
  25. JohnAndSancho
    JohnAndSancho replied to JohnAndSancho's topic in For Sale
    Let's see if these pics post. Size 11 for scale. Well, no, it won't. If you're interested shoot me a message. Or look at my marketplace posts on the evil site (Sancho B Plants is my username) or @sanchosgreenpaws on the slightly less evil site with videos.
  26. tim_brissy_13
    tim_brissy_13 replied to happypalms's topic in DISCUSSING PALM TREES WORLDWIDE
    I would like to see Richard’s house if he brings all of his 100,000 palms inside for the winter 🤣
  27. mnorell
    mnorell replied to realarch's topic in DISCUSSING PALM TREES WORLDWIDE
    I'll add that P. pacifica and P. thurstonii do grow fine out here in the desert around Palm Springs. I have a couple of P. pacifica (purchased from a nursery in Florida) in the ground and a P. thurstonii that I sprouted from seed I collected from the tree at our former house on Big Pine Key, and after four years it's still strap-leaf and still in a container. Both grow fine here, though I purposely keep P. pacifica under canopy to avoid the leaf-damage that occurs under open sky on cold nights. It has been documented both in Florida and SoCal to be relatively bud-hardy but leaf-damage occurs under open sky somewhere in the low 40s. Out here in the desert it throws new leaves so fast in spring and summer that by June-July it has a nice head of new leaves, although I haven't seen any real damage growing mine under canopy despite temps into the low 30s F. Also Matt Bradford I believe did grow one at his house in San Diego but winter damage to the leaves and slow recovery in the cool spring and summer meant a result of diminishing returns for him, so he removed it, and documented this in a post on the forum here. While I haven't seen any results about P. thurstonii in the coastal plain or fogbelt (zone 24), it is definitely a slower grower than P. pacifica for me here. I noticed this in the Florida Keys as well. It is certainly correct that at least P. pacifica is not recommended for the coast and coastal/interior valley areas. The great thing about the Hawai'ian Pritchardia species is that there are so many of them and they occupy such different niches, elevations and windward/leeward locations, sun, cloud, rain, dry, etc., that there are species for many different climate zones in California. When I lived in Los Feliz (eastern Hollywood, Los Angeles), I grew a Pritchardia beccariana that thrived, and it got quite tall after we moved across town, though it is gone today. I'm sure this was due to purposeful removal and not cold damage. It went through the 1990 freeze with no real problem at all, while young Royal palms and other plants around it were killed.
  28. Austinpalm
    Austinpalm replied to DoomsDave's topic in TROPICAL LOOKING PLANTS - Other Than Palms
    Some type of Nolina or Dasylirion perhaps.
  29. Jayce
    Some colours from the garden, wish the bottle and triangles retained that red as they mature. Also bronze new leaf on the Archontophoenix sp.
  30. Samuel Young
    Samuel Young joined the community
  31. realarch
    realarch replied to Looking Glass's topic in DISCUSSING PALM TREES WORLDWIDE
    Good job, that Pseudophoenix is the bomb. Tim

Account

Navigation

Configure browser push notifications

Chrome (Android)
  1. Tap the lock icon next to the address bar.
  2. Tap Permissions → Notifications.
  3. Adjust your preference.
Chrome (Desktop)
  1. Click the padlock icon in the address bar.
  2. Select Site settings.
  3. Find Notifications and adjust your preference.