COLD HARDY PALMS
Selecting and growing palms for colder climates.
4,192 topics in this forum
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Mule Palm Black Spots Problem!
by Phattydeluxe- 3 followers
- 11 replies
- 556 views
Hello Palm Talk fam! I already posted this on the Discussing Palms Worldwide Forum, but got a tip there may be more Mule Palm owners in this sub forum. So posting again here for visibility. Hope that's ok with the moderators! 😃 I have 3 Mule Palms (X Butiagrus nabonnandii) that have developed black spots on the spines (rachis?) of the fronds. They are only on the top side of the frond spines, not the underside, which makes me think it has something to do with the sun? They aren't really on the leaves, and more prominent toward the tip of each frond, not present from the petiole base to about mid way. The palms have looked green and otherwise healthy, however one palm…
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Area Of New York City in zone 8a according to Wikipedia?
by MonkeDonkezz- 3 followers
- 38 replies
- 2.7k views
Hello PalmTalk! There is going to be a short introduction first. My name is Yahor though I prefer you call me by my username and I am from Staten Island, a borough of NYC. I don't feel comfy telling people my age, but I am 12-16 years old. I first got my interest in palms when visiting Jacksonville Florida last year. I want to start growing them. So the reason I am making this post is something that has caught my eye for a while. According to Wikipedia, on the page about NYC's climate, the climate data graphs and classifications section show that areas of NYC might be in zone 8a. LaGuardia has 11 F (-12 C) as the minimum for January. …
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Winter watering needs of different palms
by opiecrunch- 1 follower
- 15 replies
- 520 views
Wanted to get peoples takes on watering during the winter..I live in southern Kansas near Wichita and currently have a Washy Robusta,filifera,Butia odorata,sabal brazoriensis,sabal palmetto,sabal lisa,sabal minor mccurtain,sabal minor emerald Island giant and a trachy bulgariensis.Last winter nothing was watered from Nov till late March..a very knowledgeable palm friend of mine is telling me that all of my sabals and the trachy should be watered throughout the winter,but my butia and washys are better kept dry like I've done in the past.Any thoughts on watering sabals during the winter? Thanks
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Virginia Sabal minor Population?
by L.A.M.- 1 follower
- 0 replies
- 245 views
If anyone has photographic proof of wild Sabal minor in Virginia, I'd like to know. I believe they're real, but finding wild ones isn't easy even where they're widespread and common and for people knowing where to look. In my recent catalog of palm species native to every USA state/territory, I listed Sabal minor as present in Tennessee and Virginia despite the lack of formal documentation given the absence of evidence to the contrary, sheer number of rural places along Tennessee's southern border they could plausibly be (not to mention that there's a population of them recently plainly visible in downtown Hornsby) and difficulty in properly exploring the Great Disma…
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Washingtonia Filibusta petiole/boots color
by MarcusH- 1 follower
- 19 replies
- 627 views
I've planted two Filibustas this year. They show a lot of Filifera characteristics but I've noticed on some of the older fronds that the base petiole ( boots ) turned purple the last few days . Is this typical on old fronds that are about to die ?
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Nova x Waggie
by steve617- 0 replies
- 295 views
Just sharing. I started these from seed a few years ago. Only germinated a few out of many. I think I have 4 or 5. Repotted them a few weeks ago.
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End of ‘Stuck’ Queen Palm
by Almisa- 3 replies
- 296 views
A few weeks ago I asked for advice on my Syagus Romanzoffiana under another post (Droopy Queen). It was planted a year and a half ago and lost a few fronds but had not grown or shot out any fronds since about this time last year. After looking at the picture I posted, our knowledgeable friend on this forum, kinzyjr, suggested that it might be diseased and to pull it out. Personal inspection by Lou in St Augustine concurred, noting however that it was very strange that the remaining fronds were sparse but still quite green. Today, their suspicions were confirmed. The tree snapped at its base, immediately upon the bobcat’s initial tug, water pouring out of the trunk. When …
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My palms Nashville area
by Landasaw- 1 follower
- 6 replies
- 517 views
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Banana problems
by ChicagoPalma- 11 replies
- 462 views
My bananas can’t be cut down yet, it’s too warm since days in 60s are coming. But something is happening. Any explanation? Also my hostas are yellowing a bit but they like dry soil so it’s probably got wet feet. 71900224694__3C21C012-1847-42FA-9219-C7ACDBD07212.MOV
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Jelly Palm (Butia Capitata).
by DanaS- 3 followers
- 28 replies
- 1.1k views
Hello, I am looking for your advice, 10 days ago I've planted 1 jelly palm (12Ft high), and 2 windmill Palms(6Ft.High). Soil is sandy. Location Soth Carolina. Jelly Palm came with lots of ants on the root. I have created a ring around the trees using some Miracle Gro soil for: palms, cactus. Since planting I watered every day, sometimes twice, by filing up with water the rings I've created. Do I need to use some root simulator, fertilizer?.... Thanks in advance
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Queen Palms in Central NC
by SwampDog- 2 followers
- 15 replies
- 1.9k views
So I was at the Lowe's the other day, and I stumbled across the weirdest thing. They had Zone 9 and 10 palm trees (Queen Palm, Adonidia Palm; Christmas Palm, Pygmy Dates, Bottle Palm). This was weird for two reasons. For one the fact that they were in stock, not just one or two but a good number of them, so many that the Lowe's had them in two sections of the garden center. Second, they are in stock at a store in a 7b hardiness zone. Also it's interesting that they were even outside and not in the indoor portion of the store to begin with. They all looked pretty healthy, no signs of damage on any of them. I decided to pick up one of the Queen Palms and a group of Mus…
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Growth speed Butia yatay x Jubea vs Jubea x Butia yatay 1 2 3 4
by Love them palms- 7 followers
- 158 replies
- 10.1k views
I reviewed 3 seedlings from Patric a week ago one was a Butia yatay x Jubea and one was a Jubea x Butia yatay, plus a Butia x parajubea sunkha. Just kinda Curious between the first 2 which one is the faster growing, I live in the the PNW so hopefully they are compatible with my area,anyone have experience with these species?
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Palm leaves growing short
by maskedmole- 1 follower
- 2 replies
- 383 views
I live in Tennessee. Due to the elevation in my area, I am in zone 6b on the 2012 USDA zone map. Despite this, we usually have zone 7 winters, at least in recent years. Sabal minor palms and needle palms are easy for me to grow here. This year, though, all my sabal minor and needle palms seem to be pushing out these short leaves despite growing normal longer leaves in the years before. Should I be concerned about this and is there anything that I can do? One of the needle palms are flowering and the baby needle palm had a spear pull because last winter we actually had a true 6b winter going 3 below zero and all I did was cover it up with a small pile of leaves during that…
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Recovery from Christmas
by Dartolution- 2 followers
- 9 replies
- 555 views
Slowly, but surely they are recovering. I'm just happy they survived. The Sabal blackburniana was unprotected (aside from a very thin layer of frost cloth to keep water out), while the Butia and Chamaerops were trunk wrapped with heat cable and frost cloth. Near total defoliation of the Chamaerops, ~50% burn on the butia, and >95% defoliation of the sabal. I do not recall a winter in my lifetime where things like Pansys, Violas, and cabbages died. This was truly astonishing. What was even more interesting is that all of the "tropicals/subtropicals" (i.e., Gingers, prayer plants, and BOPs) survived while so many of the maples, azaleas, hollys, et…
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Summer Surprises - Palm flowers
by Dartolution- 7 replies
- 466 views
After that winter I was surprised to see my odorata producing a spathe.
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Native dry climate Sabal minor- Kendalia, Texas
by Meangreen94z- 7 replies
- 511 views
I have an interest in native Sabal minor that grow in dry areas of Central Texas, and handle months of summer drought. I ran across these just north of Kendalia, texas. About 20 miles east of a population in Welfare, Texas, which is about as far west as they grow.
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Palm Trees of Harbor Island, SC
by PHD - Palms Heading North- 0 replies
- 211 views
For years, I've been reading post after post so I finally decided to join the forum and to admit to my fascination with palm trees (ever since seeing my first palm tree on a trip to Florida as a child). I'm officially out of the closet as a palm fanatic! While I live in New England, I've traveled extensively across the U.S. for over 40 years and I've been all over the American south. And in my 40 years of travel, I've noticed a steady progression of palm tree species being planted further and further north with what appears to be a warming climate. A recent trip to Harbor Island, SC only confirmed this. Of course SC is littered with palmettos and pindos, they hard…
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- 5 followers
- 199 replies
- 9.9k views
Starting this thread for all the random palms I see around the Dallas area on a daily basis
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- 1 follower
- 15 replies
- 7.4k views
How did the Syagrus romanzoffiana do in that region did they take much damage? Did any die? All Queens died on North Padre Island, I was curious to see if those further south in Texas had any Queens that did not survive or if there were no casualties reported that far south? Thanks
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Windmill palm exposed roots?
by ckh1980- 12 replies
- 454 views
I recently noticed some exposed roots and was concerned something was wrong. I did a little googling and I read that it is normal, but I wanted to run it by the experts here as well. I have also since removed the rocks in the pic. I was just experimenting with them.
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Quickest way to a free Butia
by Fusca- 1 follower
- 8 replies
- 396 views
As I have pointed out in previous threads it is common to find Butia seedlings growing in old leaf boots of mature palms. This one I got this morning from a Butia that also had Sabal seedlings growing on the truck! It must have been growing there for a few years as it's almost growing pinnate leaves. I'm going to pot it up for another year and then plant out.
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- 1 follower
- 6 replies
- 301 views
What is recommended to ensure cutting tools are sanitized between use on different Palms (especially new arrivals to the garden)? Isopropyl Rubbing Alcohol? Hydrogen Peroxide? Diluted Bleach & Water Solution? I currently have a Felco F-2 Classic Manual Hand Pruner for trimming old brown fronds off, if something bigger is needed I have a Corona 10” RazorTooth Folding Pruning Saw and a Fiskers 12’ Pole Saw for my big Washy. edit: I also use a Victorinox 6.7631 3 1/4” Serrated Paring Knife w/ Large Red Handle to cut suckering trunks from smaller and Dwarf Palms with “scalpel-like” precision. Thanks
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- 9 replies
- 368 views
I have heard that “nematodes in the sand” can mysteriously cause the death of otherwise healthy Palms from the genus Jubaea and Trachycarpus after years of problem free growth. Is this a known problem in Texas like in Florida? I am in Corpus Christi does anyone know if the nematodes of Palm death lurk in the coastal sands of Texas?
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- 17 replies
- 833 views
First visit to The John Fairey Garden and wow it was impressive!!! Arrived later in the day after an almost 4 hour drive and we were the only visitors at that time and we were treated to a guided Palm tour of the Garden AND Nursery! Kudos to the small but passionate staff who graciously provided an unforgettable and absolutely amazing experience, I highly recommend stopping by and visiting The John Fairey Garden if ever near Hempstead, TX. I was provided the following cold weather data: 14F 2022 Low Temp John Fairey Garden 7F 2021 Low Temp John Fairey Garden Palm Species at The John Fairey Garden: Chamadorea Radicalis Trunking Variety Infloresc…
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- 1 follower
- 6 replies
- 377 views
Hello everyone! Last year I overwintered my two Washingtonia robustas here in zone 6b by using some type of Styrofoam board secured on a 2 x 4 frame and c9 Xmas lights connected to a thermo cube. It worked great until it got really warm here in February with temps close to 80F, where I had to open them up, which caused a whole lot of mess with the Styrofoam material. All in all it protected them really good and my Palms took on about 2 feet this year. So now that I have to adjust and get more materials I was wondering what direction would be best. Go with Foam board like this https://www.lowes.com/pd/GreenGuard-GreenGuard-LG-1-X-4-X-8-XPS-Insulation-Board/5…