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Coconuts


empireo22

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Here's a nice one in Bradenton.

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Keith 

Palmetto, Florida (10a) and Tampa, Florida (9b/10a)

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I usually don't take pics of coconuts, but this group on the south side of the Big Island of Hawaii caught my eye.

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  • 1 month later...

Great Coconuts guys. It is and always been the epitome of palms.

We have a few in California. The Newport Beach (Orange County) one is the oldest and tallest being about 35 years old and about as tall.

There was a grove at the Salton Sea but died when the property owner died and tenants didn't irrigate anything.

Next there are groves in Stoney Point (Puerto Penasco) Sonora, Mexico. See the link. The Mayan Palace Hotel has a very nice grove but the apparently do not fruit as all fruits abort when about the size of a soft ball.

http://www.vacationtimesharerentals.com/Mexico/Timeshares/Mexico-_-West-Coast/Puerto-Penasco/Mayan-Palace-Puerto-Penasco/

Brian Bruning

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  • 1 month later...

Yesterday I took the below photo (first one cropped to enlarge photo. The second, original one using lots of zoom to see across the lake from the road I was on) of some coconut palms growing on the north shore of Lake Serena, here in Lake Placid, Florida. There's more coconut palms on an adjacent lakefront lot. I've seen these palms (at a distance) for years, but this is the first time I photographed them.

Notice how the back yards of the homes slope towards the lake. These are ancient sink hole lakes with the homes built on or just near the rim of these lakes. As such, the yards of these homes receive the relative heat of the water (the lake water is in the upper 60sF, even in January) during the winter months, and air temperatures rarely fall below 40 degrees F at night. Nighttime air temperature did fall near freezing on the coldest night in December or 2010, after more than a week of abnormally cold weather that brought the lake water temperatures down, verses 20.8 degrees F at my place with no lake effect.

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LakeSerenacoconutpalms-Copy_zps11d84f5f.

  • Like 1

Mad about palms

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Not the prettiest coconut, but I sure had a lot fun hanging out on it, hanging from it, jumping off it . . .

Bug Island, San Blas Islands

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Edited by Mantarey

-REY

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  • 2 weeks later...

Here are some photos of my small coconut. I live in Paphos, in the Mediterranean island of Cyprus (34N). I only don't know the variety. I hope somebody might know.

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Stelios,

Nice to see a european coconut tree, I believe they are very few.

Thanks for posting.

Philippe

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Philippe

 

Jungle Paradise in Sri Lanka

 

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I might be the only one here in Cyprus. I'll keep you posted if I see any more. I see though lately many small and a few big royals and foxtails. I know cocos is more sensitive but here in Paphos we have the most mild winters on the island and all the tropical fruits grow mostly here. If it will not survive I will plant in it's place 1 B.Alfredii or 1 royal which I have in the pots. It's been in the ground a little more than 2 years and it seems to be growing faster than my Rav. rivularis. The cocos is the only palm I give a little protection in the winter.

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Stelios,

I too think you have a nice looking Golden Malayan Dwarf. I had one too that was about 6ft. tall in overall height, putting out a new spear leaf every three weeks late last year, but the worst winter in 20 years here killed it even though I wrapped it with a towel on the coldest nights. I had a larger Green Malayan survive last winter with only about 60% frotsbite, which has since recovered and is now putting out a new spear about every 3 to 4 weeks. I think the Green Malayans may be a slight bit more cold hardy than the Golden and Yellow Malayans. Also, planting ones that are a little older with a little bit of woody trunk at the bottom seems to give them the edge in surviving the winters in marginal climates. Remember, only water it in the winter about once a month, so its roots don't stay cool and damp. They don't like cool damp roots.

John

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John

I almost not watering it at all during the winter. But since it's in the ground the last 2 winters, due to strong rain the soil got a bit wet sometimes. That's why I planted it in pure sand from the local beach here. The water is draining very fast. It also has about 1 inch of woody trunk even though is still very slim. Before this palm was in the yard of my parents house next to green tall variety (not sure which one) both in the pots. The soil was covert from the rain. They were exposed to 1 cold night (around 40F) and after a few days the green died. This one had only a few black spots and burned ends. So even though is more cold tolerant variety it also needs protection from the cold wind on the fronts. I wish I could find the green Malayan but here in Paphos is very difficult. Is it the most cold tolerant? I still have a lot of things to learn. I will find more info and hopefully with a little luck I will grow this one for some years.

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  • 3 weeks later...

These are growing side by side...green nuts and yellow nuts...

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The weight of lies will bring you down / And follow you to every town / Cause nothin happens here

That doesn't happen there / So when you run make sure you run / To something and not away from

Cause lies don't need an aero plane / To chase you anywhere

--Avett Bros

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  • 1 month later...

A couple of Golden's in my garden.

The coconut in the bag next the golden in the background is a Tacunan dwarf variety from Davao, Mindanao in the Southern Philippines and is suppose to produce nuts after 3 years. I Just need to find a permanent place to plant it to see how it will perform.

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Edited by JJD
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Local palm, loaded to the max...... :)

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  • Upvote 1

Nick C - Living it up in tropical 'Nam....

 

PHZ - 13

 

10°.57'N - 106°.50'E

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Saw this nicely curved coconut trick or treating this evening in Satellite Beach.

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Nice!!

Keith 

Palmetto, Florida (10a) and Tampa, Florida (9b/10a)

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Here are some Maypan's at McKee Botanical Garden in Vero Beach. Quick question about the plant ID tag that was around this coconut. It had the date of 2001, is that the date of planting or germination?

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Here are some more, from Fairchild Tropical Gardens.

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Panama Tall,

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Red Spicata Dwarf

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Red Spicata Dwarf,

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  • Like 1

Lived in Cape Coral, Miami, Orlando and St. Petersburg Florida.

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I was able to pick up a Red Spicata Coconut at the palm sale at Fairchild, I was very happy! Here it is planted in my garden.

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Lived in Cape Coral, Miami, Orlando and St. Petersburg Florida.

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Tangalle beach, down south Sri Lanka (2007)

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the boat debris is a rest of the tsunami's catastrophe

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Philippe

 

Jungle Paradise in Sri Lanka

 

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Here's the best we can do here in our frost hole.

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Land O Lakes FL, a suburb on the North Side of Tampa, FL

Summers are great, 90f/32c in the day & 70f/21c at night with plentiful rain & sun

Winters are subtropical with occasional frosts and freezes. Tropical cyclones happen.

We have a few Royal palms in the warm microclimates but Coconuts freeze.

I am a Kayaker, Hiker, Bicyclist, and amateur Photographer that loves the outdoors.  

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  • 1 month later...

...Bird Key Cocos and a Veitchia or two on a Sunday morning in January.. Rough life here :winkie:



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  • 4 weeks later...

post-1122-0-22151900-1422461473_thumb.jp

The weight of lies will bring you down / And follow you to every town / Cause nothin happens here

That doesn't happen there / So when you run make sure you run / To something and not away from

Cause lies don't need an aero plane / To chase you anywhere

--Avett Bros

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20150128_204434.jpg?1422640261175&142264

These two coconuts are planted at Smash Burger across from the Fashion Square Mall near downtown Orlando (or as I like to call it, the new Fort Myers). They are presumably recently planted but look pretty good (it was a quite cool 48F when the photo was taken at about 8:30pm) and I would say these look like what the quintessential Orlando Cocos looks like. That is, not as good as in deep South Florida, but good enough to want at least a few in my yard. These are clearly dwarf green Malayan coconuts. Sorry for more night time photos, I guess we are just night people :) .

I need to get photos or two virtually identical specimens (with regard to variety, size, spacing, shape, etc.) planted at a house on the east side of Lake Howell Rd. in Winter Park (for those that know the area). I can tell the resident is a palm person because there are a few smaller coconut palms in pots in the same yard.

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Are you sure they are green malayan and not maypan or something else , I say this because they seem to have a bole:)

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Are you sure they are green malayan and not maypan or something else , I say this because they seem to have a bole:)

That's an astute observation, Cluster, I'll bet your right. This added robustness may be a slight advantage for the palms future cold hardiness.

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They look like Malayans that were well fertilized for their establishing years.

Keith 

Palmetto, Florida (10a) and Tampa, Florida (9b/10a)

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  • 4 months later...

A couple of days ago, I was surprised at the number of mature coconuts in Indialantic (Melbourne beaches, Florida).

Fla. climate center: 100-119 days>85 F
USDA 1990 hardiness zone 9B
Current USDA hardiness zone 10a
4 km inland from Indian River; 27º N (equivalent to Brisbane)

Central Orlando's urban heat island may be warmer than us

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Any frost tolerant coconuts engineered yet? Come on science, hurry up!

I want a C nucifera "Amsterdam tall"

Neither frost-hardy nor in Amsterdam, but a sprout from a »normal« commercial coconut grown up in frosty German January 1972:

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Another coconut in 1974 and 3 years later in 1977, completely grown inside a living room:

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And the sad remnant of this palm in 1981, after getting too tall for a living room:

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Here 2 babies naturally sprouting on Green Island / Queensland in 1979:

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  • Upvote 1

My photos at flickr: flickr.com/photos/palmeir/albums

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