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Sabal palmetto?


CTho

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What’s this beautiful palm in Austin, TX (zone 8b)?  I’ve been assuming it’s Sabal palmetto, but that’s mostly because I assume every “full size” fan palm around here with unarmed petioles are.  Is the costa curling the leaves enough?

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5 hours ago, Jimbean said:

My neck hurts 

Sorry, it was right side up on my phone but rotated when I uploaded it :blink:

 

5 hours ago, OC2Texaspalmlvr said:

:floor:

I think it's a palmetto grown in shade, looks good 

Would you recommend growing some in shade if I wanted to (eventually) achieve a similar result for my plants?  I assume it’d grow smaller shorter leaves in full sun?

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Their canopy is much bigger when they’re grown in shade. Their trunks are also thinner. I like them better that way. 

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5 minutes ago, CTho said:

Sorry, it was right side up on my phone but rotated when I uploaded it :blink:

 

Would you recommend growing some in shade if I wanted to (eventually) achieve a similar result for my plants?  I assume it’d grow smaller shorter leaves in full sun?

If that is the look of palmetto you like then for sure , unfortunately will grow much slower then in full sun. 

 

3 minutes ago, Jeff985 said:

Their canopy is much bigger when they’re grown in shade. Their trunks are also thinner. I like them better that way. 

I prefer the fattest largest sabal trunk possible like Causiarum , which is a green bizzie to me  

T J 

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4 minutes ago, OC2Texaspalmlvr said:

If that is the look of palmetto you like then for sure , unfortunately will grow much slower then in full sun. 

 

I prefer the fattest largest sabal trunk possible like Causiarum , which is a green bizzie to me  

Sure. But those magnificent beasts already have massive canopies to go with their fat trunks. 

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It could be a Sabal mexicana, but I'm not 100% sure. I am just assuming that sinse your in Texas. 

Edited by PalmTreeDude

PalmTreeDude

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1 hour ago, PalmTreeDude said:

It could be a Sabal mexicana, but I'm not 100% sure. I am just assuming that sinse your in Texas. 

I’ve read that S. palmetto is still more common here than mexicana, and based on size of the fruit/seed I have yet to find a (fruiting) mexicana.

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Sabal Mexicana is everywhere in South Texas. They seem to have a wider trunk and canopy than Palmetto in person, although pictures online seem to show both vary.

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