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Sabal Palmetto range officially extended into Virginia Beach?


Jhonny

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Hi guys, brand new to this site. I’ve been on here for quite some time as a reader but never posted before.

I wanted to talk about Sabal Palmetto’s range possibly being officially extended to Virginia Beach. Usually the cut off is in North Carolina and naturally it is. But this past week I went down to VA Beach with the sole intention of finding as many volunteers as I could at the oceanfront, and let me tell you how shocked I was by the amount there was. First let me start off by saying I went on the 2 most rainiest days so unfortunately I was only able to cover 1/2 of the strip. And of that half I only covered the east side of Atlantic Ave. And of that east side I was only able to cover the street side, not the boardwalk at all. And after only covering that fraction of the strip, I found dozens, if not hundreds of Sabals growing at all stages. And not just Sabal, Pindos as well! 

On every block there was at least a few barely beginning to sprout, but there were definitely some a few years and older. The biggest one I found was at the Capes Resort which easily was 12-15 feet tall, the trunk starting to rise. There were several around the height of stop signs and most were to my hips and lower. There were a few that were growing nearly at the boardwalk, the limit before you get to the sand. I would say half of these things were growing in bushes, or under trees, or in other protected areas. But there was a good chunk growing out in the open, exposed to all elements. 

Having resisted multiple winters and continuing to grow (most showed little to no damage), I have no doubt they will grow to be some of the hardiest Sabals in existence. The offsprings of these strands will only get hardier and adapt better to the climate so I 100% believe Sabal is permanently here to stay. I know that most of these trees have come from Florida or other nurseries much further south and this isn’t an extension of range occurring naturally from its NC counterparts. But I think the range for this tree has officially crossed the state line. 

I’m planning to take another trip next month to finish the other half of the beach where I know there are just as many growing. What do you guys think of these Virginian palmettos?

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Interesting to see some of them look older. I wonder if they were planted as such or if they have been there for several years. Some pindo palms in there too? If there hasn’t been a severe cold weather mass in a while, anything’s possible. Probably only a matter of time.

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They seem to be naturalized. They are very weedy in general. It will be interesting to see how they do long term. I can't help but think too bad out native palm to the SE is so ugly. It just looks ratty everywhere to  me, But it is cool on the other hand that palms are growing furthur up the coast on their own, regardless what type they are. Thanks for the pics and your exploration. Are they only growing like this right at the beach?

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With as commonly as Sabal palmetto and Sabal minor are planted by man, I am sure that both species will eventually be considered naturalized in the Virginia Beach area.  Like many species at the limits of their ranges, extreme weather events will occur that will check back the species’ numbers to a few individuals and these will eventually repopulate the area (and of course in this case, the palms in question will be constantly replanted as attrition occurs).

But in a hypothetical situation, I believe if one were to plant many, many Sabal palmetto and Sabal minor of all sizes in the Virginia Beach and Norfolk area just once (and there were none growing there to start), that you would have self-sustaining populations for the foreseeable future (unless the area had a 100-200 year freeze the following winter, before the plants were established).

I am not sure how long a plant species has to be present and self-sustaining in an area to be considered “naturalized”, but I don’t think the Sabal palmetto and Sabal minor populations in Va Beach and adjacent areas will be considered an extension of the species’ natural ranges anytime soon.  Maybe someday (500 years from now for example), botanists (or taxonomists?) will consider a species native if it is known to have been self-sustaining in a location for greater than “x” number of years, even if the species is known to have originally been introduced by man.  

So for example, extant and self-sustaining for 50 years and the species is naturalized, extant and self-sustaining for greater than 200 years and it is native.  This is just speculation on my part as to what might be a logical way to treat the native ranges of floral species in the future when man has had the ability to understand and document the natural environment for a longer period of time.

As a side note, I think Syagrus romanzoffiana, Washingtonia, exotic Sabal species and Phoenix hybrids galore will one day be considered naturalized and then maybe native to Central Florida and South Florida will likely have scores of palm species that become self-sustaining.  Heck, it already does, especially in areas of human habitation.

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@Johnny Palmseed Almost all of them have grown naturally. I’ve been going to VA beach every year, I live in VA. So I’ve been keeping tabs on several of them since I first spotted them. The one in the last picture for example I first spotted in 2018 when it was slightly smaller. Most of the pictures are in random spots where there’s no way they we’re purposely planted. And most weren’t on hotel property, they were on the city properties that connected Atlantic Ave. to the boardwalk. The really big ones are I would say at least 7-10 years old so I now they’ve seen the worst of the worst winters there. I guess we’ll just have to wait and see. 

@chinandega81 yeah they may be ugly but they’re growing. I’m sure as they mature they’ll get more adapted and look better as each frond comes. It’s like this all over that part of the city, I can’t speak for more inland since I didn’t really go there. I was trying to make it a beach trip as well. I will say there aren’t as many palms once you leave the oceanfront area but the ones that I did see looked great. I’ll post those pics soon. 

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In colonial times, there was a report of sabal minor growing as far NW as near Williamsburg, but the question is whether this was a mistaken ID (yucca?) by an early botanist, or whether it was true.  In the early 1800s, there was a bitter cold that vanquished palms north of Monkey Island, NC, in Currituck County, NC near the VA border.  Less hardy sabals survive in the Virginia Peninsula,  colder than VA Beach.  I planted a small sabal Riverside in York County at least 15 years ago that is still thriving and with several feet of trunk now.

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God bless America...

and everywhere else too.

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Lots of great pics!  

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YouTube https://www.youtube.com/@tntropics - 60+ In-ground 7A palms - (Sabal) minor(7 large + 27 seedling size, 3 dwarf),  brazoria(1) , birmingham(4), etonia (1) louisiana(5), palmetto (1), riverside (1),  (Trachycarpus) fortunei(7), wagnerianus(1),  Rhapidophyllum hystrix(7),  15' Mule-Butia x Syagrus(1),  Blue Butia capitata(1) +Tons of tropical plants.  Recent Yearly Lows -1F, 12F, 11F, 18F, 16F, 3F, 3F, 6F, 3F, 1F, 16F, 17F, 6F, 8F

 

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The biggest Volunteer that has naturalized in VA beach (that I know of) is this one at Jungle Golf.  They were one of the first to bring up Sabal Palmetto to VA beach when they opened in 1970.   The Cold of 2018 hardly scathed it..  There are other large Volunteers at JG but this one is the largest and oldest.  Most of the palms in JG are from the 1980s and I believe there is one from the original 1970 planting left.

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Edited by Mr.SamuraiSword
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  • 3 months later...
On 9/21/2020 at 1:12 PM, Jhonny said:

@Johnny Palmseed Almost all of them have grown naturally. I’ve been going to VA beach every year, I live in VA. So I’ve been keeping tabs on several of them since I first spotted them. The one in the last picture for example I first spotted in 2018 when it was slightly smaller. Most of the pictures are in random spots where there’s no way they we’re purposely planted. And most weren’t on hotel property, they were on the city properties that connected Atlantic Ave. to the boardwalk. The really big ones are I would say at least 7-10 years old so I now they’ve seen the worst of the worst winters there. I guess we’ll just have to wait and see. 

@chinandega81 yeah they may be ugly but they’re growing. I’m sure as they mature they’ll get more adapted and look better as each frond comes. It’s like this all over that part of the city, I can’t speak for more inland since I didn’t really go there. I was trying to make it a beach trip as well. I will say there aren’t as many palms once you leave the oceanfront area but the ones that I did see looked great. I’ll post those pics soon. 

Sabal palmettos are a lot hardier than people here give them credit for. Mine were unharmed after seeing near record cold temperatures here in Chesapeake in 2018. That said, I've met palm growers who claim Sabal palmetto as a species are unreliable here; however, I think they are referring to the mature transplants that are trucked in from the swamps of Florida. In VB these transplants are also subjected to a myriad of bad horticultural practices like over-pruning, wrapping in plastic, and underwatering. I've seen transplanted sabals fail in Florida due to over-pruning and under watering, so it's no wonder so many here in Virginia die given the added stress of being in a new climate on a completely exposed site.  Container grown sabals and naturally seeded sabals on the other hand seem right at home here. I think a lot of this has to do with the fact that in urban areas there are no herbivores to graze on them and no tall trees to shade them out. I have lost more Sabals to bunnies and deer than I ever have to the cold. It seems their green fronds become very appetizing to herbivores against the grey backdrop of winter. 

I agree with you that those Sabals and Butias at the ocean front were seeded naturally and they will look much better as they grow (if they aren't hacked down or over-pruned). My college campus in Florida had even uglier Sabals sprouting everywhere that became beautiful specimens with time. The bits of damage I see on those sabals might be a combined effect of the cold and salt spray.  Although Sabal palmettos are classified as salt tolerant, even the Sabal palmettos in Miami and the Bahamas almost always have salt damage if they're planted right on the coast.  While I'm confident those naturally seeded sabals will thrive indefinitely if left alone, I could see those Butias being killed or severely damaged by an unusually severe winter.

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the range was never extended it was just naturalized in seva (same with sabal minors)

Edited by climate change virginia
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"The good thing about science is that it's true whether or not you believe in it."
~ Neil deGrasse Tyson

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On 9/21/2020 at 10:19 AM, chinandega81 said:

They seem to be naturalized. They are very weedy in general. It will be interesting to see how they do long term. I can't help but think too bad out native palm to the SE is so ugly. It just looks ratty everywhere to  me, But it is cool on the other hand that palms are growing furthur up the coast on their own, regardless what type they are. Thanks for the pics and your exploration. Are they only growing like this right at the beach?

IMO I think its pretty if trimmed right. Floridians (not all) usually take the palmetto for granted people in northern parts of georgia and the carolinas and virginia and some gulf states LOVE the palmetto we take pride in our palmettos. 

Edited by climate change virginia
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"The good thing about science is that it's true whether or not you believe in it."
~ Neil deGrasse Tyson

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  • 1 year later...

Sorry to burst your bubble, but I found out through hotel employees that the mature palms planted all along the beach are brought in every Spring and dug up every Fall. 

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On 4/18/2022 at 12:35 AM, Stevejr said:

Sorry to burst your bubble, but I found out through hotel employees that the mature palms planted all along the beach are brought in every Spring and dug up every Fall. 

That is true of the less hardy species, but you can see the palmettoes doing fine during the winter.  Many butias as well.  Visit Sandbridge Beach in southern VA Beach to see loads of butias planted at houses that certainly aren't dug up each year.

 

A few miles south in Duck, NC, a prominent restaurant used to plant queens, Adonidias, and other not hardy palms each year.  I think coconuts and royals on occasion.  Then they got wiser and planted some CIDPs, which can survive a few years down there.

 

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God bless America...

and everywhere else too.

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After working in Savannah, I'm starting to get bored with palmettoes and minors.  Mexicana and uresana start to get a little more interesting.  Then Causiarum and domingensis can catch my fancy.  But then, ironically, queens are exciting to see here, due to their rarity.

God bless America...

and everywhere else too.

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On 4/18/2022 at 12:35 AM, Stevejr said:

Sorry to burst your bubble, but I found out through hotel employees that the mature palms planted all along the beach are brought in every Spring and dug up every Fall. 

Sounds like Ocean Beach MD...  Most palms planted in VA beach are planted permanently, though I remember seeing one place that used queens, pygmy dates, and Dypsis "Areca Palms" as annuals.   You might have talked with someone about the sabals and pindos planted directly on the beachfront which usually have a shorter lifespan due to direct wind and salt exposure, 2015/16 and 2018/19 killed the vast majority of the palms directly on the oceanfront, and even in normal winters, they usually look somewhat ratty.... They arent dug up though unless they die.  Plenty of well established palms even on the main street.  

Sure, palms like these....

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Or these don't last more than a couple years at best....

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But theres plenty of well established palms only a block or so inland.  Some of these have been in ground 20 or more years.  Photos taken in 2019, about a year after the record low winter in 2017/18.

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Jungle Golf, only two blocks from the oceanfront has a fair number of Sabal Palmetto's planted in the 1970's note the trunk scars from the worse winters on the first one.

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Another at Jungle Golf.

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This one has been in ground at least 17 years, plenty of volunteers around, and despite having some exposure to the oceanfront, has survived every winter since 2011.....

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Theres apparently a few exceptions of trunking palms doing ok on the oceanfront, usually Windmills and some European fans, I asked someone working at this hotel who claimed this Palmetto was  planted around 2008 ... It certainly has a more robust trunk and canopy than any others I saw on the beachfront as well as some minor trunk scars. Wonder if its possibly S. Mexicana?

20190919_142644_HDR.thumb.jpg.360ff4903f21c783790b9e393f81a92b.jpg

 

Edited by Mr.SamuraiSword
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  • 4 weeks later...

I used to be proud of having possibly one of the fattest palmettoes in Virginia, especially north of the James River (at my old house), but after living in Savannah a few months, I am finding palmettoes to be rather boring.  The old familiarity breeds contempt concept.  

Now I look for examples of cultivated queen palms, livistonas, and phoenixes, all of which people further south might yawn at.  Butias are very common, but I haven't been jaded about them, because I am witnessing the variability in their morphologies.

 

If I lived in VA Beach, I would at least grow palmetto, chamaerops, butia, maybe washy, and serenoa.  

 

Ironically, you never see needles so common to get sick of them, even though they are the hardiest palm.

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God bless America...

and everywhere else too.

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