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New Leaf Color


Dypsisdean

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(Dypsisdean @ Aug. 14 2006,22:22)

QUOTE
Sixteen:

Ack!!  Horrors!! Pots galore!!!!  Plant them I say!  :)

Zone 10a at best after 2007 AND 2013, on SW facing hill, 1 1/2 miles from coast in Oceanside, CA. 30-98 degrees, and 45-80deg. about 95% of the time.

"The great workman of nature is time."   ,  "Genius is nothing but a great aptitude for patience."

-George-Louis Leclerc de Buffon-

I do some experiments and learning in my garden with palms so you don't have to experience the pain! Look at my old threads to find various observations and tips!

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(BS @ Man about Palms,Aug. 15 2006,00:12)

QUOTE

(Dypsisdean @ Aug. 14 2006,22:22)

QUOTE
Sixteen:

Ack!!  Horrors!! Pots galore!!!!  Plant them I say!  :)

Bill (aka King of the Container Ranch),

You would have been the last person on this board I would have expected to hear that from.  :D

animated-volcano-image-0010.gif.71ccc48bfc1ec622a0adca187eabaaa4.gif

Kona, on The Big Island
Hawaii - Land of Volcanoes

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Dear Dean  :)

Love photos of lovely palms_they are totally new to me.

thanks for the pictures.

Love,

Kris.

love conquers all..

43278.gif

.

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very nice photos.

Tampa, Interbay Peninsula, Florida, USA

subtropical USDA Zone 10A

Bokeelia, Pine Island, Florida, USA

subtropical USDA Zone 10B

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(Dypsisdean @ Aug. 15 2006,00:27)

QUOTE

(BS @ Man about Palms,Aug. 15 2006,00:12)

QUOTE

(Dypsisdean @ Aug. 14 2006,22:22)

QUOTE
Sixteen:

Ack!!  Horrors!! Pots galore!!!!  Plant them I say!  :)

Bill (aka King of the Container Ranch),

You would have been the last person on this board I would have expected to hear that from.  :D

Dean- Thats because I have a nice list of excuses....

Construction that could damage them...

Inferior water!

Gophers-

Weather nowhere as good as yours....

:)  ???

Zone 10a at best after 2007 AND 2013, on SW facing hill, 1 1/2 miles from coast in Oceanside, CA. 30-98 degrees, and 45-80deg. about 95% of the time.

"The great workman of nature is time."   ,  "Genius is nothing but a great aptitude for patience."

-George-Louis Leclerc de Buffon-

I do some experiments and learning in my garden with palms so you don't have to experience the pain! Look at my old threads to find various observations and tips!

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Awesome photos.  Waiting for the IDs so I can add those to my wish list!

Trinidad!  Southernmost island in the Caribbean.

So many plants, So little space.

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Well...so far,no takers! I'll just jump right in. Again, this is really impossible to get these all right,considering the little you give us! :(

 #10  Dypsis species maybe, D. catatiana

 #11  Dypsis sp. Pink Crown

 #12  Areca vestiaria  Red Form

 #13  ??  Heterospathe ?

 #14  Pinanga caesia

 #15  Calyptrocalyx  albertsiana

 #16  Ptychosperma  sp.

 #17  Dypsis lanceolata( new reddish leaf??)

 #18  ??

 #19  Pinanga sp.

  I need to go to bed!  :cool:

Searle Brothers Nursery Inc.

and The Rainforest Collection.

Southwest Ranches,Fl.

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Jeff, bedtime? At 10 pm...! ???

Anyway, 13 looks more like a Lemurophoenix to me. And I'm sure 15 is a Calyptrocalyx, but it looks like a doxanthus. Just a wild stab. And I wasn't even going to try to ID any of these because I'm trying to get some actual work done! Your fault, Dean! :D  And do you have ALL these red fronds at the SAME time???

Bo-Göran

Leilani Estates, 25 mls/40 km south of Hilo, Big Island of Hawai'i. Elevation 880 ft/270 m. Average rainfall 140 inches/3550 mm

 

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17. Dictyosperma album

18. Pinanga coronata

19. Pinanga sp.  maculata?

Agree with Jeff on 10,11 and 12.

Tim Brisbane

Patterson Lakes, bayside Melbourne, Australia

Rarely Frost

2005 Minimum: 2.6C,  Maximum: 44C

2005 Average: 17.2C, warmest on record.

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OK I'll try a few of these

#10 Dypsis hildebrandtii

#11 Dypsis pinnatifrons 'pink crownshaft'

#12 Areca vestiara

#13 Dypsis crinita?

#14 Pinanga (Jeff's probably got the species right, caesia)

#15 ???

#16 Ptychosperma waitianum

#17 Dypsis lanceolata

#18 ??

#19 Pinanga maculata

San Diego

0.6 Acres of a south facing, gently sloped dirt pile, soon to be impenetrable jungle

East of Mount Soledad, in the biggest cold sink in San Diego County.

Zone 10a (I hope), Sunset 24

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Well, between Matt and Jeff, just about everything was identified. No easy task.

#1

I purchased it as Dypsis lantzeana

post-11-1155884006_thumb.jpg

animated-volcano-image-0010.gif.71ccc48bfc1ec622a0adca187eabaaa4.gif

Kona, on The Big Island
Hawaii - Land of Volcanoes

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#11

Dypsis sp. 'pink crownshaft'

If you look closely, there are three individuals in this pic.

post-11-1155884100_thumb.jpg

animated-volcano-image-0010.gif.71ccc48bfc1ec622a0adca187eabaaa4.gif

Kona, on The Big Island
Hawaii - Land of Volcanoes

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#16

I purchased it as Ptychosperma burretianum. But as mentioned in the other "New Leaf Color" thread, I am confused about these different Ptychosperma and will try and get some help with IDs in another thread.

post-11-1155884529_thumb.jpg

animated-volcano-image-0010.gif.71ccc48bfc1ec622a0adca187eabaaa4.gif

Kona, on The Big Island
Hawaii - Land of Volcanoes

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#18

Juvenile Iguanura wallichiana

post-11-1155884661_thumb.jpg

animated-volcano-image-0010.gif.71ccc48bfc1ec622a0adca187eabaaa4.gif

Kona, on The Big Island
Hawaii - Land of Volcanoes

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Not bad.  Dang I missed the Iguanura, and I even have one that size.  

Your Dypsis lantzeana is interesting as it looks essentially identical to my Dypsis 'menalaingo' which JD said looked like Dypsis bosseri, except that your palm is suckering and mine is not so far.  I just got the POM book this week and have to say that my 'menalaingo' does not look like the description or drawings of D bosseri (which has longer and partially divided leaves).  I think that our two palms (your lantzeana and my 'menalaingo') are the same, and they fit very closely the description of Dypsis hildebrandtii, but they do look a bit different than the photos of D hildebrandtii in POM.  Will be interesting to see when they flower.

Matt

San Diego

0.6 Acres of a south facing, gently sloped dirt pile, soon to be impenetrable jungle

East of Mount Soledad, in the biggest cold sink in San Diego County.

Zone 10a (I hope), Sunset 24

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Great photos. You have some work to do, if I was a palm stuck in a pot in Hawaii, I'd be pissed. Drop me an email when your back in So Cal.

Gary

Rock Ridge Ranch

South Escondido

5 miles ENE Rancho Bernardo

33.06N 117W, Elevation 971 Feet

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Matt,

You mean we have some confusion about a Dypsis? Hard to believe.  :D

However, I thought the same thing when I saw the pics of your D. 'menalaingo'

The reason I didn't say anything at the time was that on my D. lantzeana most leafs are not entirely entire (excuse the grammer). What I mean is there is always one little leaflet or section separated in an otherwise entire leaf. If you look closely in my pics you can hopefully see what I mean. And I couldn't tell if that occurred on your plant. I didn't think so.

animated-volcano-image-0010.gif.71ccc48bfc1ec622a0adca187eabaaa4.gif

Kona, on The Big Island
Hawaii - Land of Volcanoes

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dean what do you think of the chances of growing p.burretianum in san diego(i live near mattyb)?

the iguanura is supa-fly but i realized long ago that i could never grom any palms that start with the letter "i"

here...

the "prince of snarkness."

 

still "warning-free."

 

san diego,california,left coast.

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Paul, I would have to think you are out of luck. I have seen P. macarthuri melt at slightly below 32 f. And I would assume most of the suckering forms would have similar requirements. Although I have no first hand knowledge.

I was just posting on another thread about the Palms for So Cal Handbook. If you haven't ever seen it, you are missing out. It may be listed in there, and all the palms have listed temps at which they succumb. Matt, I believe, has a copy.

animated-volcano-image-0010.gif.71ccc48bfc1ec622a0adca187eabaaa4.gif

Kona, on The Big Island
Hawaii - Land of Volcanoes

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