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Leaderboard

  1. dalmatiansoap

    dalmatiansoap

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  2. Jim in Los Altos

    Jim in Los Altos

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  3. Palms1984

    Palms1984

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  4. SubTropicRay

    SubTropicRay

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Popular Content

Showing content with the highest reputation on 03/23/2011 in all areas

  1. SubTropicRay
    2 points
    Wal, take it back and get an IPOD Touch. It does everyhting an IPOD does plus gives you internet wherever there's free WiFi. More importantly, you're not paying that ridiculous monthly fee Android and IPhone users pay.
  2. dalmatiansoap
    Can U help me to ID this two palms? Let me call them Palm 1: and Palm 2 wow, I allways admire myself whan it comes to names Location San Diego Thanks
  3. Jim in Los Altos
    Tyrone, Most people I know that have tasted the B. edulis fruit weren't very impressed. I've never actually tasted it myself. I never let them ripen. The tree in that picture is probably between 20 and 25 years old.
  4. Jim in Los Altos
    Tyrone, B. edulis fruit are round and bigger than olives. When ripe they're bluish black and are edible. Even though the fruits are decorative, I cut them off before ripening so they don't fall all over my patio.
  5. JasonD
    It's Brahea edulis. Leafbases will persist sometimes and then all fall off in the course of a week. Quite odd.
  6. dalmatiansoap
    I bet if the palm on foto didnt have any fruits on, all this ID issue would be much more different.
  7. Palms1984
    I think these Butia capitata petioles are thinner than normal because these palms are pretty shaded by a large Ficus Macrophylla (Moreton Bay Fig).
  8. Palms1984
    Some have clean trunks at this size and some don't...not sure of the reason why. I do know this palm is most certainly Brahea edulis (I've seen it thousands of times).
  9. Jim in Los Altos
    There's no doubt that the first one is Brahea edulis. The trunk fibers are typical of those in a dry or semi-dry climate and will eventually fall away to reveal a smooth trunk. This tree looks nearly identical to the one in my back yard. L. chinensis leaf bases are thicker and less upright than those in the picture. Also, the fruiting is typical of B. edulis.
  10. sarasota alex
    I also feel the first one is L. chinensis
  11. dalmatiansoap
    Doesnt it have a bit to many trunk fibers for B. Edulis?
  12. Palms1984
    I see these palms all the time in Balboa Park. Your correct Jim, the first one is Brahea edulis fruiting and second is Butia capitata.
  13. Jim in Los Altos
    Brahea edulis and Butia. That Butia has thinner than typical petiole bases for a capitata though.
  14. dalmatiansoap
    Oh cmmon, now U ruined it Thanks Tyrone Im not in So Cal either so that makes us 1:1
  15. Gonzer
    1 point
    I still use a first-generation one.

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