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Showing content with the highest reputation on 06/29/2025 in all areas
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12 points
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The new larger palms that have been donated to the gardens have tucked themselves in well with all the recent rains. Kindly donated by Colin Wilson the largest ones and a few smaller ones by myself. A nice group planting of some joeys and a single kerriodoxa along with a lanonia dasyantha they are established and just need time to get up and growing. But there in the garden and will be gor the years to come.9 points
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Some pioneer palms for the new garden, they will help in creating a microclimate, planting them along with a few trees will help to start a canopy. And also break up the harder more difficult areas to garden in, once the ground has shade in my climate it completely changes, more moisture means better growing conditions. You just have to make that start with new plants sooner or later!8 points
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8 points
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With so many new palms in the greenhouse I wish to give them a bit of a head start in life, and what better way than to make raised beds by terracing the slope . Creating two affects new real estate for palms and by creating a swail affect for retaining more moisture. Iam sure there will be something in the greenhouse to plant out5 points
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What a privilege to visit Phil’s garden and wholesale nursery (Eumundi Palms) on the Sunshine Coast. It’s something I’ve been wanting to do since moving up to Queensland more than 3 years ago now!!!. The stand out for me was this incredible Cyrtostachys renda hybrid (C. renda x C. elegans). Hopefully one day it’ll produce viable seed, and there will be no shortage of customers for the resulting palms I’m sure, as they thrive in the sub-tropics.4 points
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4 points
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I thought some people might be interested in unusual inflorescences and fruit. I’ll start with Iriartea deltoidea from Central and South America. Not sure if it will succeed outside the tropics, but it is a winner in Hawaii. The reason I’m featuring it is the odd placement of the inflorescence. Most palms develop flowers in or just below the crown of fronds. Iriartea is distinctive in that the inflorescence takes perhaps 5 years to develop. During that time the trunk keeps growing pushing the crown up. By the time the mature inflorescence sheds the long, horn-like bracts (front tree) to expose the flowers (back tree), there might be 10-20 ft of bare trunk between the crown and the much lower inflorescence. This is the first time mine have flowered. I think it looks very cool especially because the smooth gray trunk is slightly swollen in the middle. Mine still have pretty modest stilt roots. Maybe they will become more impressive with age. Next up is a frequently featured palm, Kerridoxa elegans. This is widely grown for the amazing entire leaves. Unfortunately, the occasional cold nights on the mainland may stunt its growth enough so that many folks have never seen a mature trunking female loaded with fruit. Mine pretty consistently bloom in January and February with the fruit ripening in late October. I only have one male and so must hand pollinate the four females scattered around the garden. But the clumps of pale yellow fruit are worth the effort. This one is about 12 years old and 12 ft tall starting from a 3 gallon pot. These may be understory palms, but they are NOT miniatures. Prestoea acuminata looks like any typical large pinnate palm, but for me the selling point is the newly opened inflorescence. It is initially brilliant white and resembles a frozen lightening bolt. It is very eye-catching. After the bees are done with it, the rachis gradually turns pink and then deep red (right side, difficult to see). Several inflorescences of different ages might be displayed on the same tree producing a colorful show. Marojejya darianii is the primary reason for this post. I have eight in the ground and add another every few years so I always have younger trees without trunks. For my taste, the most attractive stage of their life cycle is when a dozen huge entire leaves seem to erupt directly out of the ground. After they get tall, the tattered fronds don’t look all that much different from your average pinnate palm. Just about every photo on Palmpedia is from gardens in Hawaii plus a few from Australia. This is truly sad because every palm collector should have these in their landscape. I would really like to get seed and do a little propagation. My oldest trees have been blooming prolifically for about five years. The deep red-violet inflorescence is very attractive, but 90% of them have only male flowers pumping out huge amounts of pollen. Rarely a rachis will have male flowers distally and larger female flowers towards the base. I have no idea what causes most to be all male and only a few to have both sexes. Fertilizer? Rainfall? Cloud cover? Age? Random chance? When I find these special inflorescences, I shake pollen over them every day that the female flowers appear open. This has been a total failure. Not a single fruit, ever! Whenever I visit a palm friend growing these I always ask if they get fruit. Most say no, never. A few people do get fruit. When I ask how they encourage production of female flowers and successful pollination, they claim to do absolutely nothing. The trees do all the work. I have always suspected that they are just unwilling to divulge the recipe of their secret sauce. Last week I was trimming dead fronds in the garden and went to work on a Marojejya that is far from all the other and a bit inaccessible. I rarely visit this one up close. I’ve never tried any type of assisted fertility on this one. I originally got it as a one gallon from Mike in Kurtistown a dozen years ago. As I was cutting away old fronds, I uncovered two developing infructescences loaded with immature green fruit. The fruit was obscured by all the distal dead ends where the male flowers had been last October. After cutting those away, I got a better look at the developing fruit. There were also hundreds of dried up, pea-sized aborted fruits that I have been well acquainted with for years. These have probably been developing for about 8 months. They appear to be about 25% the size of mature seeds. I cut one open and it had a central cavity filled with a clear gel. Presumably this will expand and solidify by the time they are ripe. This doesn’t guarantee babies down the road, but it is a big step beyond anything I've gotten before. Looks like those palm friends who professed to doing nothing to assist pollination might have been telling the truth after all. Here are a few gratuitous photos from the garden. A baby that recently went in the ground near a spreading monkeypod tree that should provide good canopy. This is my favorite one that was squashed in January 2024 by a mass of falling trees filled with heavy vines. [Scroll up to the January 18, 2024 post] I’d say this has made a pretty impressive recovery after that near death experience. For scale the Anthurium cupulispathum leaves are 4-5 ft long. I deliberately planted this one to have dense canopy from the foreground tree ferns and the soon-to-be giant blue marble tree out of frame on the left. I’m trying to recreate light and wind protection conditions that in other gardens have produced palms with exceptionally large fronds. Blue marble trunk on the right. We'll find out in 10 years if my plan worked.4 points
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I took some more random pics of that area of my proprty that I posted up a few posts ago. Like I said, still a work in progress and some stuff that was planted in a few years ago before I cut down and dug out the Chinaberrys are complety overtaken with grass and weeds .... that'll be the last area I get cleaned up. It's literally pull some weeds around one plant, dump bag of mulch, move onto next area and rinse and repeat ... and of course it's hot in the sun. Enjoy. -Matt4 points
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I lied about my Bismarckia it’s about to open it’s 6th frond and spear on number 7 is about 2/3 out. Inhave four older fronds with some tip damage so I think I’m going to remove them. Here’s a few of my baby palms. The only palm that is taller than me are the Washingtonia that have grown like crazy. The one on the middle has put out 16+ fronds since the cold spell. There are two different crosses of Butia and Jubaea, a P sylvestris, Sabal uresana and a CIDP that was a strap about 1.5 years ago.4 points
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4 points
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4 points
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I was at the JC Raulston Arboretum in Raleigh, NC. They have a pair of Sabal Brazoriensis palms grown in deciduous shade and planted as 5 and 7 gallon plants in 2009 (https://jcra.ncsu.edu/horticulture/our-plants/results.php?search=brazoriensis). My understanding is that these came from seed collected in habitat. Here is the larger one but it didn't have any inflorescence this year. Here is a smaller one with inflorescence. It has some seedlings/smaller plants growing around it. I counted 4 orders of branching in the inflorescence and it was as tall as the tallest frond. I would surmise that if the petioles weren't stretched due to the shade, it may extend slightly past the fronds, but note the compactness (very short internodes). Sabal Minor inflorescence often isn't nearly as compact.3 points
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3 points
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3 points
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3 points
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Yes neither of those look like minor for sure. Note the very noticeable cross on the trunk boots in first pic. Also the noticeable costapalmate at that size. For branching you don't count the main stem. But yes the inflorescence is not like minor. Below is a pic of my brazoriensis bloom and a couple charts I made that are on my most recent video. Note the inflorescence on these palms should be smaller in diameter than minor and not nearly as many in number as minor which shoots up 3-4 to 73 points
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3 points
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Last year I collected seeds of a mature Dypsis decipiens that I planted in my parents garden many years ago. The seeds were cleaned and I put them in the refrigerator for a few months, waiting for warmer weather. In december my son Leonard ( who studies agronomics) planted them out in big pots. Maybe 1/4 of them germinated and today he and his sister Lydia transplanted 51 seedlings in individual pots. The first brazilian "manambe palms".3 points
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3 points
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I couldn’t help myself in buying an original plate from 1896. It just goes to show that palms have been of intrest for a long time, and to stop by lord Howe island and collect seeds way back then they certainly had some great minds to think about the beauty of palms. Botany has always had its place in history and will continue to do so.2 points
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these need ALOT of water. 2hrs trickle a day every day for a month then every other day as long as its warm out(>80 high). Im sure some Socal experienced board members will give you even better locally tailored advice. These are water hogs, I hope your soil doesnt drain too fast.2 points
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Here are some photos from my yard and a few from down near King William in San Antonio. The Bizzie is making a strong come back. Makes me want to try one! I see all these nice pics of palms being planted like those newly planted large Queen palms in Manvel and my mind is flashing to next winter when we are all posting photos of snow and ice and temps in the teens in places from Austin to Houston to San Antonio.. I think I’ve got some form of palm PTSD from the consistent winter lows we have been experiencing lately! 😂 Anyhow without further ado…. oh and @Ben G., those P. sylvestris were planted post 2021. This past year is the first winter that didn’t fry all their fronds. A few of them did not make it from the cold they’d been through.2 points
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To be limited to 3 species would be a tragedy for a dream garden. 1) a stand of copernicia fallaensis 2) satakentia luikensis 3) pinanga speciosa 4) copernicia hospita ( I cheated and added a 4th)2 points
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All I want to see is the future generations enjoy them. Hopefully they will become a part of the garden and be well looked after. Coffs botanical gardens has a lot of room for a lot of palms. It just needs to be set out in a way that will bring the eye candy to the viewer in the way of palms. Richard2 points
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The soil is a mix. One one end it's solid limestone rock. Alot of it was exposed at the surface. I removed tons of rocks that were the size of my torso. I used a bunch of them to enclose some raised beds. As you move towars the other end there was an area where the builder had excavated some rock to build a large retaining wall around the house. They then filled it with some sandy loam. That area was pretty deep and the soil is both hydrophobic when dry, but then drains really fast. Then there was an area next to it that was more like clay. I think some of the soils are mixed uo in that area because of work done long ago with the next door neighbors excavation of their pool and septic tank ... that was done when my plot was undeveloped ... I think the dirt was dumped on my plot, then when my house was build it got mixed up, etc I didn't prep much. I did dig out the stumps and roots of all the trees and brush and pulled out a lot of big rocks. The holes left behind were many and big. They got filled in with a mix of soils as I planted individual plants. If it was an agave, yucca, nolina, dioon, or Brahea then I left it alone as they can handle limestone. The Sabals had more organics mixed in with decomposed granite to keep drainage good. -Matt2 points
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I could easily do a top 25 list here. Maybe even top 50. 😬2 points
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Beautiful work. Iam sure your children will love and enjoy this moment and remember that special day in potting them up, and hopefully they get to plant them out and watch them grow with memories of family.2 points
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Well I don't post much palm pics here (yet), but that's mostly because I only really got started on my palm planting in earnest a few years ago and until now never really felt like I had much pics of palmy landscape worth posting. Some of my palms are planted among grass and overgrown brush that desperatelt needs to be cleaned out. Anyways last summer I decided to take out 3 large (40 foot) Chinaberry trees that were planted in a row 20+ years ago. Palmageddon kilked them back nearly to the ground, but they then resprouted on the lower 15 feet or so of trunk. Those sprouts were epicormic and thus very weak jointed to the trunk. Once the branches would get to about 15 feet long they would tear away from the trunk and peel back 5 to 10 feet of the trunk. So last summer I decided to rip the trees down along with all of the brushy undergrowth. Here's some pics of that in progress. This past March I replanted that area, and beyond (not pictured) with palms, cycads, yuccas, agave, etc. Then since the area was now exposed to copious amounts of sun, the weeds exploded from dormant seeds. In the last few weeks I've been focused on pulling the weeds and mulching it in. Mostly it's a mix of pine bark mulch and rocks of various sizes, texture and color. The last pictute was taken 20 minutes ago. It only shows about one third if the entire area I have been working. You can see that even in that area I have not yet completed the mulching, etc. ... it's a work in progress for the rest of this summer/fall. I will add more pics as progress continues. -Matt2 points
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@MattInRaleigh Here's a link on this board of my seed pic I posted some days back. Yeah I'm not sure what to make of my mystery Sabal. It may be Louisiana but there's no way it's a regular sabal minor. I've grown them for a long time and never had a minor trunk this quick. Usually it's decades. I haven't looked closely really but I believe you're right in that it's not very costapalmate. Thanks for stopping by there Matt and getting pictures.1 point
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hello Tom in Tucson: there really are stupid people. i was in the forest early yesterday morning and wanted to see how she was doing. what i saw was just a big hole. now someone has actually dug her up and taken her away. now i can only hope that this person will at least take good care of her. but it makes me very thoughtful, she/he could have just left her there ... 😞1 point
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I visited Karen Piercy's place this afternoon under the pretext of picking lychee. Of course, the real reason to visit was to commune with the jaw-dropping collection of massive palms. I posted a photo of this Corypha umbraculifera a few years ago, but it was even more overwhelming on this visit. The trunk has to be over 4 ft in diameter, maybe closer to 5 ft. Growing in deep Hamakua soil at roughly 1200 ft elevation overlooking the Hilo airport. Now you know why you don't often see these growing in suburban landscapes. Certainly gives Tahina competition as the most massive palm out there. It's probably still decades away from blooming. You may remember Karen and her husband, Dean, as the organizers of the 2004 IPS Biennial to Hawaii and helping again with the tour of the former Carlsmith palm collection during the 2022 Biennial. BTW, I filled my 5 gallon bucket with delicious lychee. That didn't make a dent in the fruit still left on the trees. Oh, the hardships of living in Hawaii...1 point
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The folding of the leaflets could be a sign of water stress. As for fertiliser less is best, there are two types of fertilisers synthetic or organic. If it was my palm i would use organic fertiliser, in the form of a little chicken manure (pelletised) sprinkled around the area along with a liquid seaweed. The seaweed will help in vitamin B stress relief and also act as a soil tonic conditioner, this will help your palm get a move on.1 point
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Fun topic! 1) Areca macrocalyx var Mariae 2) Chrysalidocarpus baronii Black Stem 3) Pinanga aristata1 point
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Like the man said if you got the money we can do anything you want. No wonder they had the money imposing all those taxes on the poor people! But hey wouldnt we like a hothouse the size of ship you bet I would!!!1 point
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Paid on Saturday, shipped on Monday, in my hands and unwrapped as of about 5 minutes ago. I also want to point out that these were gifted to me, he only asked me to cover shipping and I also want to point out that shipping cost more than what we agreed on, and he covered it anyway. They're also bigger than I expected, and they're heavy - my only complaint is that the only pots I have big enough for these guys are pretty ugly. Sabal Maritima 👍1 point
