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  1. bubba

    bubba

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  2. Tracy

    Tracy

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  3. realarch

    realarch

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  4. Merlyn

    Merlyn

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Popular Content

Showing content with the highest reputation on 04/05/2026 in all areas

  1. Tracy
    The first ring on my California grown Chrysalidocarpus robustus. I don't recall seeing any other big specimens here in California. Thanks to visiting the Big Island I have seen some tall specimens which put my juvenile plant in perspective.
  2. Rick Kelley
    Pinanga caesia may suffer from overexposure on PT, but mine only recently started blooming so the novelty hasn't worn off yet. I still get startled when I walk by when a new inflorescence is about to open. The entire tree is Technicolor, but the blooms dial it up to 11.The deep red covering (bract?) only stays on for a few hours. After it falls away, the soft pink flower buds are exposed for less than a day. First thing the next morning the flowers open to a cloud of bees. After only a few hours all the flowers have fallen to the ground leaving just the bare violet rachilia that might go on to make fruit, if I'm lucky. I wonder what role the intense colors play. I assume the bees are attracted to some fragrance, not the color, but I really don't know. I could believe brightly colored fruit attracts birds for seed dispersal, but that is months down the road. No matter, it is an impressive, albeit brief, show. Palmpedia says this species is difficult in California. I hope people on the mainland are able to find a protected spot in their garden that can provide the right microclimate for this beautiful palm. If you are going to try zone pushing, might as well swing for the fences. I hear that this is one of the taller Pinangas,. I'll need to keep adding another baby every few years so I always have eye level blooms.
  3. realarch
    A nifty diminutive palm from New Guinea, Hydriastele rheophytica. Loves water hence, the name, and sparsely clumping. I remember Brad posting a photo of one in his garden not too long ago. Tim
  4. pogobob
    Planted in 2015 as a 5 gallon
  5. John2468
    Young Nepenthes ‘briggsiana’ a cross between Nepenthes lowii and ventricosa.
  6. James B
    That’s awesome Tracy. I think my winters are too cold for it here so I’ll be sticking with Prestonianus and Dacaryi as my big boy Chrysalidocarpus in my garden.
  7. awkonradi
    Welcome to PalmTalk! If those two palms were transplanted without big root balls, then they easily could show this much transplant stress. Right now, I think watering at least briefly once a day is not too much. I think those two palms may look rough for months, but then they may start to grow vigorously. Washingtonia are tough, and they transplant well. Do you have other Washingtonia in your neighborhood, understanding that Houston suffered a severe freeze in Feb. 2021? Good for you for renting a home and caring this much about your landlord's palms!
  8. Kim
    I have a lot of affection for this elegant palm. And the seeds are so pretty, too!
  9. SCVpalmenthusiast
    How big is it now? Mines about this size right now.
  10. realarch
  11. Foggy Paul
    3 points
    Turns out nobody had a 15 or even a 5g so we got this little guy from Flora Grubb, at a typically dear FG price. But it’s in the ground! Hopefully it’s as fast growing as they say.
  12. bubba
    Juvenile Latania lontaroides. They do not stay red in humid Florida long:
  13. bubba
  14. RiverCityRichard
    Recently purchased this 7g “weepy form” of C. Onihalensis from Chip Jones Nursery. I’ve read a few posts from people having a hard time growing these in Florida, albeit, in areas a bit warmer than north Orlando. The specimen at Leu Gardens looks great. I also have a smaller “upright form” I’d like to plant out as well. Anyone have any successes with these in ground in Florida? And if so what soil/sun exposure has been the trick?
  15. PAPalmtrees
    2 points
    Happy Easter everyone! Jesus has risen! I hope everyone has a great day spending time with family and worshiping God!.
  16. 96720
    I bought a lot of Sabal seeds they all grew and have the typical heel but this one has not and looks different!! Any ideas?
  17. Tracy
    I will have to do a check of old photos, but it was shortly after we added the outdoor shower in 2015. I can't recall if I ever potted it up after I bought it from George Sparkman as either a 3 or squat 5 gallon.
  18. bubba
    Thank you Merlyn. I agree about the questionable Macaw. I took pictures of the trunk, which is without spines. The leaf structure is also an issue per Palmpedia. The other palm in the front above the Cocothrinax is a mystery!
  19. aztropic
    2 points
    Agree with Ryan. Fruit has a delicious sweet sour taste and 2 seeds per fruit. Skin is thicker than a grapes, and rubbery to chew on, so just spit it out. Wish my tree produced bigger crops, but the fruits I get are still a treat nonetheless. aztropic Mesa, Arizona
  20. Z4Devil
    2 points
    Have met his nephew and wife who are in Bochum in his apartment right now ... his last words were for his Lytos and me ... And now? Have loaded 3 larger and one really large L. weddelianum + 2 L. itapebiense (one mid-sized, 1 seedling) and a L. hoehnei into my car ... this was the last promise I gave him; to take care on his "babies", as long as I am alive. Heaven was crying on my way back, much of rain came down ... 😪
  21. Butch
    2 points
    Happy Easter... Butch
  22. Fishinsteeg234
    Hey @Fal! My group of Archontophoenix by my pool is doing OK since the freeze, but I did intervene by using a burn barrel during our coldest night at 23degrees. All are pushing new spears luckily. I have a few other smaller Archontophoenix around the yard that were not protected, and they’re not looking as great right now with a few spear pulls. The cunninghamiana’s held more green in the leaflets competed to the other species I have including alexandrae, maxima, myolensis, tuckeri, and Purperea. There is a palm sale coming up at SJBGNP on May 2nd. I will be there with 1-3 gallon Archontophoenix for sale. With 4 awesome palm vendors in attendance, there may be over 100 different species available for purchase. I highly recommend checking it out. -Alex Steeg
  23. Harry’s Palms
    That is a large specimen ! How long has that been in the ground there? Harry
  24. bubba
  25. bubba
    Some form of Cocothrinax in front of a cluster of MacArthur palms. Please help me with ID's and corrections.
  26. bubba
    My friend claims this is an Areca catechu dwarf. I believe it is a simple Areca catechu:
  27. bubba
  28. bubba
  29. bubba
  30. bubba
    Shot of the same palm from another direction:
  31. aztropic
    A nice white cat opened just in time for easter! Lightly scented. This one is a reliable spring bloomer that has bloomed 4 years in a row for me. aztropic Mesa, Arizona
  32. metalfan
    Dendrobium anosum popped yesterday, and Bulbophyllum falcatum has 3 spikes in bloom
  33. WaianaeCrider
    Raging waters in the valley I hike in. Following are some pictures of an old "swimming" spot just below a small dam build over 100 years ago to divert water into a pipe for the sugar cane growing lower in the valley. The water during the storm must have been 15 feet or higher. Not shown there was an area where people camped, cooked on a wood fire and relaxed. That area is now a field of small boulders. I'll get a picture next time I'm up there. I dug back in my files and found a photo from 2023 that shows the area back then. People use to jump off that big rock into a pool about 7' deep. Now there are two HUGE boulders where the pool use to be and perhaps a new pool below them.
  34. Palmarum
    2 points
    Yummy. Flavor varies. It tastes like a sweet grape to me. You plop the whole thing in your mouth, eat the fruit then spit out the seed or seeds. The skin is edible but can be tough to chew. Also makes an incredible jam or jelly if you are into preserving and get a lot of fruit you can't eat. Some new and interesting varieties are appearing. Ryan
  35. MIKE82397
    Late march 2026. Goodbye winter!!!
  36. Jonathan
    Some nice colour on this Butia odorata inflorescence.
  37. sonoranfans
    yep when well watered and fed these get thick trunks. My largest is 14 years int he ground from a 3 gallon.
  38. Merlyn
    Here's a spring 2024 update, in the same photo order as the 11/3/2019 post. These are about 5.5 years from ~5' tall big 3 gallon plantings. The front yard one is still the smallest, but is around 15 feet tall: The East side of the house has the biggest, and at about 20' tall is very close to trunking. The backyard SE pair is towering over everything nearby, here is one of them crowding a 5' tall Chamaerops Humilis: And the SW center of the bed is my favorite placement out of the big ones:
  39. happypalms
    The Geonoma atrovirens one palm that’s on my must have list that’s for sure. A bit of a challenge to in the brain grow sector of my horticultural files in the back of my brain somewhere. We all have a palm that challenges our grow skills and this one is it for me. An absolute stunning palm to look at I would trade a 1000 Joeys for a hundred of these beauties in a blink of an eye that’s for sure.
  40. MikeB
    1 point
    It looks like it might be deciduous so I'm going to take a guess. Could be a very old Broussonetia papyrifera, paper mulberry tree. If thats what it is it's the tree that tapa cloth is made from.
  41. Scott W
    2026 update...and yep, still thriving! The overall width on the last several sets of fronds has widened substantially, with them starting to encroach on my Syagrus campylospatha. Also, comparing the trunk height, the new growth appears to me to be emerging several inches taller; last years shows about at eye height on the statue, this year eyebrow height.
  42. Tracy
    Leptotes bicolor is blooming. It seems a little early but I should check photos from past years to confirm my suspicion.
  43. metalfan
    Sarcoglottis sceptroides, 3.5 ft bloom spike
  44. PalmatierMeg
    My experience with the Geonoma spp I tried is that they can't survive long term in Florida - more like a few weeks, perhaps months depending on when they are planted/potted. They prefer a cooler climate, especially at night but FL gives them 6-8 months of summer swelter day and night.
  45. happypalms
    Well what can I say perfection plus a absolutely gorgeous.
  46. realarch
    Hi John, mine has been flowering for a few years now and is finally trying to set seed. We shall see. Be patient, it will surprise you one of these days. Tim
  47. John hovancsek
    I was pulling the moss if at the base of mine and broke off its first flower. I don’t think it would set seed yet but would have loved to see it
  48. realarch
    Here are a few photos that I’ve posted before. Of the three I have, two are developing darker leaves and not quite as robust as the third, which continues to throw medium green leaves. They all have new leaves that are different shades of mauve. They are over 5’, (1.5m) tall. Just a killer small palm. Tim
  49. happypalms
    Photos yes please. My only regret about this palm is, there was one for sale at the pacsoa plant sale that was in a large pot and about 3 feet tall selling for $650 Aus iam so disappointed I didn’t buy it.
  50. realarch
    Richard, I’ve posted several photos of this species on PT, so they are here somewhere. The search feature is a bit dodgy lately and I needed to reenter and search several times before I got the results I was looking for. In any case, I will post more photos soon. I agree, this is a remarkable palm. Tim

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