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Showing content with the highest reputation on 11/26/2025 in all areas

  1. This has been a fun palm to watch grow. I planted it in 2012 as a solid dark green 1 gallon. Slowly it became more and more silver on the bottom of the leaves and then started to turn silver on the tops. Now I have to climb on the roof to shoot a pic of the tops of the leaves and they are solid silver only loosing some their color as the leaf ages. Sorry for the Bigfoot quality photo on the first shot.
    23 points
  2. This is mine. Super nice palm 🌴 breahea pimo to its left in the second photo
    9 points
  3. Mine is about 8-10 years behind I guess but I already love it. It’s nearly finished its green-silver transformation. All the different hues it goes through during transformation are nice but it’s good to see it approaching nearly full silver now.
    9 points
  4. Added photos to my original post. Couldn’t wait!
    7 points
  5. I've had this Super Silver growing for well over 10 years. Super slow growing for me in sandy soil on a steep slope in a hot environment. Always looks good, loves as much summer water as you want to give it, just has been incredibly slow
    6 points
  6. Both planted 2015 as small palms..not even close to Stevetoad brahea..probably climate, shade and to much competition...
    6 points
  7. @pogobob, I had a problem with a trunked Howea, the rat would chew through the top of the petiole, just below the frond blade. This would happen one frond each night. I tried spring traps, glue traps, metal band around the trunk, nothing helped. In desperation I purchased this very expensive trap. It worked, the corpse had dried blood out the earholes the next morning, very satisfying !! For those unfamiliar with this trap, it was invented in New Zealand. It is a most clever design, forcing the rodent to stand on its hind legs to investigate the bait within the top of the black section. When this occurs, the rodent trips the trigger, causing a horizontal bolt (inline with the A24 printing) to strike the rodents skull. Then the rodent falls away. It is powered by a CO2 cartridge, and automatically resets for the next victim. My favorite detail is that this is a mechanical kill, and there is no risk of poisoning a non-target animal that might scavenge the carcass. (the reason I do not use poison)
    5 points
  8. Washingtonia filifera in Candelaria, Texas , Chinati Mountains and surrounding area
    5 points
  9. My regular Brahea Armata is very slow growing but getting a very large trunk . It has been silver since it was a small 10” pot size about 25 years ago. The “super silver” that you have has a smaller trunk ( judging by the photo )with more rapid growth. Harry this was last year , I think. Unfortunately not much of the trunk is visible in this pic , but clearly a different palm than you have. Very slow growing like the L. Chinensis behind it. All the palms down here are about the same age. In the upper left hand corner you can see the Brahea Edulis which grows a lot faster , already about 8’ of smooth trunk. Harry
    5 points
  10. Evening sun hitting this 2 headed Chrysalidocarpus Prestonianus Hybrid
    5 points
  11. I've been growing one of these trees in Arizona for a couple years now, mainly for it's beautiful foliage. Today,I noticed for the first time its tiny flowers. As small as they are,they have a strong smell of nutmeg.Since this was just its first flowering, I decided to play queen bee and see if anything develops...🤞 aztropic Mesa, Arizona
    4 points
  12. Just received my L yannanensis seeds from Charway. Well shipped/packed, no floaters, very happy. Great communication and quick shipping as well. Will update here about germination... Matt
    4 points
  13. @MoPalm Yes , you are hooked! The canopy you desire will happen faster than you think . I was about your age when I started , moved into my “new “ house in ‘97 and started over after 7 years in the other house. My canopy is mature , and now I have my understory areas to plant the smaller stuff. Still sowing seeds at 71! Harry
    4 points
  14. I am 45 so with some luck and if I eat properly and exercise I will see my palms as grown trees! That is, if the cold, the spidermites, the heat and mainly my mistakes don't kill them first. I was interested in plants since my teens, dunno why and cannot remember how it started. My mom would kill anything green within days and my dad was never into growing anything. I received a cocos as a birthday gift from my dad when I became 15 or smth. I knew that as a traditional Greek man born in 1939 he didn't really approve of his son's hobby deep inside. He didn't understand a teenage boy growing plants, and that made his gift especially moving for me. Anyway, the cocos died within weeks. I am kinda proud deep inside that I was into plants before all those new "plant moms and dads" emerged during the pandemic thanks to the Instagram 🤪
    4 points
  15. Phoenix dactylifera in Big Bend National Park at a former hot springs resort closed in the 1940’s and also Dugout Wells area. I’m sure they’ve seen low teens off and on over the decades .
    4 points
  16. Today it caught my eye how difficult it is to photograph my Mauritia and how easy it is to photograph my Pinanga.
    4 points
  17. On tonight’s show we have some lovely exotics that are straight from a jungle nursery near you! First we see the fabulous packaging from such a fantastic grower of the finest gifts Mother Nature has to offer! Then from the great land of Madagascar we have a lovely little Dypsis just simply known as CLBS. Just looking a picture perfect for this evenings show. Next we have a beautiful little Areca tunku that looks to be a baby! From there we go all the way to the jungles of Panama with a gorgeous zamia nesophila, a lovely understory Zamia. Staying in the understory we have a armorphallus lacourii, followed by a nice anthurium talmancae that’s also perfect for the understory. And to finish of tonight’s show we a lovely Etlingera cornerii aka Siam Rose these would definitely make a wonderful gift for that certain someone in your life! So thank you all for watching tonight’s show and stay tuned for nexts weeks show!
    3 points
  18. I wanted to start a thread here to share photos and put a place for others to share as well. The more time I spend in Midland and Odessa for work the more I appreciate what people are growing here and have through many years even 2021. This climate is 8A but after going back through climate data about 90% of our winters are 7b/8a/8b, luckily leaning more heavily to 8a and 8b. However about 1/10 winters the area sees 7a or even 6b lows and each winter there will be about 3 days where highs don’t get above freezing. So it’s amazing to see what these have endured. Unless many were cut down after 2021 it seems like filifera survival was close to 100% here and these seem to be the most common palm here and then sabal, Trachycarpus and chamaerops.
    3 points
  19. Planted 2 years ago as a 7 gallon. Covered one night each winter but no heat has been applied. Survived 29 for 3 hours last year with two comforters around it. This year and going forward it will get some c9 incandescent bulbs and 12 foot posts around it for an enclosure.
    3 points
  20. Yes it is a different species. It didn’t have an official name for a while but now it’s lumped in with brahea calcarea I believe. It is a smaller palm than armata, has no thorns and in my opinion not as white as armata. brahea calcarea Is considered a slow growing palm but from what I’ve experienced super silver is not.
    3 points
  21. I've always been interested in plants and weather since I was about ten. However, that interest faded for a while, until a few years ago when I moved from the desert-like climate of the Middle East to the California Bay Area. The weather here is nice most of the year, and my interest in plants suddenly came back—stronger than ever. I fell in love with Kentia palms at first sight and started buying them, planting them all over my property. Some got burned by frost or too much sun, which led me to start planting hardier palm varieties as canopy to protect them! The story continues, but my plan from the beginning was to not get addicted and start collecting all kinds. It's hard, though. I spend most of my free time calling nurseries and people to ask about this or that variety! I've traveled over a thousand miles, driven semi-trucks (without a CDL), and taken risks just to get more and more palms! I can't pass up a good deal. I hope I'm not truly addicted, but it's hard to tell. The urge to buy plants in the spring and fall is very strong. I just turned 39 and have started to wonder if I'm patient enough to build a full canopy, like the legendary ones I see around here. I met some great people in the San Diego/LA area who patiently grew very slow-growing palm varieties from seed. All respect to everyone who has that strong love, care, and patience. A truly legendary focus around here! I think not only are the collectors I've met and purchased from dedicated to finding rare palms, but they are rare individuals themselves! Indeed.
    3 points
  22. Incredible color on this palm! I love mine, but it's nowhere near the size of yours
    3 points
  23. Washingtonia filifera in the ghost town of Shafter, Texas. About a month after seeing 10-12°F in December 2022.
    3 points
  24. Brahea armata . Chinati Hot Springs
    3 points
  25. Amazing! Mine is growing like a weed and the progression is exactly the same. Green, silver bottom, now silver fronds. I love the heel and interest mine provides. If I remember tomorrow, I’ll add a picture.
    3 points
  26. Foxtails survive in cooler climates but never look their best and the slightest of problems kills them. Here they are are so common that I am actually thinking about getting rid of mine for something more unique. Peachy
    3 points
  27. Wodyetia are a bit sensitive in their roots . It could take more time to recover or it may not recover at all. They can be very hardy or super sensitive , hit or miss . My bet is that it won’t recover , but that is because I have lost two of them for no apparent reason . One was growing like a weed for about ten years , got big , then just started fading . I tried everything to save it but finally had it cut down. Harry
    3 points
  28. That’s not a rat it’s cappabarra by the size of that thing omg! But that’s a rat on mission by the looks of him for sure!
    3 points
  29. A nice young burretokentia hapala, had the dancing lady orchid to dance with!
    3 points
  30. I’ll be 75 next June and immigrated from the Netherlands in 1956 at 5yrs old. Been into surfing all over the world, road racing bicycles on and off until 65 years old. Been a Palm society member since 1977, and now I’m on my second go round with my 13 years old garden in the hills of Vista/ Bonsall area of San Diego. I just finished spreading 36 cubic yards of mulch this week myself. I’m growing cycads, aloes, agaves, plumerias, protea, boojums, and of course palms. The world keeps on changing but I’m still the same cantankerous beast that I’ve always been 😎
    3 points
  31. Dypsis procera, beautiful smallish palm.
    3 points
  32. Chrysalidocarpus Lutescens Solitary Form and a dwarf Areca catechu happy with all these recent rain.
    3 points
  33. A few mapu to put in the collection. Five in total that will remain in there container in the collection in the greenhouse.
    2 points
  34. Harry, your story is exactly the inspiration I need! It proves this isn't a hobby, it's a lifelong journey. It reminds me of when @Darold PettyDarold gave me a tour of his yard—it was an absolute dream. I remember thinking that every morning spent drinking coffee under the palms he grew over the years must be like adding another 10 years to your life. That’s the real health benefit of this passion.
    2 points
  35. I can't answer "why?", but the likelihood of it being unique in maturity is exceptionally low. This all reminds me of my seed growing days 20 or more years ago.
    2 points
  36. A nice bit of red today around the garden with a Areca vestria red form, and a nice little dypsis lantzeana.
    2 points
  37. 2 points
  38. Yeah rats live in gangs. You can be rat free, then bang, 30 can just rock up from nowhere and cause trouble. I bait them. I don’t like doing it, but, I’d rather kill a few rats than let them breed and then need to kill 200 of them. When you live in rural properties they are never too far away. They love chicken coops too. So if you have chickens they won’t ever be too far away. They will burrow underground in a chicken coop. Sometimes you will get university trained rats that won’t take a bait and know how to take the bait from a trap. They teach others. If you have that problem you need to get the intelligent first. Simply put poisoned bait on the trap. I had super intelligent rats in my previous garden and if I had a gun I would have sat out in the garden at night with night vision goggles. Anyway the only thing that worked was using poison on the trap. Job done. Rattus rattus is best Rattus deadus.
    2 points
  39. One of my Washingtonia filibusta caught my eye
    2 points
  40. Here's a Corypha sp. at Kopsick loaded with fruits with lots of seeds to be collected later and a big removal to come as well!
    2 points
  41. Good Morning! Yesterday, it snowed, the whole day!!!! And it went to -6C at night, here is a pic of my european fan palm in the ground afer -6C:
    2 points
  42. Skippy the bush kangaroo in amongst the palms.
    2 points
  43. 2 points
  44. Allagoptera fruit is indeed delicious, i have to suspend them up if i want to eat them, otherwise the wildlife always gets there first synchronized Geonoma chococola awaensis 😮‍💨😮‍💨😮‍💨😮‍💨😮‍💨🤤
    2 points
  45. Pinanga coronata first spathes I've noticed
    2 points
  46. Hi there, boot came off of my longtime favorite - as mentioned before - seed grown C. leptocheilos... What a beautiful palm! A faint of purple is left, I am glad to witnessing it. Lars
    2 points
  47. Areca macrocalyx still powering on, before and after dropping a leaf sheath. Tim
    2 points
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