Jump to content
  • WELCOME GUEST

    It looks as if you are viewing PalmTalk as an unregistered Guest.

    Please consider registering so as to take better advantage of our vast knowledge base and friendly community.  By registering you will gain access to many features - among them are our powerful Search feature, the ability to Private Message other Users, and be able to post and/or answer questions from all over the world. It is completely free, no “catches,” and you will have complete control over how you wish to use this site.

    PalmTalk is sponsored by the International Palm Society. - an organization dedicated to learning everything about and enjoying palm trees (and their companion plants) while conserving endangered palm species and habitat worldwide. Please take the time to know us all better and register.

    guest Renda04.jpg

Here we go again - creating Pepe'ekeo Palm Paradise


Recommended Posts

Posted

Incredible Jason!

  • Like 1
Posted
6 hours ago, Hilo Jason said:

IMG_4758.thumb.jpeg.b224b5a7d70c2007b6afbff2f28195fa.jpeg

The Tahinia planting is a great tribute to a your former family companiion Gracie.  Everything looks spectacular Jason.  I was curious which Ravenea this is in the center on the slope?  It reminds me of my Ravenea julietiaes, but I also have another slower growing one that has this appearance which does not hold as many leaves (fronds) here as the R julietiaes do.

33.0782 North -117.305 West  at 72 feet elevation

Posted
1 hour ago, Tracy said:

The Tahinia planting is a great tribute to a your former family companiion Gracie.  Everything looks spectacular Jason.  I was curious which Ravenea this is in the center on the slope?  It reminds me of my Ravenea julietiaes, but I also have another slower growing one that has this appearance which does not hold as many leaves (fronds) here as the R julietiaes do.

Hi Tracy!  Yes that is Ravenea Julietiaes, or at least purchased as that from Floribunda. A slow grower here (not any faster than California from my experience there as well) but always looks good. Nice to have a palm that is a slower grower here as most are too fast!  Here’s a zoomed in photo of it from the opposite angle:

IMG_4729.thumb.jpeg.6aba1171d719386709a57488c5249666.jpeg

  • Like 8
Posted

So nice to start the new year with some serious EYE CANDY.  🍬🍬🍬

And unlike my holiday indulgences, no diet resolution required. 📝

Your photos motivate me to restart my own garden efforts (once it dries out a bit after recent rainstorms). Thanks for the mega dose of inspiration! 🌴

  • Like 2

Stacey Wright  |  Graphic Designer

Posted

Beautifull garden and collection, indeed eye candy 😍

  • Like 2
Posted

man jason ... i cant believe how much your garden has advanced in a couple of years.  seems like just yesterday we were reading about the start of this project.  

btw i was wondering if you have any decipiens planted?  your thread is so long now that i can't possibly remember.  you probably have a couple of the blue decipiens (aka betafaka) from jeff marcus.  regardless,  your garden is looking phenomenal.  

cheers

tin

  • Like 1

My Santa Clarita Oasis

"delectare et movere"

Posted
5 hours ago, tinman10101 said:

man jason ... i cant believe how much your garden has advanced in a couple of years.  seems like just yesterday we were reading about the start of this project.  

btw i was wondering if you have any decipiens planted?  your thread is so long now that i can't possibly remember.  you probably have a couple of the blue decipiens (aka betafaka) from jeff marcus.  regardless,  your garden is looking phenomenal.  

cheers

tin

Hey Tin, thank you for the compliments!  

I do not have any true Decipiens in the garden.  I had one in a 10 gallon pot but it died before I found a home for it in the ground.  As you mentioned, I do have the Blue Decipiens and I also have a Decipiens hybrid.  In my opinion that is one big Chrysalidocarpus / Dypsis that looks better in a drier climate like Southern California.  I'm not sure I've seen many here in Hawaii that impress me when I see them. 

  • Like 1
Posted
27 minutes ago, Hilo Jason said:

Hey Tin, thank you for the compliments!  

I do not have any true Decipiens in the garden.  I had one in a 10 gallon pot but it died before I found a home for it in the ground.  As you mentioned, I do have the Blue Decipiens and I also have a Decipiens hybrid.  In my opinion that is one big Chrysalidocarpus / Dypsis that looks better in a drier climate like Southern California.  I'm not sure I've seen many here in Hawaii that impress me when I see them. 

Thanks for the reply Jason. Yeah I was thinking they would grow similar to Bo's old garden where he had a huge plantings of decipiens and of course I was astonished that they would grow in just damp climates. 

Regardless, if we are taking score, that would be one for us for socal and 500+ for you in Hilo. LoL. 

Could you post pics of your blue decipiens when it's convenient. I love seeing that species. 

Cheers

My Santa Clarita Oasis

"delectare et movere"

Posted
18 hours ago, tinman10101 said:

Thanks for the reply Jason. Yeah I was thinking they would grow similar to Bo's old garden where he had a huge plantings of decipiens and of course I was astonished that they would grow in just damp climates. 

Regardless, if we are taking score, that would be one for us for socal and 500+ for you in Hilo. LoL. 

Could you post pics of your blue decipiens when it's convenient. I love seeing that species. 

Cheers

You guys get a few more points in California for Rhopalostylis, Ceroxylon, Hesyscepe, etc.  hah! 
 

Here’s my Blue Decipiens. Still a ways off from trunking when they seem to speed up. I’m guessing this one is 8-9 feet tall from ground to tip of newest leaf. 
 

IMG_4793.thumb.jpeg.86b6e1367a4f68a8ead1f71594b77f45.jpeg
 

IMG_4792.thumb.jpeg.6d024d32b57a93d0003fffdc792f97fd.jpeg

  • Like 9
Posted
21 hours ago, Hilo Jason said:

You guys get a few more points in California for Rhopalostylis, Ceroxylon, Hesyscepe, etc.  hah! 
 

Here’s my Blue Decipiens. Still a ways off from trunking when they seem to speed up. I’m guessing this one is 8-9 feet tall from ground to tip of newest leaf. 
 

IMG_4793.thumb.jpeg.86b6e1367a4f68a8ead1f71594b77f45.jpeg
 

IMG_4792.thumb.jpeg.6d024d32b57a93d0003fffdc792f97fd.jpeg

Is this the one nicknamed “butt ugly betafaka”? Looks like it to me, but I’m not sure.

And if so, any guess on the amount of sun it likes, with the understanding it would be CA sun? Mine is currently in a pot in shade, but I’m toying with the idea of planting it in full sun (after transitioning it for a while). I seem to recall that blue palms often handle the sun well. Any thoughts on sun for that one? Yours is looking awesome!

  • Like 1

Stacey Wright  |  Graphic Designer

Posted
On 1/3/2026 at 8:44 PM, Hilo Jason said:

Nice to have a palm that is a slower grower here as most are too fast!

Rub it on Jason! Some of us wonder if we will live long enough to see any trunks in the garden 😅

  • Like 3

Zone 9b: if you love it, cover it.

Posted
15 hours ago, iDesign said:

Is this the one nicknamed “butt ugly betafaka”? Looks like it to me, but I’m not sure.

And if so, any guess on the amount of sun it likes, with the understanding it would be CA sun? Mine is currently in a pot in shade, but I’m toying with the idea of planting it in full sun (after transitioning it for a while). I seem to recall that blue palms often handle the sun well. Any thoughts on sun for that one? Yours is looking awesome!

Yeah, that’s the one. I would say full sun. It has thick leaflets that can handle the sun well. 

Posted

And I thought I had a garden, absolutely beautiful stuff, I will say it again lucky Hawaii growers! 

  • Like 2

Create an account or sign in to comment

You need to be a member in order to leave a comment

Create an account

Sign up for a new account in our community. It's easy!

Register a new account

Sign in

Already have an account? Sign in here.

Sign In Now



  • Recently Browsing

    • No registered users viewing this page.
×
×
  • Create New...