Jump to content
FIRST IPS “WEEKEND BIENNIAL” EVENT REGISTRATION NOW OPEN ×
  • 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

Can anyone ID what a Washingtonia Fayetteville is?


Recommended Posts

Posted

And is it an actual zone 7b palm?

Screenshot_20241203-101017.png

  • Like 1
Posted

You should do a search on here, you will see pics of the palm and i think a whole topic related to that tree.  

Posted

That's my listing!

  • Like 1

An Autistic boy who has an obsession with tropical plants.

Posted

It is a seed/plant from a hybrid washingtonia located in Fayetteville NC.  As mentioned, there is a topic in the cold hardy section of Palmtalk. 

I think collecting seeds now at the washie at Taco Bell in Roswell or in Carlsbad would accomplish the same goal.  You will have true leaves before fall if planted in place next  spring.  They are that fast. 

  • Like 1
  • Upvote 1
Posted
37 minutes ago, jwitt said:

It is a seed/plant from a hybrid washingtonia located in Fayetteville NC.  As mentioned, there is a topic in the cold hardy section of Palmtalk. 

I think collecting seeds now at the washie at Taco Bell in Roswell or in Carlsbad would accomplish the same goal.  You will have true leaves before fall if planted in place next  spring.  They are that fast. 

I think that Washie at Taco Bell is completely dead.

  • Like 1
Posted

 

An Autistic boy who has an obsession with tropical plants.

Posted

I'm experimenting with several of these on Vancouver Island zone 8a/b.

 

Wash21.jpg.bf5274b5ea84553f184c73d518388b2a.jpgWash22.jpg.10e4bd57d324bdee7286c5ae5e9e68d4.jpgWash25.jpg.da5d455021e59b43796cb2c97169cd99.jpg

  • Like 6
Posted
1 hour ago, Las Palmas Norte said:

I'm experimenting with several of these on Vancouver Island zone 8a/b.

 

Wash21.jpg.bf5274b5ea84553f184c73d518388b2a.jpgWash22.jpg.10e4bd57d324bdee7286c5ae5e9e68d4.jpgWash25.jpg.da5d455021e59b43796cb2c97169cd99.jpg

Beautiful palm, I bought 2 saplings, how long to that size?

Posted
1 hour ago, Las Palmas Norte said:

I'm experimenting with several of these on Vancouver Island zone 8a/b.

 

Wash21.jpg.bf5274b5ea84553f184c73d518388b2a.jpgWash22.jpg.10e4bd57d324bdee7286c5ae5e9e68d4.jpgWash25.jpg.da5d455021e59b43796cb2c97169cd99.jpg

Very beautiful, Ive noticed these palms from bragg blvd have such a nice green color and the growing pattern is pretty nice as well. Not sure if thats just coincidence of timing and soil nutrients available. 🤠

Posted
3 hours ago, EJPalm05 said:

That's my listing!

Why not include "NC" in the title - there's dozens of towns named Fayetteville.  And saying it's zone 7 hardy can be misleading since the parent palm is in zone 8.  Maybe the parent palm survived a freakish zone 7 type low temperature once but it might not survive that temperature multiple times like it would in zone 7.  Maybe it would, but hard to say for sure.  It would be safer to say that the parent palm survived x° temperature. 

  • Like 1

Jon Sunder

Posted
3 hours ago, Las Palmas Norte said:

I'm experimenting with several of these on Vancouver Island zone 8a/b.

 

Wash21.jpg.bf5274b5ea84553f184c73d518388b2a.jpgWash22.jpg.10e4bd57d324bdee7286c5ae5e9e68d4.jpgWash25.jpg.da5d455021e59b43796cb2c97169cd99.jpg

I like the look of yours! Maybe a good cross for your climate.  I like the fattening of the leaf bases and trunk. 

  • Upvote 1
Posted
4 hours ago, gdumea said:

Beautiful palm, I bought 2 saplings, how long to that size?

These are 30" tall from seed 3 growing seasons ago.

  • Like 1
Posted

Keep in mind that collecting seed from an F1 cross will not necessarily result in plants with the same characteristics as the parent...the next generation could potentially throw back to either parent species type. Or not. 

  • Like 1
  • Upvote 1

South Arm, Tasmania, Australia - 42° South

Mild oceanic climate, with coastal exposure.

 

Summer: 12°C (53°F) average min, to 21°C (70°F) average daily max. Up to 40°C (104°F max) rarely.

 

Winter: 6°C (43°F) average min, to 13°C (55°F) average daily max. Down to 0°C (32°F) occasionally, some light frost.

Posted

image.png.d2890c77e3940b115c7fdc225bc0edc7.png

Based on this, 1/2 F2 seedlings resemble the F1 parent.

  • Like 1

Jon Sunder

Posted
On 12/3/2024 at 9:30 AM, EJPalm05 said:

That's my listing!

Looks like you mist have sold out!

Posted
On 12/3/2024 at 11:15 AM, Las Palmas Norte said:

I'm experimenting with several of these on Vancouver Island zone 8a/b.

Las Palmas Norte - what is the soil situation amd drainage for these beautiful Washies? 

Posted
6 hours ago, tarnado said:

Las Palmas Norte - what is the soil situation amd drainage for these beautiful Washies? 

This one (in above photos) is planted in course gravelly type medium, & top dressed with small aggregate, so reasonably good drainage. I can only assume this was brought in as part of the landscaping prior to our ownership. Once the roots reach deep enough they'll contact the backfill that was used during the site prep for the build. 

Another is in a raised planting area and a third is growing in the muck (as I call it).

  • Like 1
Posted
21 hours ago, Fusca said:

image.png.d2890c77e3940b115c7fdc225bc0edc7.png

Based on this, 1/2 F2 seedlings resemble the F1 parent.

What if momma f1 is a homophradite? Serious, true question. 

Posted
2 hours ago, jwitt said:

What if momma f1 is a homophradite? Serious, true question. 

Washingtonia are monecious - I'm not sure if any palms are hermaphrodites.  It does make the chance of creating a natural hybrid less I imagine.  But I don't think it changes the probabilities of the F2 characteristics.

Jon Sunder

Posted

My understanding was washingtonia are monecious(meaning both sexes)and they can self pollinate.  The definition of monecious can mean hermaphrodite. 

So if a f1 washingtonia self pollinated(momma pollinated itself) without another bloomer within a hundred miles, would the offspring(f2) stay mostly true to the mother plant? Screenshot_20241205-161825.thumb.png.7103f1d74118dd7e275fb35e78a3027c.png

Posted
2 hours ago, jwitt said:

So if a f1 washingtonia self pollinated (momma pollinated itself) without another bloomer within a hundred miles, would the offspring(f2) stay mostly true to the mother plant? 

From what I understand in your scenario 50% of the F2 seedlings would resemble the parent F1 (filibusta), 25% would resemble filifera and 25% would resemble robusta.  Because of the ease of hybridization with Washingtonia there aren't many "pure" robusta or filifera around here (or "pure" F1 hybrids).  Maybe it's different in your neck of the woods.

  • Like 1

Jon Sunder

Posted
14 minutes ago, Fusca said:

From what I understand in your scenario 50% of the F2 seedlings would resemble the parent F1 (filibusta), 25% would resemble filifera and 25% would resemble robusta.  Because of the ease of hybridization with Washingtonia there aren't many "pure" robusta or filifera around here (or "pure" F1 hybrids).  Maybe it's different in your neck of the woods.

Yeah I was actually talking about a specific palm. This palm bloomed, set seed(self pollinated) with no other palms for miles upon miles.  Absolutely no cross pollination with another palm.  

Would the offspring still follow the 50/25/25 or more an almost clone of the  f1 parent? Something I have wondered. 

Blooming washingtonia are exceptionally rare in my locale. Blooming robusta do not exist. 

 

  • Like 1
Posted
6 minutes ago, jwitt said:

Would the offspring still follow the 50/25/25 or more an almost clone of the  f1 parent?

I don't think it works quite like that - the 25/50/25 ratios work for specific genes in an F2 cross. But then multiply those probabilities across all the genes that are guiding the plants' growth, and it becomes much more interesting! Also, this tree itself might not even be an F1!

  • Like 1
  • Upvote 1
Posted
2 minutes ago, tarnado said:

I don't think it works quite like that - the 25/50/25 ratios work for specific genes in an F2 cross. But then multiply those probabilities across all the genes that are guiding the plants' growth, and it becomes much more interesting! Also, this tree itself might not even be an F1!

Thank you and @Fusca..

So a box of chocolates sort of thingy.  I am simple minded, sorry. 

Posted
10 minutes ago, tarnado said:

Also, this tree itself might not even be an F1!

Exactly, I was just about to make that point.  @jwitt, who's to say that the palm you're referring to isn't an F5 or F6?  But I would think that if the hybrid palm is filifera dominant the majority of seedlings should also be filifera dominant.

  • Like 1

Jon Sunder

Posted
Just now, Fusca said:

Exactly, I was just about to make that point.  @jwitt, who's to say that the palm you're referring to isn't an F5 or F6?  But I would think that if the hybrid palm is filifera dominant the majority of seedlings should also be filifera dominant.

Got ya! That is kind of what I have seen with 2 separate examples.  I truly could be on f15 for all I know.  Thank you!

Posted
1 hour ago, jwitt said:

Got ya! That is kind of what I have seen with 2 separate examples.  I truly could be on f15 for all I know.  Thank you!

There is no F15, hybrids stop at F7. If a hybrid is stable at F7 it is considered true beeding.

  • Like 1
Posted
14 hours ago, Las Palmas Norte said:

third is growing in the muck (as I call it).

Cool - and how does the growth of these differ?

Posted
8 hours ago, tarnado said:

Cool - and how does the growth of these differ?

It's too early in the game to know.

  • Like 1

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...