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What is the rarest palm you own?

Featured Replies

7 hours ago, DoomsDave said:

Looks like a Sabal.

You mean the variegated Sabal palmetto or the Brahea dulcis?  😆

Jon Sunder

Trithrinax schizophylla is doing well.  When I got it as a seedling, over 20 years ago, it was quite rare in So. Calif..

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Lemurophoenix halleuxii is probably the rarest palm I have and it’s also the most expensive I’ve ever bought. Purchased from Mark Daish in Babinda, North Queensland. He only had 3 left, 1 was already promised to another, and he wanted the remaining 2 for himself. I kept asking and increasing my price until he caved, or he played me from the start 🤣. Didn’t care either way, just had to have it. I think there’s only around 300 left in Madagascar and one doesn’t come across them often in cultivation (outside of Hawaii that is), although Queensland is blessed with a few. 

Tahina spectabilis appears slightly less rare with circa 700 individuals in habitat, but far more than that it seems in cultivation. Mine was a gift from Michael Green, which I’ll forever be grateful for.

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For those of you that frequent Facebook, I’ve set up a group called “Pommy palms”, where many of the palms I’ve seen since emigrating to Australia have been documented. If you wish to be a member, copy and paste “Pommy palms” into Facebook to view the page and click “Join group”.

I'm blessed to have more than a few rarities scattered  about, many of them doing okay.  But then I'd have to find them and post pics.  So, I'll just enjoy everyone elses.

What I  don't want to list due to the therapy I'd  need is how many rare things have met their demise under my care. 😕 I can make myself feel a little  bit better in that I think maybe only 25% or so passed due to a fault of mine... the rest is zone pushing.... or gophers 🤬

 

Zone 10a at best after 2007 AND 2013, on SW facing hill, 1 1/2 miles from coast in Oceanside, CA. 30-98 degrees, and 45-80deg. about 95% of the time.

"The great workman of nature is time."   ,  "Genius is nothing but a great aptitude for patience."

-George-Louis Leclerc de Buffon-

I do some experiments and learning in my garden with palms so you don't have to experience the pain! Look at my old threads to find various observations and tips!

Probably Lepidorrachis and this little Syagrus ruschiana for mine.

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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.

Foe me it’s my Dypsis bejofo, yes a real one!

Dave Hughson

Carlsbad, Ca

1 mile from ocean

Zone 10b

Palm freaks are good peeps!!!!!

21 hours ago, Jonathan Haycock said:

Lemurophoenix halleuxii is probably the rarest palm I have and it’s also the most expensive I’ve ever bought. Purchased from Mark Daish in Babinda, North Queensland. He only had 3 left, 1 was already promised to another, and he wanted the remaining 2 for himself. I kept asking and increasing my price until he caved, or he played me from the start 🤣. Didn’t care either way, just had to have it. I think there’s only around 300 left in Madagascar and one doesn’t come across them often in cultivation (outside of Hawaii that is), although Queensland is blessed with a few. 

Tahina spectabilis appears slightly less rare with circa 700 individuals in habitat, but far more than that it seems in cultivation. Mine was a gift from Michael Green, which I’ll forever be grateful for.

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Mike and Andy Green, hardcore palm mates. Nice gift for sure.

Tim

Tim

Hilo, Hawaii

Sabal loughidiana (from Montgomery Botanical Center source and purchased at CFPACS meeting /auction

and Sabal antilllensis found at South Florida Palm Society sale last spring from Natures tapestry

Also couple favorites this year and kinda rare are Calyptronoma plumeriana - Clay Porch @ Urban Oasis

and Allagoptera caudescens - looked for awhile and found @ Floribunda under Polyandrococos caudescens

 

I would really have to say my marojejya darinii, obtainable but they don’t won’t to part with them! 

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It looks like the big boys have come out to play . Nice selection from our members. 👍 Harry

5 hours ago, Harry’s Palms said:

It looks like the big boys have come out to play . Nice selection from our members. 👍 Harry

We don’t muck around down under! 🌱

No you do not , Richard. Harry🦘🌴

3 hours ago, Harry’s Palms said:

No you do not , Richard. Harry🦘🌴

That’s not what they tell me, Harry. Richard 🦅🌱

All rares grown from seed (that I can think of):

  • Jubaea Chilensis
  • Phoenix Theophrasti
  • Sabal Pumos
  • Sabal Tamaulipas
  • Sabal x. Brazoriensis
  • Sabal sp. Caribbean Giant
  • Chamaerops Humilis (rarer around here at least)
  • Serenoa Repens Silver version

Favorite palms: Pindo/Jubaea/Mule variants, Large Sabals Climate: High humidity subtropical Lowest seen: 16F throughout the day Soil type: Heavy red southeastern clay

In my own case, this doubles as a teaser to the Fall garden update - Carpentaria acuminata X Veitchia arecina. 

20250727_000000_Carpentaria_X_Veitchia.jpg.f2958fbaaaec9f26ee80004c986c3aa0.jpg

Lakeland, FLUSDA Zone 2023: 10a  2012: 9b  1990: 9a | Record Low: 20F/-6.67C (Jan. 1985, Dec.1962)

On 8/28/2025 at 7:12 AM, iDesign said:

Seeing all the amazing palms here, I realize I should have posted just my VERY rarest, with photo.

So I’ll call it my “mealy bug” - because it’s rare to find one this size in CA, and it was also my most expensive palm…

IMG_3569.thumb.jpeg.4f9853f2b8b96bef88d3325968487053.jpeg

It's stunning.

My current collection is around 400 palms, and most would be considered "rare" by a non-enthusiast.  But the majority of them are ones familiar to many (most?) PTers.  Some of the rare ones are Patrick hybrids like BxJ, JxB, and BxLytoWed.  The most unusual are probably a Sabal "Lisa" and an Elaeis Guineensis "Whole Leaf."  They are probably only known to palm wackos like all of us here...  :yay:

While not my rarest, Hemithrinax ekmaniana has proven itself a winner for the Arizona desert. Takes our full sun, extreme heat to 120F, and winter chills into the upper 20'sF without a scratch. One of my favorite palms due to it's compact nature, and relatively fast growth speed. (compared to most Coccothrinax species) I have already grown a few batches from seed to help preserve this rare palm from extinction.

 

aztropic 

Mesa, Arizona 

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Mesa, Arizona

 

Temps between 29F and 115F each year

On 8/27/2025 at 8:33 PM, quaman58 said:

Beautiful specimens all! I’ve always felt that there was the “hard to get” palms, and then the truly rare ones based on their limited range and other factors. For me, the Hawaiian Pritchardia is a fixation. Knowing there’s only a handful of P. viscosa or remota in habitat, makes me cherish the ones I’m fortunate enough to be growing. 

Thought I should share a couple pics. First is a 10 yo P. viscosa; next was purchased as P. aylmer-robinsonii, later rolled into “remota” by Don Hodel. 

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Bret

 

Coastal canyon area of San Diego

 

"In the shadow of the Cross"

My rarest palm tree would prob be a tie between my Cyrtostachys renda Variegated and Chrysalidocarpus 'Votovavy Blue'

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Lots of nice palms here. Thanks to those responding and I look forward to more. 
 

Taking out the barely hanging on palms which fit better in the finicky palms topic

 

and the seedlings not yet proven to survive, I narrowed it down to two palms.

First Calyotrocalyx doxanthus from Floribunda years ago.

IMG_1586.thumb.jpeg.0e5e11854fadbfb1f17b798b3540c1a4.jpeg
 

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And Pinanga aristata, a little more fussy and never holding many leaves, but dear to my heart after seeing many in Borneo on IPS travel.
 

Also from Floribunda. 
 

IMG_1583.thumb.jpeg.7b65f2a787556e73c86cbbd88e563bbb.jpeg
 

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Below is one of many photos I took in Borneo on epic IPS travel showing Pinanga aristata really happy. 

Still trying for that, but glad no leeches in Puerto Rico. 

image.jpeg.d5f9cbdf4cd6e2b174d04b1852811325.jpeg
 

For those who have insomnia and/or want to see more photos of this palm in habitat go here:

 

Cindy Adair

Oh I forgot one which probably won’t survive but seems pretty unique. 
 

I have two Sommieria leucophylla in the ground, slow but OK from RPS seeds years ago. Here’s the larger of the two:

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Then I was gifted some seeds from HI a couple of years ago which germinated and are growing well but one has yellow to almost white leaves. 
 

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Maybe it will have enough chlorophyll to survive, but if not you can at least see it here among its very deep green siblings. 

Cindy Adair

14 minutes ago, Cindy Adair said:

Ah, me olvidé de uno que probablemente no sobreviva, pero parece bastante único. 
 

Tengo dos Sommieria leucophylla en la tierra, crecen lentamente pero bien, gracias a las semillas de RPS de hace años. Aquí está la más grande:

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Luego, hace un par de años, me regalaron algunas semillas de HI que germinaron y están creciendo bien, pero una tiene hojas amarillas o casi blancas. 
 

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Quizás tenga suficiente clorofila para sobrevivir, pero si no, al menos podrás verla aquí entre sus hermanos de color verde muy profundo. 

Your private collection of palm trees is very beautiful.

Screenshot_20240422_175305_Microsoft365(Office).jpg.2d807628875283f040af1dbd643ddcaf.jpg

 

Thank you Hu Palmeras!

Cindy Adair

While I don’t really have anything super “rare”, I do have a bunch of coveted palms listed below I think many might like to have in the garden. 
 

One palm that is probably my favorite and most unique was purchased as Dypsis Heteromorpha but it surely seems like a hybrid of some type. I’ve posted this palm many times so people are probably tired of seeing it but it never gets old to me and is continuing to grow at a rapid rate. Planted out as a small 5G stick in Feb 2021 if you can believe it. Crazy…..

-Dypsis Mananjarensis (Mealy Bug)

-Dypsis Dark Mealy 

-Dypsis Black Stem 

-Dypsis Ampasindavae 

-Dypsis Mayotte

-Dypsis Marojejyi (MadFox) 

-Kentiopsis Piersoniorum 

-Licuala Ramsayi

IMG_5297.thumb.jpeg.26ecde1de69f5b14d62476ee980cac8a.jpeg
 

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On 8/27/2025 at 11:12 PM, iDesign said:

Seeing all the amazing palms here, I realize I should have posted just my VERY rarest, with photo.

So I’ll call it my “mealy bug” - because it’s rare to find one this size in CA, and it was also my most expensive palm…

IMG_3569.thumb.jpeg.4f9853f2b8b96bef88d3325968487053.jpeg

mealy bug, sounds kind of funny 🤭

Official Climate Update: Subtropical Microclimate (Cfa) | 36-year mean: 11.76°C (incl. -0.3K offset) | ~2,100+ annual sunshine hours Bresser solar-vent. Station @ 1.70m since 2019 (Stachen, CH)

Compared to the climate and latitude we find ourselves in, everything is exotic and rare, and some of it will certainly be best cared for indoors.
The Carludovica palmata is certainly one of the rarest exotic plants here in our small collection...
But we won't let that get us down and will try to plant everything we can, no matter how big the challenge.
Like Asterix and Obelix, we won't let the Romans drive us away or dissuade us from our plans... 🤣

 

Official Climate Update: Subtropical Microclimate (Cfa) | 36-year mean: 11.76°C (incl. -0.3K offset) | ~2,100+ annual sunshine hours Bresser solar-vent. Station @ 1.70m since 2019 (Stachen, CH)

17 hours ago, Cindy Adair said:

Lots of nice palms here. Thanks to those responding and I look forward to more. 
 

Taking out the barely hanging on palms which fit better in the finicky palms topic

 

and the seedlings not yet proven to survive, I narrowed it down to two palms.

First Calyotrocalyx doxanthus from Floribunda years ago.

IMG_1586.thumb.jpeg.0e5e11854fadbfb1f17b798b3540c1a4.jpeg
 

IMG_1587.thumb.jpeg.f14742d5dffbd386659de66bba9c6171.jpeg

And Pinanga aristata, a little more fussy and never holding many leaves, but dear to my heart after seeing many in Borneo on IPS travel.
 

Also from Floribunda. 
 

IMG_1583.thumb.jpeg.7b65f2a787556e73c86cbbd88e563bbb.jpeg
 

IMG_1582.thumb.jpeg.81eeffea5b587bfa196d1faca16f4599.jpeg

IMG_1584.thumb.jpeg.c7820231b70ec9288ee40148a216517e.jpeg

Below is one of many photos I took in Borneo on epic IPS travel showing Pinanga aristata really happy. 

Still trying for that, but glad no leeches in Puerto Rico. 

image.jpeg.d5f9cbdf4cd6e2b174d04b1852811325.jpeg
 

For those who have insomnia and/or want to see more photos of this palm in habitat go here:

 

Oh wow and double wow that doxanthus omg! Iam glad I have two of them and they both survived my winter. 

12 hours ago, Mazat said:

Compared to the climate and latitude we find ourselves in, everything is exotic and rare, and some of it will certainly be best cared for indoors.
The Carludovica palmata is certainly one of the rarest exotic plants here in our small collection...
But we won't let that get us down and will try to plant everything we can, no matter how big the challenge.
Like Asterix and Obelix, we won't let the Romans drive us away or dissuade us from our plans... 🤣

 

This. 

 

I think once you get away from the coast, all palms are pretty rare in Mississippi except the native Sabals. But everything I've got has something about it that makes it cool. 

I feel like a lot of my palms I have are basic since I’m trying to grow outside the tropics, but for North Carolina anything that isnt Sabal minor, palmetto, windmill, butia or med fan palm are considered “rare”

Youll come across a date palm, washy or Chinese fan palm in the NC beaches once in a while. But never have I see lady palm in North Carolina, which I have success with as a die back perennial palm. A close second would be the queen palms I have zone pushed. 

IMG_0613.thumb.jpeg.a98034ddf3617880a854c9b1da4d1ff1.jpeg

 

Zone 8a/8b Greenville, NC 

Zone 9a/9b Bluffton, SC

On 8/31/2025 at 9:18 AM, aztropic said:

While not my rarest, Hemithrinax ekmaniana has proven itself a winner for the Arizona desert. Takes our full sun, extreme heat to 120F, and winter chills into the upper 20'sF without a scratch. One of my favorite palms due to it's compact nature, and relatively fast growth speed. (compared to most Coccothrinax species) I have already grown a few batches from seed to help preserve this rare palm from extinction.

 

aztropic 

Mesa, Arizona 

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Wow, nice job and awesome to have such a rare palm.  We don't have too many choices out here.  

Carl

Vista, CA

Hi there,

 

for me without doubt...

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...my two Neoveitchia Brunnea, really taking their time but pushing constantly new leaves. (seed grown)

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Last survivor of originally four I was able to get sprouted - Hydriastele Ramsayi. Fingers crossed.

 

Lars

 

On 9/2/2025 at 9:12 PM, NC_Palms said:

I feel like a lot of my palms I have are basic since I’m trying to grow outside the tropics, but for North Carolina anything that isnt Sabal minor, palmetto, windmill, butia or med fan palm are considered “rare”

Youll come across a date palm, washy or Chinese fan palm in the NC beaches once in a while. But never have I see lady palm in North Carolina, which I have success with as a die back perennial palm. A close second would be the queen palms I have zone pushed. 

IMG_0613.thumb.jpeg.a98034ddf3617880a854c9b1da4d1ff1.jpeg

 

Hell yeah. Don't even get me started on the Pygmy Date Massacre in Atlantic Beach every January. 

Northwest Florida - USDA Zone 9A

It isn’t really rare, but for some reason Ceroxylon parvifrons is not the one you typically see around, even in botanical gardens. It’s usually vogelianum and of course quindiuense. Just a baby still and Darold has the best one in NoCal by far.

 

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SF, CA

USDA zone 10a / Sunset zone 17

Summer avg. high 67°F / 20°C (SF record high 106°F / 41°C)

Winter avg. low 43°F / 7°C (SF record low 27°F / -3°C)

480’ / 146m elevation, 2.8 miles / 4.5km from ocean

The Ceroxylon quindiuensis palm is the tallest palm tree in the world. It grows on the western branch of the Andes at high altitudes and is a sister tree to the Chilean Juania australis palm. Various studies show that the trunk of the Juania australis is hollow inside. (or partially hollow bamboo type)

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5 hours ago, Foggy Paul said:

It isn’t really rare, but for some reason Ceroxylon parvifrons is not the one you typically see around, even in botanical gardens. It’s usually vogelianum and of course quindiuense. Just a baby still and Darold has the best one in NoCal by far.

 

IMG_1982.jpeg

Definitely rare in cultivation Paul, nice one! 

All mine from seed turned out to be vogelianum, so I'm trying again this year, fingers crossed.

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.

Not my palms (no personal space to grow any except a "bonsaied" Serenoa repens, but at Work:

  • Voanioala gerardii, from Scott Cohen.
  • Sabal lougheediana, from Montgomery Botanical Center via South Florida Palm Society.
3 hours ago, Jonathan said:

Definitely rare in cultivation Paul, nice one! 

All mine from seed turned out to be vogelianum, so I'm trying again this year, fingers crossed.

I forgot the second half. Purchased from Flora Grubb (hello @JasonD ) maybe three years ago. I put a deposit on it while they were still growing it to “sellable” size in SoCal, waited almost a year, and then convinced them to just sell it to me anyway (and at a discount since it was so small).  I was pretty sure it would grow faster here than there. Hopefully it turns out to be the real thing!

SF, CA

USDA zone 10a / Sunset zone 17

Summer avg. high 67°F / 20°C (SF record high 106°F / 41°C)

Winter avg. low 43°F / 7°C (SF record low 27°F / -3°C)

480’ / 146m elevation, 2.8 miles / 4.5km from ocean

On 8/30/2025 at 6:08 PM, kinzyjr said:

In my own case, this doubles as a teaser to the Fall garden update - Carpentaria acuminata X Veitchia arecina. 

20250727_000000_Carpentaria_X_Veitchia.jpg.f2958fbaaaec9f26ee80004c986c3aa0.jpg

Pretty cool, I didn't know this hybrid existed!  🙂

Jon Sunder

3 hours ago, Fusca said:

Pretty cool, I didn't know this hybrid existed!  🙂

I had assumed it was possible, but hadn't seen one until it showed up at a CFPACS auction in Spring 2025.  @PalmBossTampa outbid me for it, but decided to relinquish it at the Summer 2025 Meeting.

Lakeland, FLUSDA Zone 2023: 10a  2012: 9b  1990: 9a | Record Low: 20F/-6.67C (Jan. 1985, Dec.1962)

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