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Showing content with the highest reputation on 05/15/2026 in Posts
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I had read in the past that it may occur, but I knew it only as theory. Now I am experiencing it live in my garden: a Phoenix dactylifera up to now male, bearing this year also female flowers! Yes it is true. Only presignal was that it was belated in opening the spathes. Pretty much belated almost by three weeks. At first I thought it was caused by the weather but now I am starting thinking of hormonic causes because of the female flowers. Exciting!5 points
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This was the last red leaf from earlier this year . I grew this from a little 4” pot I brought home from Maui. It is now flowering regularly with about 5-6’ below the crown shaft. Since it broke through the canopy , the red leaf lasts about 3 days , that’s all. The fronds on these are very large . Harry You can see a bit of burn , but no where near as bad as a couple of years ago . It now gets at least twice as much water as before. This shows the size of the fronds in relation to the crown and trunk.4 points
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@SCVpalmenthusiast I would give it shade where you are for sure . At least for a few years. Lots of water in the warmer months . Mine grew into the sun from deep shade and burned every summer until I figured out that it wanted more water. I now water every other day , spring through fall , and it helps a lot. Congratulations on your new palm. Harry4 points
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In addition to some mentioned above I'm growing Ravenea glauca, Chrysalidocarpus ambrositae, onilahensis and baronii, Geonoma undata and Syagrus weddelliana. Howea belmoreana is nice and would take forever to get large. And maybe Chamaerops humilis. I'm also on a small lot with some overhead wires.4 points
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A few small ones that grow well for me in SF: Basselinia eriostachys/glabrata Lanonia magalonii/calciphila/dasyantha Licuala fordiana Ravenea hildebrandtii Pritchardia minor Hedyscepe All sorts of Chamaedoreas, benziei is particularly nice as a solitary plant imo.4 points
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My second order this season from Floribunda arrived this afternoon and all are new trials for me. They all are BIG in their respective containers as is usual from this excellent vender. Pritchardia aylmer-robinsonii Chamaedorea arenbergiana Chrysalidocarpus ‘Baby Red Stems’ Pinanga ‘Maroon Crown Shaft’ Anyone with personal experience with any of these, please comment.3 points
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I know folks who grow bamboo that cut the bottom out of large containers to contain the “runners” . I was told that the barrier should be a minimum of 18” deep. If you have a pipe supply company near you , you can get remnant cuts of PVC pipe in very large diameters and use that. The problem is the larger the pipe , the bigger the hole you have to dig. On the other hand , I have two Rhapis palms that have been in the ground for over 20 years and I just divide them when they send out runners . I let the runner grow for a while and then divide and pot. They make great gifts or potted plants for around the outside of the house. This is one that is controlled by division , been there over 20 years. Harry3 points
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They absolutely can survive planted in the ground, in Phoenix, if sited correctly. (Think microclimate) Here's one I had grown from seed that was in that spot for several years. Also had a bottle palm in the ground for about 20 years before our brutal summer of 2020 took out both of them...🤷♂️ aztropic Mesa, Arizona2 points
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I might move them to a more " bright light, but out of direct sun " kind of spot..2 points
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My Ravenala has made it! It survived a 9b winter despite my upreparedness. It looks cr@p to the point that I'm wondering whether it's worth it, but it's pushing a new leaf (not clear in the photo yet). I am curious to see how many leaves it can push until November. I covered it on cold nights with fleece but a single layer. I added two containers with hot water inside around the base. Lowest temperature was 29F. Next winter I'll be better prepared with incandescent lights around it like a curtain. I actually did buy some but the shop sent me LED instead.2 points
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Getting a few common varieties of palms in today’s planting expedition. No soil amendment, just the holes dug and the lot heeled in with a good watering in! lytocarum weddlianum hypohorbe indica green Oraniopsis appendiculata vietcha joannis hypohorbe indica red diploglottis Australis not a bad little haul today’s planting fun! dypsis rivularis Gausia maya Areca triandra Rhopalostylis baueri bentnickia condapanna Chambeyronia pyriformis Pinanga coronata Chambeyronia macrocarpa livistona rotundifolia dypsis baroni black petiole Livistona Australis2 points
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She’s staying in a pot for a long time before I plant this little princess of a palm, but I will certainly give it a go! Richard2 points
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Yes, they both appear to be rostrata. Not all Yucca rostrata are silver, it’s just the preferred cultivar.2 points
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Explanation is easy. Like Richard had written right above, it is the combination of cold and wet that does Phoenix dactylifera in. Real date palm may be even cold hardier than CIDP but in an arid climate. High air moisture does not suit it well. And iberica is just another dactylifera. Many growers call deliberately Iberica common dactylifera specimens growing and fruiting in Spain! There is not a separate iberica sp, we can find genetical traces of a wild sp in some Spanish date palms but this does not mean that this wild sp still exists. Similar situation with the Neanderthal genes in the DNA of European population. Another grower in north-western France saw his iberica declining slowly. Perhaps an F1 hybrid of dactylifera with theophrasti could offer you the opportunity to grow a dactylifera without such problems.2 points
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these hybrids can be variable, your alberto seems to follow the beastly upright jubaea appearance more than the butia. There is a quite a difference between the BxJ and the JxB from what Ive seen. Yours doesnt have the heavily recurved leaves of the butia mother, its upright, and it has the fattie trunk more like a jubaea. F1 hybrids can vary quite a bit, mules can be more uprright (butia) or weeping(syagrus). Here is my B x J, not sure what subspecies of butia, I got from jungle music. Here is my (BxJ)xJ, with more jubaea blood, from patrick shaeffer Yours looks more like the 2nd one, more jubaea genetic influence. Both are hating the 85-88F weather and grow slowly waiting for winter to green up and speed up. Growth of these palms is probably 2x as fast in winter here with our 55F/75F typical average lows/ highs.2 points
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With bamboo , depending on the variety , you are talking about something that can grow several inches a day (up to a foot in the tropics) . I have Black Bamboo in a pot that sent out a culm a month ago . The culm is now over 6’ tall and still growing . Rhapis palms are very slow growers so you have plenty of time to react to errant runners. My experience has been that they are fine , both of them are next to pathways and manageable . Then again , I like to garden so ….. Harry2 points
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Thanks, JLM, that’s good info. I see you are in Pace outside of Pensacola. Several years ago, really like more than a decade ago, a guy on this forum sent me seeds from Canary Island Day Palms h said we’re growing around the courthouse in Pensacola. He said the trees were probably about 100 years old. The seeds all sprouted beautifully, but I could not get long-term survival for CIPD here in Dallas, TX. When I visited Mobile and the Gulf Coast last year to see the SS United States, we drove over to Pensacola, but I did not see any CIPD around the courthouse. Did those trees just live out their years or did they freeze? thanks, I guess I didn’t know where to look. There used to be a few of those in Mobile, too, but I think they’ve all died out. On another note, I really don’t understand how the threads work on this form. I’m not sure if you’ll even see this reply.1 point
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Oraniopsis appendiculata, I don’t think they will ever to tall in a hurry!1 point
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There's a recent thread about some seedlings surviving in London so you might not be too far off. Greenhouses get pretty damp in our climates in winter, maybe try it outside with overhead cover to keep it dry. Thread EPS thread1 point
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Sorry Meg - can’t answer you. I would need more info. What happens when you try? Any error message? After you click “Save” what exactly happens? You are clicking “Save” - right??? At any rate, there have been the occasional User with a glitch like this - usually with old time Users. Don’t know why - corrupt database error or something. If you have trouble logging in to new site, submit a Support Ticket, or get hold or me somehow and I will help you out. Or - if you read this in time, send me your email and password via PM and I can edit them into your account manually when the new system is up.1 point
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In My large one only ever holds 4 leaves and a spear,. A few more years and will get there!1 point
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Love the upright fronds on this palm. And the deep green, almost blue green color. This should be more widely planted and available.1 point
