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Showing content with the highest reputation on 04/15/2026 in Posts

  1. A somewhat bit of a rare Howea species, there about the place if you look hard enough. But not that common, the fosteriana got all attention and the bell was left second place. A nice palm with that punk look about it!
    6 points
  2. Hello, Does anyone have any idea what this might be? It was labeled as Schippia Concolor, though it seems that may be incorrect. I planted it from a one gallon, maybe 2-3 years ago. Cocothrinax? Thanks
    5 points
  3. The Encephalartos laurentianus flush is progressing better for this time of year than normal. The mild weather has allowed the flush to emerge without wind and rain damage. Sometimes the portion of the leaves above the adjacent 6' block wall succumb to wind shear, but not yet at least on this flush.
    4 points
  4. A hot dry spot is just what these cycas species will be living in. A 28 year old Ferox that has lived its whole life in the container finally got freedom today. And a nice cycas media just for good measure. And dioon spinolosum just for some fun.
    3 points
  5. Had a nice dinner under the Roystonea regia: grilled up some cevapcici, which are caseless Serbo-Croatian lamb and beef sausages with some mushrooms in wine and garlic sauce. And a politically incorrect beverage. .
    3 points
  6. Perhaps you have just eaten an Alien!😂
    3 points
  7. Hi John hers a couple of verschaffeltia, purchased seeds named as black seed, totally different looking seeds but a verschaffeltia splendida.
    3 points
  8. Wow amazing growth. I hope mines that large in 7 years. I think it’s about the same size as yours in 2019.
    3 points
  9. 3 points
  10. There you go @bubba a nice freshly planted Kentiopsis olivformis
    3 points
  11. Zamia pseudoparasitica has grown well over the last few years. Tim
    3 points
  12. They say if a tree falls in the woods and nobody hears it did it really fall! Well regardless if this one was heard falling, it has fallen over. It’s already started to die, poor palm.
    2 points
  13. I have found archies to be very good for making multiples and I use a more dense planting than my other crownshafts. They love water so planting in multiples can make it easier to keep them moist. We have a dry spring here and they will get pale if I dont add consistent irrigation for them to look good. Other than that they are easy to keep happy in my yard. My archi8es are currently kind of tall(25-30') cant get em in a pic unobstructed so pictures are. I looked back to 2011 a year after I planted my alexandre triple and then a pic from 2019 where they grew in a bit. Here is the pic a little over a year after planting from 3 gallons, they were quite fast. Note the whitish undersi8des of the leaves in morning sun, hard to see the whitish undersides today as little sun hits them at 30' tall with everything grown in.. second pic 2019 shows how they grew in in 8 years(in 2019) since planting. today they are much larger of course, trunks are over 20' clear and bases are swollen to 17-18" thick.
    2 points
  14. I have texted my buddy. That will be the next project.
    2 points
  15. Coccothrinax miraguama. aztropic Mesa, Arizona
    2 points
  16. Just had a lunch with my work mates. Very similar like this recipe just without carrots 😊🥂 White wine with sparkling water 50:50 as a beverage
    2 points
  17. I finally got my seeds, ordered on the 26-1-26, so I finally get them into my grubby little cultivation fingers today 15-4-26, not to bad considering customs and a lovely delay that they provided me with. But wait theres more to this story of 50 seeds, total cost of this project was wait for it $950 Australian dollars. The delay and the lovely bill from customs was $620 dollars. Three varieties of seeds where ordered and one lot of ten seeds was seized. It’s fun importing seeds and even more fun knowing how many will germinate from the 40 seeds I have left, if they do germinate they will be very exspensive little seedlings. That’s growing palms could have been worse I germinate all of the seeds and the rats get them. Luck of the Irish on this one!
    2 points
  18. Too look at both varieties as seedlings you would be hard pressed to tell the difference. Both easy growing palms just add water. The hainensis are from rps and the nana are from my garden. Both beautiful palms when mature. Chuniophoenix hainensis Chuniophoenix nana
    2 points
  19. Yep that’s the way it is, our bio security is for good reason, and I respect that reason!
    2 points
  20. Anchovies in the oven with olive oil , lemon juice, oreganum, salt n pepper, plus a layer on top of pomodorini slices.
    2 points
  21. at Coffs Harbour. Spoiler alert: these specimens are in a glasshouse but nice nevertheless.
    2 points
  22. I'm thinking it would be a fun surprise to find one under all that. All it takes is one stuck leaf base to start a storage trend. Ryan
    2 points
  23. Seabrook- clear lake today queens planted post 21
    2 points
  24. Agree definitely not Schippia and most likely Coccothrinax sp based on the silver abaxial frond surfaces. As to species, I’ve got no clue when it comes to Coccothrinax sp especially at that size!
    2 points
  25. So @Than or @Phoenikakias or @gyuseppe or @dalmatiansoap any of you make lamb stew? Maybe share a recipe if you do. Or seafood! Anyone! Share recipes if you like!
    2 points
  26. Not quite spineless but a very narrow leaflet form of Encephalartos trispinosis on this boy.
    2 points
  27. Scott W, There is a huge amount of seed that is never harvested, or collected for germination here around Santa Barbara and Ventura. OK it takes awhile to find the mature trees that consistently deliver but Jubaea seed by the buckets goes to the squirrels . I collected Nikau palm seed in Ventura today and at least the squirrels leave it alone but again buckets of seed never get touched. Parajubaea Cocoides seed is also available although mature trees are fairly rare. I was wondering if Nikau seed are hard to get in Florida? Obviously Jubaea seed is imported and Parajubaea aren’t locally available . Is it the opinion of Florida growers to favor the hybrids or are growers there still trying to germinate cool climate palms at least in Northern Florida. We can get down to the low twenties and I grow these palms because they can handle a mild freeze. I also enjoy germinating difficult palm projects . Hope they outlive me.
    2 points
  28. Hey Richard, old habits die hard, this now is Allagoptera caudescens according to Kew. Tim
    2 points
  29. I am relatively certain that my friend purchased a Carpoxylon macrospermum at one of the Fairchild sales many years ago. I am not certain that he originally planted it in the front but he moves palms around. Although I have never seen leaves hang on Cm the way this specimen does, I have a sneaking suspicion that removal would reveal a crown shaft!
    2 points
  30. Burretiokentia would have entire leaves or much fatter leaflets at that stage. Looks like R glauca to me.
    2 points
  31. I can share photos of seeds on the plant of one that has gone more green as it has grown, Plants around this specimen, including the bananas which grow rapidly and are replaced with new stalks every year rub up against the trunk, which could be why it retains no red fuzzy tomenetum. There also was a Guava tree that had branches that would rub up against the trunk which I just removed. It grew fast and I was always having to trim back the branches growing into the adjacent plants. In one of your other posts you noted that your green and red forms flower at different times of year. This specimen seems to pop out a new inflorescence with each new leaf base that is lost, so it is almost continuously flowering. You can see it is still holding several old inflorescense with a flower spathe still unopened.
    2 points
  32. Here’s the recipe for the mushrooms: INGREDIENTS 1-2 pounds crimini mushrooms chopped; 1 large onion skinned and diced; 1-8 cloves of garlic peeled and grated; olive oil; 1-2pounds ripe tomatoes; salt pepper chopped basil and thyme to taste; 1 cup dry white or red wine. PROCEDURE Coat sauce pan with 1/4” of olive oil and sauté grated garlic till golden or brown; add mushrooms, tomatoes, and chopped onion; stir; add wine, salt pepper and thyme and or basil;simmer on low heat uncovered till liquid evaporates. Stuff face, along with cevapcici. Chase with some red wine. So @dalmatiansoap what do you have with cevapcici?
    2 points
  33. Everything in the picture was planted by hand circa 2018-2019. New zoysia sod just went in a month ago. Love my little tropical garden! (SW Florida Zone 10b) JD
    2 points
  34. Lastly, and a bit off-topic, Randall told me several months ago that he was relocating some palms in his backyard so that he could make a tiki hut. I’m thinking of something like maybe an outdoor barbecue/ bar area, open air, with a thatched roof. Ah no.. His attention to detail was absolutely unbelievable. Beyond words, enjoy..
    2 points
  35. I found this photo from March 2016 with a description of Dypsis robusta in the ground. I'm not sure if I had just planted it or if it was a little before this that it went into the ground. The growth over a decade from this picture to the current is accurate though.
    2 points
  36. I chalk up their relative rarity to their slowness of growth. Finding larger specimens are almost impossible. But boy are they exquisite as they attain some size. The trunks are even more prone to bending than forsteriana, giving them a beautiful, graceful appearance. The umbrella shaped crown is just icing on the cake. I have one grown from seed about 18 years ago that is finally producing its own seed. Beautiful pictures!
    1 point
  37. This plant has now been taken down off ebay, which I think is probably for the best.
    1 point
  38. Congratulations are in order I hear your a chamaedorea adscendens Dad!
    1 point
  39. So a strap leaf seedling is actually visible in the May 2017 street view image as well, meaning this London Dacty must have survived the February 2018 freeze when it was very small, as well as the December 2022 freeze. So it would have been growing there at least 9 years now. I wouldn’t be surprised if it grew from a discarded date pip.
    1 point
  40. A rather fast growing majestic Syagrus with stiff dark green leaves. Ripe fruit is yellow and the size of golf balls. These have got to be in the 30 foot range. (10m) Always loaded with seed. Tim
    1 point
  41. Next, the best Trachycarpus princeps I’ve ever seen. Interestingly, they won’t grow very well here near the coast. But a slam dunk in the dryer air where he lives. Followed by a canopy view with a Livistona decora poking its head out. As his canopy has expanded, what used to be impossible for him to grow, is no longer out of the question. Case in point, Becarriophoenix alfredii.
    1 point
  42. Yes water in winter is a tricky one, I made the mistake a warm day, oh great I can water I think only to get the coldest morning in winter the next day in my greenhouse. Plants slow down in winter and the metabolic rate is down. Along with Farouk temperatures. Winter watering I try to leave up to the rain. Minus 6 that’s too cold for my gardening style I admire your determination!
    1 point
  43. Here is an updated photo of mine it definitely is different than those grown in cooler areas it has already been dropping it’s boots which ones I have seen much larger still have their boots!
    1 point
  44. 1 point
  45. oh, OK.... I went and took a pic.. just shy of 4' diameter at base, maybe 44".
    1 point
  46. Wal this is what I know about cham.mac. watermelon . I saw a cham. mac. with seed on it 12 yrs.a go in a garden here on the big island no other cham. around that I could see. Being the seed pig that I am I collected as many seed as I could . Way to many anyway germinated them all, time moves on pot to 4 in. then to 1 gal. to many to keep putting in to 1 gal. so we put 3 in a 1 gal.. More time so we move them to 12 and 15 gal. NOW they are starting to show the markings . Some are still just starting to show at 12 yrs old. Here are some pic.I am starting to move them all some where not sure where so thats why it looks this way. This is just a few of what I have of these.
    1 point
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