Skip to content
View in the app

A better way to browse. Learn more.

PalmTalk

A full-screen app on your home screen with push notifications, badges and more.

To install this app on iOS and iPadOS
  1. Tap the Share icon in Safari
  2. Scroll the menu and tap Add to Home Screen.
  3. Tap Add in the top-right corner.
To install this app on Android
  1. Tap the 3-dot menu (⋮) in the top-right corner of the browser.
  2. Tap Add to Home screen or Install app.
  3. Confirm by tapping Install.

Leaderboard

  1. happypalms

    happypalms

    IPS MEMBER
    8
    Points
    12,893
    Posts
  2. tim_brissy_13

    tim_brissy_13

    IPS MEMBER
    4
    Points
    2,516
    Posts
  3. Merlyn

    Merlyn

    IPS MEMBER
    3
    Points
    5,843
    Posts
  4. Chester B

    Chester B

    IPS MEMBER
    3
    Points
    4,689
    Posts

Popular Content

Showing content with the highest reputation on 07/14/2026 in Posts

  1. pogobob
    Kogi, hapala, dumasii, grandiflora growing great here in Vista/Bonsall.
  2. tim_brissy_13
    Potting up a few Ceroxylon parvifrons. The root systems on these things are impressive already. Skipping my standard 50mm tubes and 70mm pots for these ones, they are going straight into 90mm containers.
  3. Merlyn
    @Banana Belt I see this a lot with local Sabals. The ones in natural forests here are usually full crown but all the fronds below about halfway down are dead and crispy brown. But they fall off complete with the boot in time and leave a completely smooth trunk. Only the Sabals in people's yards still have boots, for the most part. It's probably because people cut off the frond and then gravity doesn't pull the boot off, like you said. I routinely cut off brown or cold-damaged fronds for cosmetic or clearance issues. But I try to not tear off boots until they are ready to fall off. If I'm pruning stuff and the boots just peel off easy then I'll peel them off until I find one with some resistance, and stop there. The only exception is stuff like a Bottle palm, where I use a razor knife and super sharp shears to carefully snip off the old boots. I might clean up old boots on a Bismarck or Alfredii for similar cosmetic reasons...and because the giant flying cockroaches ("palmetto bugs") love to live in the rotting old boots...
  4. Jim in Los Altos
    Most of us grow palms for their aesthetic value and for me and many of us, dried up brown persistent fronds are a detriment to that. A lush green garden versus one that has lots of dead hanging foliage, hmm, which one do I want to look at and be in? Fortunately most of my palms are self cleaning but many, such as Parajubaea, Livistona, Syagrus, Trachycarpus, Phoenix, and others are not so I trim off yellowed leaves. Rhopalostylis, on the other hand, often shed their oldest frond while still green and quite heavy. The stems and old boots of virtually all the palms that are trimmed here, fall off readily, many right up near the palm’s canopies with just a few exceptions. I don’t think leaving the dead fronds hastens trunk “cleaning” appreciably.
  5. aztropic
    Ooof! I think they might have killed it this time.🤦🤷‍♂️
  6. Jdash
    great update, a lot of work has been put in that yard!
  7. Chester B
    I think people who don't live in climates like this really understand how hard it is to get things accomplished in summer. I have the same schedule - 30 minutes of work followed by the same for a break. The only difference is I try to stay outside in the shade under a fan and only go inside when I know I'm just too hot. And the weeds in these climates are just insane. That's a ton of work for this time of year.
  8. pj_orlando_z9b
    It is odd. It was my largest plumeria with a trunk diameter about 6". Funny thing is it is the one I did what was recommended. Cut it back before rot worked down. My other i keft alone until May before cutting and it came back from the base. Go figure.
  9. Banana Belt
    I completely understand and find myself wanting to make the palm look better. Dead brown hanging leaves are ugly.
  10. Chester B
    Likely Bambusa multiplex "fernleaf" just because its so readily available here through Houston Garden Center. They have a ton of locations, plus people sell this variety on Marketplace regularly.
  11. tim_brissy_13
    Yeah I’d say that’s right. That Burringbar grove is on a slope which aids drainage. I’ve found it’s often the cold and wet combination that’s the issue. When I started growing palms, many species were thought not to cope with Melbourne winters, even things like Chambeyronia macrocarpa which is now known to be pretty much bulletproof in a variety of planting positions. Species like Bismarckia nobilis and Chrysalidocarpus decaryi languish in boggy soils here especially if not in full sun, but give them a sunny, well drained position and they don’t even flinch in winter.
  12. happypalms
    Worth a shot but you get snow don’t you! 🥶
  13. Urban Rainforest
    Encephalartos Kisambo flush progressing nicely
  14. happypalms
    A good indicator with a lot palms, in this case pinanga genus, coronata no worries so a lot of other pinanga varieties are going to do well which I have found out in my climate. Calyptrocalyx the same you just have to find which varieties will tolerate the cool some do some dont. But through zone pushing you find them , pick a genus that has survived in your climate and in some cases there are a lot other varieties in that genus that will live. Oh a heated hothouse, let me dream, dreams can come true. But so far there nightmares of dead palms.🤣
  15. tim_brissy_13
    I’ve seen a grove of Vershaffeltia doing well in Burringbar which isn’t too far from @happypalms . Think damage wouldn’t occur until much below 7C. Richard - do you get significantly colder than Burringbar? I’d have expected Vershaffeltia should do ok in your greenhouse at the very least.
  16. Tyrone
    Pinanga rumphiana looks like a win to me. Verschafeltia was a bridge too far for you. A proper tropical. I think 7C is their damage temperature. Now if you had a heated tunnel house then you’d be ok with them.
  17. Harry’s Palms
    Here’s a pic of that Brahea . Harry ☹️
  18. pj_orlando_z9b
    Recovery is really picking up here in Belle Isle with the tropical heat and beneficial rains. Apr vs this weekend. Coconut is finally pushing up and not folding. Adonidia made a full recovery and have been the fastest z10 plants to regrow. My final casualty list includes 1 autograph plant, 1 plumeria, and a young/unprotected flame thrower.
  19. happypalms
    Trimming leaves is purely for aesthetic purposes in most gardens, any amount of life left in a palm leaf will benefit the palm, no matter how tattered or dying look, the palm needs that leaf right up until it decides to drop it. Leaves are a factory for all plants, it’s only us palm nut fanatics who go crazy with the secataures or pruning saw, I pretty well much leave them on until they fall off. There are some exceptions to that rule a problem leaf rubbing against a roof or building, a leaf that is in the way near a pathway, transplanting a palm you remove a lot the foliage. A leaf that is in danger of doing substantial damage if it falls. But in general wait until it dies and falls off.
  20. happypalms
    Johannesteijsmannia perakensis, i somehow dont think I will see it get a trunk in any time soon!
  21. happypalms
    Chambeyronia hookerii with that afternoon sun in winter that says it’s going to be a cold morning.
  22. happypalms
    Triphylla are so cute they need to planted next to a step or that intricate little corner you walk past or the garden will eat it up. They set seed from a young age and they do make fantastic container palms.
  23. tinman10101
    I just wanted to say for all the work that you and suchin have contirbuted to the palm world ... I am ecstatic that they have named a palm after you both!! may your business thrive as your palms do. cheers! tin
  24. Rain52
    bottomed out at 22 jia, 23 jax beach.. lost a lot of cook pines at the beaches. wind just brutal.
  25. Billeb
    Mejiae get big! Not uncommon to see these 15-20+ leaf flushes. It’s a cool species. -dale
  26. Daryl
    Up in the clouds...unlike relatively flat Australia, there are some good sized mountains in Java Corypha utan...have only ever seen this growing in coastal areas, right down to the ocean...these ones battered by constant salt and winds off the ocean Actinorhytis callaparia - cultivated Licuala grandis at the entrace to Bogor BG Latania verschafelltii in Bogor BG Nstivr Rattan in the mountains growing near Pine forests Kerriodoxa in Bogor BG Perhaps Rhopaloblaste sp? in Bogor BG Cyrtostachys and friends in Bogor BG Oncosperma tigillarum in Bogor BG Bogor BG Cyrtostachys renda in Bogor BG Hydriastele in Bogor BG Interesting coastline in East Java Corypha utan down near the shore
  27. Merlyn
    @Keys6505 I'd guess some kind of Multiplex, given the tiny leaves. Initially I thought Glaucophylla, but the leaves on that are variegated. There are several small Multiplex like "Fernleaf." If the culms are a sort of tan/pinkish then it could be Multiplex "Rosa." It's also somewhat similar to my Dendrocalamopsis Variostriata.
  28. Brad52
    Fresh Sainte Lucei and C laceolata in the rising sun.
  29. happypalms
    You need a few Arenga engleri for your garden!
  30. happypalms
    1 point
    Let’s see what’s cooking in the greenhouse!
  31. junglejim
    Survivor stories: IT'S ALIVE! I was able to cover up my pandanus utilis pretty good during the hard freeze. All the leafs got fried but the center held a green hue giving me hope it would live. I pampered it and over time noticed the crown had green, but no growth for months. One day i took the top between my finger and thumb, gave a gentle tug and the whole top pulled out with a mushy rotten bottom. I thought "well, that's dead and i just didn't know it yet." So i stopped watering/fert, let the weeds grow around. And had been planning to dig it out and put something else there. But through the combined powers of indecision and procrastination that never happened. Months later i spotted a little green shooting out of the middle and was surprised to find the crown growing back. Now it's getting pampered again and looks like recovery is possible, which is a big chance from a few weeks ago when i considered it a dead body in the front yard i needed to get rid of.

Account

Navigation

Configure browser push notifications

Chrome (Android)
  1. Tap the lock icon next to the address bar.
  2. Tap Permissions → Notifications.
  3. Adjust your preference.
Chrome (Desktop)
  1. Click the padlock icon in the address bar.
  2. Select Site settings.
  3. Find Notifications and adjust your preference.