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  1. Tracy

    Tracy

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Popular Content

Showing content with the highest reputation on 05/08/2026 in Posts

  1. Dioon edule female I've grown 53 years from a 4 inch caudex. Currently pushing 34 leaves. 56 inch pot with 4 feet trunk. Fat!
    4 points
  2. Two easy palms that are always setting seeds.
    3 points
  3. May 2026.. 13 years in ground
    3 points
  4. This palm should be a top choice in SoCal. Fast and jaw-dropping.
    3 points
  5. Here is a better shot of the whole palm
    3 points
  6. Hey palmtalkers. Just wanted to share the progress of my bailey palm. I planted this one from an overgrown, rooted in the ground, 1 gallon baby palm back in May 2016. A picture of that at first planting is shown as well with it being the tiny palm, center of the pictures. It has about an overall height of 9 to 10 feet now to the top of the leaf. Has been slower growing for me than I would like. It gets way to much shade from the surrounding palms now that they outgrew the bailey. It's hard to show in the photos, but this one has that blue-green color. One I prefer. Has been through 3 major hurricanes. Irma, Ian, and Milton. Some winds from Helene as well. It still holds damaged leaves from Milton, but I didn't want to over trim. Took some leaves off and left the others. Hopefully now that it's getting larger and a bit more sun, it will start to grow a bit faster.
    2 points
  7. I cannot find any information on this palm, apart from it was wallichia nana. Does anyone have pictures of this palm?
    2 points
  8. Unfortunately it is in a traffic zone, and it has caused me trouble before, right down to the doctor in Sydney wanting to know what palm it was! They are so hard to remove the needles. You can run your hand down the trunk, but heaven forbid the other way going up. Richard
    2 points
  9. Some nice dictyosperma album var conjugatum needed a bit of attention. So time to wack em across the potting bench. Thanks Merc!
    2 points
  10. The good old Chambeyronia and the dypsis saintlucei poking its head up above the greenhouse.
    2 points
  11. Gausia maya, Burretokentia hapala.
    2 points
  12. I can’t believe I managed to get these ceroxylon seeds to germinat. I wasnt doubting the quality of seeds. I was more worried about my climate being to warm for once, pretty well much sown at the start of summer so my fear was was that I wasn’t going to be able to keep them cool enough to germinate. It was a long hot summer, so the seeds were kept inside on tile floor in the coolest part of the house. So nearly 6 months later they are a popping. Not sure what I will do with them I might have to send them to the polar bear growers down south!
    2 points
  13. Together two sexes of C radicalis Male radicalis Female radicalis Male microspadix Female microspadix
    2 points
  14. Two very nice palms for the garden. The Radicalis can take sun but the Microspadix wants nice cool shade . I get a lot of seeds from both of these species. Just push them in the ground and …more palms! Harry Chamaedorea Microspadix fruit Chamaedorea Radicalis Tree Form , Palm is about 8’ tall (out of picture) fruit is hanging at eye level.
    2 points
  15. Tnx most cool tolerant Dypsis/Chrysalidocarpus spp are pretty easy this way.
    2 points
  16. Lit up underneath....... ✔️ Two outer palms curving outward ✔️ -10f survivors ✔️ Filifera trifecta ✔️ Growing in zone 7b unprotected ✔️
    2 points
  17. I grow this in Jacksonville FL ----collected the seeds in 1988 from habitat in Northern Domincan Republic --- in my front yard ---
    2 points
  18. The solitary one I have in Leucadia is getting more light now that I removed a Guava tree to its west and a little north. The top of the wall is 6 feet high for perspective.
    2 points
  19. To me it just looks like cosmetic cold damage, nothing really bad . Now if you're experiencing spear pull/pulls then that could be a problem.
    2 points
  20. Today the favorite is this Encephalartos which is currently flushing. I include some photos of it earlier in the flush.
    2 points
  21. Baronii and Ambositrae growing in such kind of medium
    2 points
  22. In Ventura California I have been seeing several Howea Foresteriana around the Industrial parks where my shop is . The Community Memorial Hospital has several mature Livistona Australis , large Howea Foresteriana , Chrysalidocarpus Lutescens, and beautiful Archontophoenix palms . Harry
    2 points
  23. Two different palms have come in over the years as Dypsis (now Chrysalidocarpus) Sp. Ambanja. The first was a multi trunk palm somewhat like Baronii. The second was a larger solitary palm. Mine has just revealed its first ring of trunk and is a really nice looking palm. Has similar characteristics as Leucomalla (white spear and coloring) and Sp. Dark Mealy Bug with the black flecking. But has a unique look of its own. Anyone else growing this?
    2 points
  24. Close to all day full sun 1.5 miles from the ocean.
    2 points
  25. Mine is beginning to look like something 🙂
    2 points
  26. Mine has been a great grower for me. The colors on the crownshaft and petioles are great. I just recently took a close up photo of the trunk showing the coloration:
    2 points
  27. Great to hear. Here is mine. Location: Orlando, FL south side of town. I'm on the E side of a large lake, giving decent microclimate benefits especially on radiational cooling nights. Temperatures: 1 night below freezing. Feb 1: 46F / 25.7F Feb 2: 55F / 34.4F Feb 3: 65F / 34.8F Protection: some (marked with * below) From my personal experience, I'd rate hardiness of my palms as: 1a) Phoenix roebelenii (40% burn [front], 10% burn [backyard]) 1b) beccariophoenix alfredii (10-20% burn, mostly tips) 3) Majesty palms (50%-60% burn) 4a) Foxtail palm (total defoliation, spear had green) 4b) Bottle palm* (total defoliation, spear had green) 6) Coconut palm* (total defoliation, minimal green in spear) 7) Christmas palms* (total defoliation, minimal green in spear) I don't have Royals but from what I'm seeing around town, I'd put them above Foxtails. One note about my coconut. I did experience bleeding and after much research and courage, I did cut some of it away. thankfully it wasn't deep. After spraying with copper very well and allowing it to dry, I applied a natural homemade patch of beeswax, olive oil and tea tree. What I learned is it was caused by a broken irrigation system. ugh. Always check your system. My pump was breaking and basically poured water right on the coconut trunk. I'm guessing a stressed tree couldn't fight off some early rot. My recovery method was: 1) Within one week of freeze, sprayed with copper fungicide. Repeated every 10-14 days for 2 months or until I didn't notice any sign of rot. If I was really concerned about rot, applied Banrot to specific palms. 2) Within one week of freeze, applied a root stimulator and repeated once a month for 3 months. 3) 15 days after freeze, applied a recovery formula to soil which is basically a light fertilizer. 4) Once soil hit near 70F, applied fertilizer 5) Watering often especially with this bad drought and heat. All pics below are about 60-90 days apart.
    1 point
  28. I was doing some research on S. domingensis and through some detective work and with the help of Google AI was able to find the location (in Bokeelia, Florida) of this house with the big old specimen out front. Sad to say this is yet another one of these situations where something great is felled...the above picture from 2021 is the last image with the palm in place. By September of 2023 it was gone. So sad when you think about how old this palm may have been. I'm hoping it wasn't a victim of an ignorant homeowner and rather of the hurricanes during that period, which included a 6-to-9-foot storm surge during Hurricane Ian in September 2022. This palm does come from a heavy-duty hurricane zone, so you might think it would stand tough against it, but it is S. causiarum, rather than S. domingensis, that occupies the hard-hit coastal zone...S. domingensis is typically found in the interior where it may not have evolved such a tough disposition...You can see the image progression on Google StreetView by looking at the past dates (click "see more dates") here.
    1 point
  29. How bout a small ‘BUMP’. So, how are all of the posted specimens doing? Thriving I hope. Here is a photos I took yesterday of a grouping grown from seed back in 2012. The tall palm in the center surrounded by B. condapanna is B. nicobarica. Tim
    1 point
  30. Hi Pete, I would love to see a side view of the leaves and leaflets. I have one that I got from George and planted it in 2018. It was a good size 15 gallon plant back when I put it in the ground. Here is mine toward the end of a flush in early July this year.
    1 point
  31. I am working my way through this very interesting thread on Cycads. I will post a Cycad located at ANSG, which likely has already been discussed:
    1 point
  32. I love shiny green leaves, especially after a good washing from rain.
    1 point
  33. Mother and child flushing sequence along with a pup. I love the mother plant, but it sure is exciting to see her child flush at the same time! The "child" is an Encephalartos (horridus x woodii) x (horridus x woodii).
    1 point
  34. Tracy, I did read your response to a post by PalmatierMeg about the limitations of growing the silver Encephalartos in Florida due to high rainfall and humidity, and poor drainage. Good drainage must be the key as you know what the rainfall and humidity in Hilo is like. These looked pretty good, or at least I thought so. I’ll take you over there on your next visit. Encephalartos lehmannii & horridus Tim
    1 point
  35. First set of “double” Eugene’s have already crumbled these have now done the same. Couple other goods waiting for spring!
    1 point
  36. This one is pretty cool as well.
    1 point
  37. @Billeb Nice looking plant! I agree with Tracy that blue arenarius is the likely ID, but everything goes out the window if/when people hybidize! I saw your photos and I figured I share some photos of my similarly sized blue arenarius. These are two different angles of two different plants. Both came from Kevin Weaver. Maybe this will be helpful.
    1 point
  38. Whenever I come back to this thread and see the initial photo I opened it with, I can't help comparing to what the view looks like now. Due to the growth of plants in the foreground it is hard to duplicate the photo, but I was out in the garden this afternoon and did my best, minus my son and the dogs. That little Dypsis bef has grown but still competes for sunlight with the Encephalartlos horridus x woodii. The Cycad has grown a bit too, as well as the Kentiopsis (Chambeyronia) oliviformis, which is just a trunk in the photo now..
    1 point
  39. Very attractive form. The leaves look more recurved than many. Mine only has that recurve just at the tip of the leaf with the rest of it being basically straight. I'll go to a different genus, this is the Zamia standleyi. It's a male plant, only pushing a single leaf; funny thing is that it pushes out more cones than it does leaves in a flush. Last coning I think i had 5 cones. The second shot which shows how much taller this new single leaf flush will be than the prior flush of 3, has a flushing Cycas debaoensis trying to compete for attention in the background.
    1 point
  40. Here’s my favorite nubi in the garden right now.
    1 point
  41. To fully appreciate what is going on right now with this cycad, I had to get shots from 3 sides. I removed some of the lower leaves from older flushes just so that it would have room for all the other flushes pushing. I couldn't get a photo from the 4th side, which has another lump on the main caudex that is a growth point. This one has it all, pups galore and 3 growth points on the main caudex. Seven concurrent flushes on this plant.
    1 point
  42. Favorite? Not sure. But I do enjoy this Encephalartos princeps x lehmanii hybrid. The first picture sort of looks photo shopped in there but it is not.
    1 point
  43. After having to trim off the lowest leaf of the Pseudophoenix which had been hanging into the crown of this Encephalartos eugne-maraisii, it really opened up the view. I love the leaflet insertion pattern on this species as well as the dull green/grey color.
    1 point
  44. Tracy: Looks like you had a couple of the ArexLat X Lat crosses George made. It's interesting to see others as they begin to get bigger. I ended up with two and one died shortly after planting it (Crown Rot). Here is the one that is still going strong. Only one flush per year....I can't say my plant has the hybrid vigor I see in other hybrids. Nonetheless it's a really nice plant and happy it didn't see the same fate as it's sibling.
    1 point
  45. I have no idea what species, but it is a new favorite..... great looking specimen ! Arnhem Nursery, Humpty Doo.
    1 point
  46. So when I opened the first photo file and looked at it zoomed in, the leaflets appear to have a mid-rib. That would immediately rule out Microcycas, so it must be some species of Cycas. I took close ups to clarify what Gene was looking for on the leaflets. First the Microcycas calcoma leaflets pictured followed by a few Cycas (debaoensis, tropophylla x micholitzii, szechuanensis ssp fairylakea, and thouarsii x cupida). No mid-ribs on the Mc leaflets, but all the Cycas have a mid rib in the leaflets visible. Now as to what species of Cycas, Gene or someone else may be able to weigh in. I've actually been known to try to catch someone outside working in their garden to ask about plants but rarely been bold enough to walk up to someone's door to ask. Maybe you are bolder than I am?
    1 point
  47. Encephalartos princeps showing its great color in the drizzle, with the blue set against a mix of greens.
    1 point
  48. I love the plumose leaflets on Encephalartos caffer and this little one flushing is just oozing with appeal right now.
    1 point
  49. Cycas debaoensis showing no signs of cool damage and apparently thoroughly enjoying a wet winter. It certainly has a tropical feel to it.
    1 point
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