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Showing content with the highest reputation on 04/30/2026 in Posts

  1. A nice duo of licuala fordiana!
    3 points
  2. 15 gallon Brahea Edulis 125.00 15 gallon Brahea Super Silver 125.00 1 gallon Butia Eriospatha 60.00 can ship 3 gallon Chamaedoria Costaricana 60.00 3 gallon Chamaedoria Hooperiana 60.00 3 gallon Chamaerops Humilis Cerifera 75.00 can ship
    3 points
  3. A neglected Hyophorbe lagencaulis (bottle palm) at Balboa Park, San Diego, CA. It’s amazing it’s still alive considering how neglected this palm has been. I believe it was planted in 2021 or 2022.
    2 points
  4. I do believe it’s a gaggle of geese and a grove of palms!
    2 points
  5. I am enjoying the color of this unknown species id Anthurium's flower spadix.
    2 points
  6. Oh. I misread the topic.
    2 points
  7. A gaggle of Hyophorbe lagenicaulis at Four Arts:
    2 points
  8. Dypsis decaryi looking fantastic.
    2 points
  9. 2 points
  10. Here’s a beautiful full Bismarckia nobilis, Pandanus utilis and Royal palms in the background at Balboa Park, San Dieg, CA.
    1 point
  11. I think we need a new updated thread for these palms... Starting with the big one at Overcliffe Gardens near Dublin in Ireland. This is probably the largest Juania in the British Isles. The Earlscliffe Juania was planted very small back i 1995, so it has been in the ground for 30 years now. The earliest photos I can find are from 2002 and 2003. The third photo below shows it in 2009... -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Next up we have the Juania specimen at Overbeck's Garden in Salcome, Devon. The Overbecks Juania was apparently planted in 1995 as well, but it was a very small seedling back then. the earliest photos I can find for it are from 2011 and 2013. ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Next up we have another legendary Juania at Glendurgan Gardens in Cornwall that has been in the ground about 25 years as well, alongside Dr Kevin Spence for scale... Here is a grainy photo of the Glendurgan Juania from 2012 before it had properly started trunking... ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- There are other decent specimens in southern England and Ireland, which I will update on in due course...
    1 point
  12. Magnifico señor🌴🌴🌴🦜🦜
    1 point
  13. I have always loved chatting about palms/cycads and plants in general with Maria. I've known her and her sons for the better part of 10 years, and she has always been so kind. Maria was the owner of Sago Rey Palms in Fresno, where she continued the business after the passing of her husband Thomas Wash. I was very saddened to hear of a horrible incident at the nursery over Easter weekend, and further saddened to learn of her passing. She will live on in the memory of many of us here in the area (and out of the immediate area) who have crossed paths with her. My garden is full of plants she cared for and nurtured. If any of you got those really blue Sabal uresana seedlings, they came from Maria. A few photos from her obituary: https://kmph.com/news/local/nursery-owner-dies-after-easter-machete-attack-nephew-faces-murder-charge
    1 point
  14. Houston botanic garden yesterday and a yard with a fairly large pindo in Pearland towards 45 South . peep the new washys along the freeway under planted with sabal minors @Xenon your favorite 😹😹😹dead Jubaea…. As expected lol
    1 point
  15. Going fast only 4 1 gallon Butia Eriospatha left
    1 point
  16. 1 point
  17. wait a little longer my friend and I will send you all the seeds as promised
    1 point
  18. Whoa Steve, that's way bigger than mine.. nice job. Mine's split as well & still has a lot of red fur on it. I'm going to repeat what I mentioned in an earlier thread here. The seeds came from the garden of Bill Austin when we visited in 2017. He was giving us a great tour & we stopped by what I recalled was a nice clumping palm, possibly Dypsis psammophila or something like it. Bill reaches down on the ground & scoops up a handful of seeds and says "Here, take these with you". As they grew, they looked nothing like the palm I remembered, so I thought I must have a mistaken memory. A couple months back I noticed that Seabreeze nursery was offering a new hybrid that they were calling the a "Sandy bear"; psammophila x leptichielos (or visa versa). A dead ringer, with one possible caveat: I don't remember any leptichielos in Bill's garden, although I could be wrong. But he did have several beautiful lastalliana growing nearby, that really caught my attention. Anyway, there's the story.. In the meantime, Dypsis sp. "Quaman" has a nice ring to it. 😁
    1 point
  19. My (4) Kentiopsis are fruiting for 3-6 years now and some spots under them are wet and shady enough for volunteers. Overall height I estimate at 22-32' tall. They still are a few leaves short(~3-4) of a full crown(10-12 leaves) after Milton stripped them 18 months ago. Some have currently green fruits that will turn red in a couple months if restrictions are lifted and we can get them watered. They are water lovers, maybe its better they have less leaves in a drought. Trouble free palms that add the dark green crownshafts and leaves for a complementary look to the other crownshafts. These do like their Mg, K to stay that darker green color. I dust them along with my cuban copernicias with langbeinite every year and fertilize with florikan palm osmotic release fertilizer. They are so tall, I have to crank my neck to look at the crowns these days. They do provide some good filtered shade for the C. macrocarpas I have under them.
    1 point
  20. First three donated plants (all Sabal), already plugged in.
    1 point
  21. Update on this guy. It’s now spit into two trunks. Still lots of color. If officially named it “dypsis sp. quaman” until I get a better ID.
    1 point
  22. 1 point
  23. Three for the price of one, archontophoenix Cunninghamiana, dypsis saintlucei and Arenga engleri.
    1 point
  24. Bees are a welcome addition in getting attention! IMG_1608.mov
    1 point
  25. Three rare ones getting my attention today. Pinanga sp BorneoAreca ahmada licuala sallehana var incisifolia
    1 point
  26. Repost of the tallest Thrinax radiata's I have seen in a local residence
    1 point
  27. A nice dypsis plumosa in the sandstone countryside and a Areca vestria not wanting to miss out on any attention!
    1 point
  28. Lowest temperature outside was -7,8 celsius. Not sure what the temp was inside the wooden boxes. I had plenty of wool around the palms that day. Photo from today:
    1 point
  29. May we be blessed (and FAST) with returning daylight on the Solstice today
    1 point
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