Jump to content
REMINDER - VERY IMPORTANT ANNOUNCEMENT ABOUT FUTURE LOG INS TO PALMTALK ×

Leaderboard

Popular Content

Showing content with the highest reputation on 01/26/2026 in Posts

  1. This is a great hybrid, get yourself one if you can find it. I really like the thin trunk.
    4 points
  2. 4 points
  3. Cold hardy palm trees in Dallas zone 8a at 15F after sleet storm. 🌴🥶
    4 points
  4. Photos today following the ice storm. Low this morning got down to 22F, and the high got to 32F. Washingtonian robustas: Washingtonia filifera: Sabal uresana
    3 points
  5. Actually it was worse in the past by nearly every metric. In terms of absolute minimum temperature, The freezes in the 1980s, 1962, and 1890s were dreadful. Most of the places getting 20s and 30s next week went into the teens during some or all of those events. In terms of hardiness zones, the forecast from Weather.com has my minimum during this event at 32F. The minimum for the entire winter thus far is 31F. That's in line with the 2023 USDA Hardiness Map putting my portion of Lakeland in USDA 10a. The 1990 zone map had Lakeland in 9a and Orlando in 9b. That means the locations in question averaged low-20s and mid-20s each year, respectively. The zone maps from 1990, 2012, and 2023 show the change over time, even if they aren't great planting guides by themselves. In terms of long stretches of below average temperatures, January 1940, January 1977, Jan/Feb 1996, January 2010, and December 2010 had long stretches of cold that were much worse than this. While I wouldn't call it normal or typical, it does happen with regularity.
    3 points
  6. Same here in Big D! Rough last couple days and it looks like almost 70 hours below freezing from what i calculate. Gawd knows how low it will go tonite if the skies clear as the whole region is compacted frozen sleet, snow. I guess the 2020s will go down as the icy epoch, will it continue into the 2030's? I covered and did the xmas lite addition thanks to all the peeps on here giving me the idea🤓 But, to my dismay, I was unable to find my old xmas lites in the attic or basement! Oh well, i think it will be more like the previous 5 winters- heavy leaf damage on Sabal bermudana and even Trachys but the minors and needle palms, minimal if any damage! Another cold wave next weekend but dry so far predicted, not that these forecasts have been worth a hill of beans😑
    3 points
  7. I know there are older threads with similar themes, but hopefully we can get this forum moving again. Post your pics before the snow melts.
    2 points
  8. It was perfect tour weather for @PalmBossTampa and @Midnight Gardener over the weekend. The high at the airport today was 88F, breaking the old record by 3oF. Now we get about two weeks of garbage weather. Since the NWS and Weather.com forecasts are almost identical, we'll just stick with the graphic below +/-1. We'll see how this holds up and how the plants hold up to it:
    2 points
  9. Cold hardy palm trees in Dallas zone 8a at 15F after sleet storm. 🌴🥶
    2 points
  10. When I first started germinating seeds I was using a heating pad and I absolutely do not recommend those at all. Google and see how hot it actually gets. Granted my heating pad was half broken and only worked on high but it got just a wee bit too hot. I'm all for upcycling, but between closeouts and Black Friday and eBay deals, I'm pretty happy with my actual seedling heat mats now. Thermostats and knowing exactly what temp your soil/baggies are is nice, especially when you can check them from your wifi. I scored some 48x20 mats for $9 apiece and got the Inkbird wifi thermostat for $20 shipped all in. I'm having a lot more success now.
    2 points
  11. If the forecast holds up, Monday and Tuesday nights will likely be too much for those palms to handle.
    2 points
  12. Beautiful (when it's short lived)! I covered my Washingtonias last week since they just got put in the ground last spring. So no pictures. They will be uncovered again this week as temperatures get back up. The Sandia and Manzano mountains did there thing in protecting us from the brunt of the arctic blast once again!
    2 points
  13. You are ultimately correct on the Rockies protecting us. Our arctic cold never comes from the north, only the east. Which the Sandias/Central Highlands offer us some protection. But when that arctic air is on the plains to our east, and a low pressure system to our west, we can get our coldest(east winds). The cold is "sucked" thru and over the Sandias.
    2 points
  14. Thanks! Yes, the "twins" or curved filifera are settling in. The largest filifera is about 16' tall.
    2 points
  15. Sandias did the protection And a microclimate definitely helps 40f in ABQ 41f double eagle 20f Moriarty 6f in Amarillo 50f+ something in my backyard/porch with partial sunshine! Might be a different story if the low pressure was to our west.
    2 points
  16. I've got multiple apps telling me multiple things so I'm just gonna roll with Accuweather. It says our temp is 28 with a "feels like" of 11 and I absolutely believe it. My nipples could cut glass and my boy parts are halfway up my ribcage after walking the dog, and everything is just soaking wet. The whole yard is like the carpet in a flooded house. My toes are all wet. I'm not particularly enjoying this but I know a lot of people got it worse than this so I'm just gonna scratch my belly button and keep checking the plant room heater.
    1 point
  17. This is why I won’t be planting any z10 palms in Texas… 10hrs until dawn.
    1 point
  18. In fairness I didn't say I had experience at those temps. Just that I wouldn't do shit about it. lol
    1 point
  19. Jonathan, this palm looks a lot like A. guppyana with a couple of differences. I don’t know if you’ve tried guppyana, but they should grow under similar conditions. Tim
    1 point
  20. I agree. Germination is typically around 86°F or 30° C. It would be very hard to regulate the temperature on a standard heating pad.
    1 point
  21. Cold hardy palm trees in Dallas zone 8a at 15F after sleet storm. 🌴🥶
    1 point
  22. Coldest day so far this winter. We had 30°F overnight low.
    1 point
  23. No I don’t, luck of the draw as it goes. Spend close to $3000 grand on sabinara seeds and one is not going to play coroner on those rare beauties. If they are quality seeds you can tell pretty well much straight away. Sometimes you get beautiful looking seeds and nothing germinates. One example 300 triphylla seeds one lot in a styrofoam box and the other lot in a community pot, nothing germinating in the styrofoam box but the community pot all germinated. So you could say technique or even grower mistake with to wet a mix or something just right in the community pot. You just can’t tell until they pop up, and knowing my luck a pack of ten seeds and I go and cut up the only living seed in that pack 🌱
    1 point
  24. If we are lucky enough when far North Queensland (cairns) has cyclones if it tracks south we can get a full wet week, the east coast low when that sets in my area becomes that true subtropical climate. The whole mid north coast area once was what they called the big scrub before settlement one huge rainforest. Close to 400 square kilometres of pristine environment a small Amazon jungle. Now settlement and land clearing has broken that up into large reserves national parks and state forest. A place where the rainforest from the tablelands met the ocean!
    1 point
  25. Adventitious roots on C. costaricana and T. fortunei lending a bit of tropical flair to our cool-weather garden
    1 point
  26. Salam alaikum, sylvestris is always solitary, dactylifera is almost always suckering. Besides ratio of petiole's to entire leaf's length in sylvestris is 1/10 while in dactylifera is about 1/5. In other words petiole in sylvestris multiplied 10 times makes out entire leaf, while in dactylifera this is achieved through a multiplication by 5.
    1 point
  27. Just be sure to avoid moisture and should be fine if the temperature is right. I used a pet bed heater for several years and have heard of recycled water bed heaters being used for the same purpose. There's enough stuff in the world so why not repurpose?
    1 point
  28. I can get these if there’s enough interest. Smallest/Stoutest Hurricane Palm from Round Island in Indian Ocean. .25 each.
    1 point
  29. I think this week is going to stress me if it hasn’t already. Yesterday I wrapped up the bismarkias with their blankets, tarps, and lights well ahead of the cold since I didn’t want them rained on. Woke up to 69 degrees this morning but dropped 20 degrees in the last hour or so and is down to 49 already. Got about 1.5” of rain last 24 hours so everything’s going to be soaked for this freeze. Weather report says low 24 degrees tonight and 22 tomorrow night. tropicals are still on the porch drying off a bit before they come in. They’d be dry if it wasn’t raining sideways. Plus one butia that’s still in a pot waiting to be planted. Then to add to the dramas my neighbor bulldozed one of my Washingtonias and I now have it staked because it won’t stay up on its own. I hope it makes it through all this because it has been my fastest grower and is bigger than some of my others that are a year or two older. To top things off Ive got a short notice need to leave town later in the week and there’s some weather reports for next weekend looking bad so the potted palms will stay inside but not sure what I’ll do with the bismarkias. I may have to just let them out and hope for the best. Weather channel says everything will be fine with lows in the 30s next weekend. My phone is calling for some apocalyptic freeze to 19 degrees at the same time. Anyways good luck to all this week.
    1 point
  30. How things are looking here. My large Grevillea (right) has the vegas lights. Large cat palms, some dwarf Heliconia, and everflowering bottlebrush are on the left - they needed a serious haircut to get them to fit this year. Kangaroo paws and small Grevillea behind the car also have lights. Mountain bottlebrush and narrow leaf bottlebrush aren't getting covered this year, just a little mulch. Everything else gets mulch (or nothing). Arenga sp. usually get buckets over them, but they have now outgrown that. Cham. mircospadix. These seed grown ones are much more vigorous than a large one I bought. They just get mulch poured on them. Cham. cataractum and Cham. radicalis seed. Figured I should actually save some. Only a fraction of what they set this year. The large Heliconia just get mulch piled up around the base. There are three new flowers coming on x 'Coral Surprise' that I'm sad to lose. I'm not wrapping any citrus this year either, only mulch.
    1 point
  31. It looks like the southern Rockies protected us from the arctic blast. Check out the difference in temps just to the east.
    1 point
  32. I'm always saying that San Antonio isn't zone 9a it belongs in zone 8b with some winters going even lower to 8a7b. Overall what I'm saying is that we aren't anywhere near the winters Texas has seen before 2021 and I don't have a crystal ball to predict future winters. The truth is that we see more weather extremes in both ways due to climate change. Climate is changing in Texas as well and not for the better. There were Queen palms growing in San Antonio for almost 20 years with some already died in the 2010s. Since 2021 it's impossible to keep them alive without proper protection. I'm not going to bet my money on warm winters. Not in this city at least.
    1 point
  33. 1 point
  34. I've had one for a few years here in Lakeland: My Progress Thread: Palms and Others of Interest
    1 point
  35. @TonyDFW Incredible photos as always. The house leopards are a nice touch, too.
    1 point
  36. Pretty incredible to keep a Jubaea growing for so long in Dallas. Did it have to be trunk cut at some point?
    1 point
  37. There is a an undocumented population of Braheas located just 40 miles south of Douglas, Arizona near the town of Esqueda, Sonora. These palms seem to be a variation of the Brahea Calcarea but with a taller trunk and fuller crown. I would also like to mention that these specimens of Brahea are very likely to be more hardy than Brahea Armata considering they are growing in elevations of 4000 or more where winters are extremely more cold than that of the Brahea Armata range. They palms are located in a ranch named Rancho Los Baños - Tierra Chamahua EcoAdventures which appears to have recently closed and has virtually no public access. There are dozens of pictures of the palms in the TripAdvisor page of the ranch online. I thought yall would enjoy knowing of these groves as they might have the potential of being the MOST hardy Brahea of all the genus. Getting seeds from these plants would be amazing but the location is very remote and a known area of high cartel activity.
    1 point
  38. Beautiful Braheas. I've already germinated several Braheas and Super Silver. Spanish music. They say the first flamenco score found was Sephardic Jewish music. It's very interesting that Spain inherited that music from the Jews. A Spanish musician revealed this. He thought flamenco was Arabic or from the Gypsies, but upon discovering the score, he realized it was Jewish. That's where those oriental melodies that Spain and the Spanish Gypsy people inherited originated.
    1 point
  39. Here's a video I found that shows one of the palms on the ranch. It's at about the 5:39 mark I also found this photo, which shows both glaucous and non glaucous palms in the background. To my eyes they all look like calcarea
    1 point
  40. flypower191, Welcome to Palmtalk ! Great pictures and info, thanks for posting.
    1 point
  41. At an attempt to carry on what Mr sparkman used to offer. I do have pollen for the following species: E. arenarius E. Arenarius blue E. Caffer E. Ferox E. Horridus E. Eugene marasii E. Lehmanii E. Princeps E. Longifolius E. Trispinosus I do have several different forms of some species so feel free to message me with any questions.
    1 point
  42. Here's a better pic of one of the plants. The leaves are around 10 inches long. - Matt
    1 point
  43. 1 point
  44. Syagrus schizophylla x romanzoffiana (the palm in the photo). Likely self-pollinated, although there are regular romanzoffiana in the area.
    1 point
  45. Patiently waiting for the seed to mature
    1 point
  46. 1 point
  47. It's hard to get a good picture of mine now but definitely seems to lean a little more schizophylla but very cool looking. It recovered from being crushed last summer and now it's growing pretty fast.
    1 point
×
×
  • Create New...