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Popular Content
Showing content with the highest reputation on 06/07/2026 in Posts
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Needle Palm 4 Years ago Vs. Now
8 pointsHere it was when I first planted it! I really had no hopes it was surviving up here 😂 Crazy how much it filled out this corner in only 4 years with suckers lol8 points -
Looking for advice on replacement palm trees
No one has suggested a foxtail... Wodyetia bifurcata... I'm fairly close to OCKev in La Mirada and these things grow like weeds for me... They are self cleaning but they do drop egg sized seeds that are easy to pick up and discard... Really no mess... Butch8 points -
Looking for advice on replacement palm trees
Putting palms in bunches helps with sunburn resistance, watering, and wind resistance(to drying). I would plan that spot with a multi of some crownshafted type. I would also be careful with how inland you are. If you are even in Irvine its hot and dry a lot and some of those palms will take a lot of attention to keep them looking good. WHen I see a chamby in a forest of trees, the sun exposure may be some directly overhead by not late day. My macrocarpas burn a little towards the western summer sun. Chambeyronia oliviformis doesnt have a red emerging leaf but they are more sun tough and wind dessication resistant due to a waxy leaf. And they are IMO more attractive than a macrocarpa aside the red leaf. They will grow taller than the macrocarpa for sure but not so fast as an King. Might be interesting to plant (2) oliviformis to the west and one macrocarpa to the east in a triple. The dark green of the oliviformis and the marcocarpa should have a striking appearance and witht he oliviformis protecting the macrocarpa from western sun. Here is oliviformis(center, dark green crownshaft) 13 years in the ground from a seedling.5 points
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Looking for advice on replacement palm trees
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Of course my absolute favourite chamaedorea adscendens
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Rhopalostylis sapida peeking out in glory
Rhopalostylis sapida peeking out in all its splendor. Vergara Palace Garden. City of Viña del Mar in Chile.4 points -
Sabal Uresana Bismarckia growth comparison 15 years
When I first moved to Florida, I planted a Bismarckia in mid2010 and a sabal uresana in summer 2011. Uresanas are often mentioned as alternatives to bismarckia in 9a. These palms have stood next to each other over the years making for an easy growth comparison. Bismarckias are generally regarded as fast growers and uresanas are said to be slow. First, Bismarckia several months after planting a 5 gallon bought at a big box store. Everything but the spear had heavy mold spots so I kind of treated it as a rescue. It seems to have that purplish hue after winter that is often associalted with a whiter leaf. It adapted fast to sun after being tortured inside the box store with palms stacked in a pile around it. It put 5-6 new leaves out the first year. late july 2010 bismarckia then about a year later I planted a sabal uresana "icy blue" I bought from tejas tropicals in texas. It was a strap leafer and I put it in a pot. About 6 months later it was ready to go into the ground as the pot was root bound. A little over 2 years later in sept 2013 both had grown well. IN this pic the uresana looks a bit bigger than it was (relatively) since it was closer to the observer. It had turned darker with less "icy blue" color but was clearly not just a green sabal. The uresana was about 6' overall and the Bismarckia was closer to 10' in this pic At this point the bismarckia was trunking and growth was accelerating and here is the pic from june 2015. The uresana not trunking was putting more leaves for a bigger crown About 4 years later the uresana had lengthened it leaves and had gone into trunking mode. It went skyward chasing the bismarckia but still 6-7 feet over all behind the biz in height Last week I took another pic and noticed about a 10' gap even though the uresana had sped up and grown to about 25' tall. compared with 35' for the bismarckia I thought it was interesting that the growth burst of each happened at trunking, as we are often told by the literature. Yes even sabal uresana grows well after trunking. I also though it is interesting to note that Sabal Uresana has a wider crown, that was a surprise. I had always thought Bismarckia would be wider as it throws more shade but its a couple fee less in width of the crown. The Uresana crown is more open though, and it took a lot less damage than the Bismarckia in hurricane Milton(oct2024). Part of the lesser damage suffered by uresana could be due to less wind damage as there are higher wind velocities at height, but also part might be the Uresana having an open crown with smaller leaves that have less wind drag. I do think Uresanas will have more blue than mine in a drier hot climate. Bismarckias are very versatile, they don't need much fertilizer and mostly they are self shedding. Just keep them happy and the weevils wont come to dinner(I had a sick one attacked by weevils and killed). I treated the Uresana same as Bismarckia, limited fertilizer compared with my other palms The Uresana has persistent leaf bases which are still strongly attached near the ground. Since I do the trimming, I am happy that Uresana is a slower grower, as the Bismarckia is now too tall for me to trim from the ground. And the Bismarckia(female) is a mess, dropping 150-200 lbs of seed a year. I just got done raking up half a trash can full of Bismarckia fruits, and there is at least that much still hanging on the tree. Uresana has not fruited yet at 15 yrs. Sabals are notorious for liking heat to grow fast and they both had plenty of Florida heat. For those thinking about Sabal Uresana, its not Bismarckia fast but its more of a medium grower for me after trunking.4 points
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Looking for advice on replacement palm trees
Private growers PLEASE! I concur with Merlyn. There are other growers but may need to drive a bit . Rancho Soledad Nursery may have them . Maybe @DoomsDave can get you some , he is in La Habra and has nice stuff! Dave is a super cool guy , very knowledgeable about our area , and he may introduce you to Conan the cat. I’ve gotten some very nice palms from him. Harry4 points
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Central Florida Palm & Cycad Society - Summer 2026 Meeting
Some photos of the Summer Meeting in Melbourne are attached below. A special thank you to @Jdash for hosting! It was great to see @PalmJuan , @kinzyjr , @chuckg , @CodyM , @Fishinsteeg234 , @Maddox Gardening-youtube , @rick , @D. Morrowii , @Midnight Gardener and plenty of others today.4 points -
Looking for advice on replacement palm trees
Howdy all! I just joined and hope I'm posting this in the right spot... I live in Orange County, California (zone 10b). I've owned the house for 20+ years now, and the 2 giant palm trees in my front yard are just getting too tall and too much to handle so I've decided to remove them (hopefully the picture comes through!). They require trimming every year (about $300), and during the summer they drip a fine mist of sap on any cars parked in the driveway. I had quotes from $2200 to $3800 to remove them with stump grinding, and the $2200 bid has tons of outstanding Yelp reviews, so the existing palms will be removed next week. I'm thinking I might replace them with a smaller and lower maintenance palm tree. After doing a few hours of research, it seems like either the Cuban Royal Palm or more likely the King Palm might be a good fit. Sounds like the Queen Palm might require more maintenance that I'd like to avoid. So anyway, I'd love to tap into the expertise of this group for any advice I might be able to get. I'm looking for recommendations on types of palm trees (and whether planting 2 together might make sense) and how easy it is to plant them yourself. The small lawn is on an automatic sprinkler system so the area gets plenty of water. Thanks!3 points
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Looking for advice on replacement palm trees
Palm plantation in Riverside is amazing, you don’t need to scout private sellers unless you want super rare palms. You can get a macrocarpa. I have one in the front. You can also do Dypsis Pembana which is beautiful palm.3 points
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Of course my absolute favourite chamaedorea adscendens
All throughout the garden, when I look at my garden from the outside I think I know what’s growing in the understory little beautiful plants all over the place! Richard3 points -
Chambeyronia about to flower
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Looking for advice on replacement palm trees
@OCKev not, I repeat, NOT Moon Valley. 🤣 I don't know any nurseries out there, but I have read enough horror stories about them. Jungle Music is highly regarded here, but I am not sure where they are compared to you.3 points -
Looking for advice on replacement palm trees
Yes , especially during Fall when the Santa Ana winds blow . Our humidity drops and the temperature climbs , sometimes into triple digits . Archontophoenix can burn too but not as bad as a moderately sized Chambey . @DoomsDave has a Chambey forest down in La Habra and they look awesome . He has a few varieties that have survived years there . I’m pretty sure they would survive at that spot in the OP’s driveway but there isn’t a lot of cooling from other plants and palms ( none ) . We certainly don’t have the humidity that you guys have most of the time . Harry3 points
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Cycad cones and flushes
3 pointsThis Encephalartos Longifolious x Horridus was buried behind other 15 gals. so I dug it out and trimmed the older leaves off to make room for the new flush. The new leaves are very fuzzy due to the Longifolious influence.3 points -
Looking for advice on replacement palm trees
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Looking for advice on replacement palm trees
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Looking for advice on replacement palm trees
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Pink Pseudobombax ellipticum fruit
2 pointsThinking this is more normal seed leaf color variance that will disappear once it starts producing out true leaves, rather than a sign of potential variegation ...that would carry on beyond this stage of development at least. If you see this occur as the seedling develops / adds additional sets of true leaves, that could be a sign of variegation.. Never heard of Pseudobombax producing variegated specimens but, that doesn't mean it can't do so either.2 points -
Chamaedorea cataractum aka cascade palm
In my modestly arid climate, they will live in full sun, but always look anemic. Plant under canopy and they look wonderful.2 points -
The beautiful lytocarum weddlianum
2 pointsA few seeds are setting on the lytocarum in garden. A fantastic palm that’s easy to grow. Super tough and very forgiving. I would say a bit slow growing to reach maturity in a subtropical climate. But once they get there they don’t look back. Very predictable and a great learning palm to grow, just put them in the shade as seedlings and away they grow.2 points -
Needle Palm 4 Years ago Vs. Now
2 pointsVery nice growth on that one! They truly are cold hardy palms . Harry2 points
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Needle Palm 4 Years ago Vs. Now
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Looking for advice on replacement palm trees
They look a bit like a king but have longer leaves by 1.5-2' or so and fatter leaflets, closer to C. macrocarpa. when we say "kings" we generally mean archontophoenix cunninghamiana but there are 6 different species of archontophoenix so a trade name cannot describe the available "kings". "kings" or "archies" available are cunninghamiana, alexandre, tuckeri, purpurea, myolensis, and maxima. The names can be a pain initially but its good to know what you are buying. Some archies are more sun tolerant than others, and some are more cold tolerant than others. A kentiopsis leaflet is thicker than archontophoenix, more of a leathery look. You will need to make sure you remove the roots of those monster washingtonias before planting and you will need to ammend to a rich soil as all the kings or "archies" and the chambeyronias are water lovers. If you want to avoid water loving palms there are many that are more adapted to hot and dry climates. I would talk to your local Socal palmtalkers(I second @DoomsDave) to get detailed advice on where to buy, and what to expect in terms of care(watering frequency, fertilizer) in your area.2 points
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Needle Palm 4 Years ago Vs. Now
2 pointsWell done! Their reputation for being slow-growing is well known, but yours is flourishing. Years ago (pre-internet, so YEARS ago) bought a needle palm seedling over the phone for 6B Connecticut. I asked about its growth rate. The seller quipped, “It’s a good palm for your grandchildren to enjoy in their old age.”2 points -
So What Caught Your Eye Today?
2 pointsRoscheria melanochaetes, growing into a solid seedling! And the dypsis manajarensis is not far behind!2 points -
Three great must have palms for the garden
Definitely clears the mind, I can find myself wandering all day in the garden doing things and just looking around tending to the plants, either planting, landscaping, watering, or in just a plain garden stupor having a great old Mother Nature memory melt away enjoying every minute of it! Nice garden Harry I can see the love and harmony that it gives oneself, what is it that they say om shanti! Richard2 points -
The beautiful lytocarum weddlianum
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So What Caught Your Eye Today?
2 pointsI pulled it out of the ground 27 years ago as baby seedling. And planted it as one of the original garden plants. I had a vision on that one and knew the look I was after! Richard2 points -
Can you help me save my potted areca palm?
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So What Caught Your Eye Today?
2 pointsDypsis lantzeana loving the cold weather, along with the triangle palm keeping the tree fern company!2 points -
Rhopalostylis sapida peeking out in glory
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Sabal Uresana Bismarckia growth comparison 15 years
Awesome and interesting comparison Thank you for sharing2 points
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Sago Questions
2 pointsThe short answer is yes, you can and should cut off the female seed cone. The plant is using up stored energy to grow seeds. It might kill it, but probably not. I have a big female sago as well, and I cut off the seed pod every spring. I use a sharp pair of shears, but a sharp hand lopper works too. Snip the "hand" shaped fans above the red line. There's no need to cut them super low, just snip below the fan shape at the stem. I snip the horrendously stabby thorns as well. Cutting the cone is slightly risky for infection, because it's a lot of small cuts. You could sprinkle the top with a fungicide like sulfur powder, or squirt with Daconil or similar. Cycads have "coralloid roots" around the base, generally just below ground level. As long as the top or trunk hasn't rotted, it is still gaining new energy every day and should flush eventually. But it might not be for a month or so.2 points -
Looking for advice on replacement palm trees
Wow, first thanks to you and everyone else for all of the fantastic advice! I'm learning more about palm trees than I ever thought I would. From the pictures, the Chambeyronia oliviformis looks very much like a king palm, but you're saying they don't grow as tall or as fast (but are taller than a flamethrower). My next mission will be to look up local nurseries here in Orange County (city of Orange to be specific) and see if they even carry some of these more exotic palms. Can anyone recommend a nursery that carries a variety of palms like the flamethrower?2 points
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Looking for advice on replacement palm trees
That's what I was wondering. I've grown Flamethrowers in full sun here in swampy FL, the only problem was exposure to frost and getting defoliated. But I've read a bunch of people having sunburn issues with them in full sun, both in Tampa and Miami, and also out in CA. One big connecting problem seemed to be planting near reflecting walls and lots of concrete, just amplifying the heat and torching them. But I've also seen some great photos in CA with literal forests of Chamberyonia, so it sure seems possible! @OCKev I'd also think about whether you want something that gets tall fast, or takes decades to get there, or stays somewhat short forever. For example, a common Bottle or Spindle might take 10-15 years to grow to roof height...but a King could get over-roof height in 3-5 years, depending on the size when you buy it. Likewise a Jubaea might take 20-30 years to get over roof height. Others like Parajubaea are quicker but the fronds might be too big for that area. A Butia (Pindo) would probably work in that spot too, and be quicker than a Jubaea. If you wanted a smaller palm the Pygmy Date (Phoenix Roebellini) or Chamaerops Humilis (European fan palm) are slow to gain height and pretty tough. If you want a BIG fan type palm that's slow to gain height, Copernicia Baileyana or Fallanesis or Gigas might work.2 points -
Looking for advice on replacement palm trees
Chambeyronia are very nice palms though, depending how far inland you are. They tend to burn easily in full sun until they get large , and even then. Slower growing palm and would grow in that spot but not as vigorously , quite a bit more $$ than Archontophoenix. Harry2 points
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Looking for advice on replacement palm trees
Archontophoenix would be decades before they hit 50’ but they do eventually I guess. The trimming of the inflorescence is up to you and are at the base of the crown shaft, so easy to get to with a pole saw for the first several years. Mine took 15 years before they flowered and not every year so not near the nuisance of the Queens. If you really like Royal Palms , the Oleracae that @JohnStraz suggested has a smaller presence and the fronds won’t smash a car to bits . They are a bit sensitive to cold and it would probably harder to locate one . They are beautiful palms though and I love mine. Depending on your particular climate could do very well . Harry A much smaller base on this 15+ year old Oleracae.2 points
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Looking for advice on replacement palm trees
Sounds like some of the old 'big box' standbys might be right up your alley. Pigmy date palms are available already planted in triples at any height you desire to start with at very reasonable prices. Mediterranean fan palm is another good choice, available in both blue or green colors. Neither species would grow over 10 ft high in the next 20 years. Here are my examples, both over 20 years in the ground. aztropic Mesa, Arizona2 points -
So What Caught Your Eye Today?
2 pointsThree palms for the future of the garden caught my eye! Lanonia calciphila licuala sallehana var sallehana Areca laosensis2 points -
So What Caught Your Eye Today?
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Sago Questions
1 pointYes , it's a girl. Technically it's a Megasporophyll Male penis is called a cone. I don't know know if cutting the Megasporophyll will induce a flush or not. The plant is drawing nutrients via the roots so that may be enough. Does the female flower photosynthesize,IDK? Unless you just don't like looking at it I'd leave it. Perhaps some of the cycad gurus can give some input @Merlyn @Tracy @GeneAZ1 point
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SUPER IMPORTANT - MAJOR IMPROVEMENTS TO PALMTALK
I often open PT using my iPhone and I am happy to see today there is a big improvement in speed of searches, editing, posting, looking for unread content etc. I know our moderator Palm Mod has been working many hours on our behalf to sort out issues arising after an important upgrade. Thank you! Anybody else now seeing speeds closer to what we had before the upgrade?1 point -
Chambeyronia about to flower
1 pointyes, I agree. The first 2 to 3 influorescence typically don't produce any fruits, but I am going to use my knowledge from hybridizing to try to store some pollen and then apply it once the females open, perhaps I can get a fruit set on the first or second influorescence.?.. JD1 point -
Chamaedorea cataractum aka cascade palm
Lots of people don’t realize that this species DOES actually form trunks.1 point -
2026_02 - Florida Palmageddon Observations and Damage Photo Thread
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Mississippi Squad
1 pointI didn't realize it's been so long since I posted an update here after years of daily updates. My brother got the central hvac replaced so I copped mom's window unit and put it in the grow room. The same grow room that I used to go check the heat every 2 hours, yes. If I was an intelligent and reasonable person I'd tie it to a smart plug and let it run for an hour or 2 before I planned to go out there, but if I was smart like that.....anyway. The heat index in there regularly hits 130, I've been trying to keep some rehabs in there but it might be time to load them on a tray and put them outside where the heat index is only 105 or so. I've made a few more sales, I tried a Whatnot live show but their shipping absolutely sucks unless you're selling tissue cultures and plugs. I've since figured it out but I stand on the hill that it sucks. They also promise the world to new sellers and deliver on nothing. I've also been dabbling with various fertilizers and stuff - it's super cool when everything wants a different fertilizer and a different ratio and this one also wants this and that one also wants this and everything gets cal mag and I'm mixing a gallon at a time so I'm too impatient to add the silica since it takes 20-30 minutes to properly absorb into the water and blah blah blah. Anyway let me see if I can just photo bomb for those of you who boldly and bravely refuse to submit to the evil empire. I salute you. I am @sanchosgreenpaws on Instagram and Sancho B Plants on the world's largest collection of AI slop and user tracking for those who care. That Thai Giant is just insane. I have a couple more that are taking an eternity to sprout and a couple smaller ones, and they've been getting weekly feedings of 20-10-20. I just haven't had the energy to dig holes, but I need to dig a lot of holes. I need to build some trellis for the dragonfruits, they haven't even seen full sun yet and they're going insane. Hibiscus has chosen to remain a stick. The 5g Alocasia Batik is INSANE, I thought I was done rearranging lights until it got cool. I've got a 1g I should flip before it gets any bigger, and it ain't gonna be cheap. I've also snatched up a couple Portora and what we believe are Regal Shields, others have said Buddha's Hand. They came from Wal-Mart so I'm more likely to believe Regal Shields and of course I go through all the pots looking for multiples. My alleged Regal Shields had 2, straight to 1g pots in evening sun. The portora has a total of 7 (!) Pups, got a Stingray, I forgot the name of the gigantic yellow one, a couple Yucatan Princess, 2 Sebrina, a Zebrina, pink dragon, several Cuprea, Macro Camouflage, there's..... there's a lot. Unfortunately it seems like most sellers harvest corms before shipping after they advertise it as a corming plant so they can kinda go to hell for that. I'd do the same, i just wouldn't advertise it as a corming plant. I have a few I've grown from corms, I've got some corms marinating but my confidence isn't high - they're from a big box Melo that was on a shelf a few plants down from the worst mealybug infestation I've ever seen and i still paid $10. Whatever. Anyway, Sancho is on thyroid pills now so he's up to 8 pills and 2 supplements a day, he's catching up to me but he's got a ways to go. On top of all of my mystery health problems, now I've lost a lot of flexibility and mobility in my left hip literally overnight. The physical therapist won't see me until I have coverage, I've been on hospital charity. Hospital says I need to apply for Medicaid, Medicaid denied me because they're waiting on the state and SSDI, and bless my Dr- I was telling him about all this and he just bumped my anxiety meds up. So anyway there's that.1 point -
Pinanga Coronata - 1 year of growth!
Here’s the 2 year update on these Pinanga Coronata. In just 2 years these have gone from 1 gallon plants to seed producing adults! And I’m happy to announce that they are fully blocking the road now which was the goal! 5 gallon paint bucket for scale: Removed the grass that was in between these clumps and made a planter which is filling in nicely. fast growing 11 year old daughter for scale view from the road above thanks for looking! P.S. I’ll probably be offering some seed from these in the future if there’s any interest.1 point -
Pinanga Coronata - 1 year of growth!
Pretty steady for me, worry-free and just so dang gorgeous in shade here in SoCal. As they've grown into some sun, they've seemed to tolerate it moderately well. July 2014: Present day:1 point