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Leaderboard

  1. happypalms

    happypalms

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  2. DoomsDave

    DoomsDave

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  3. Harry’s Palms

    Harry’s Palms

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  4. Merlyn

    Merlyn

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Popular Content

Showing content with the highest reputation on 06/02/2026 in Posts

  1. happypalms
    A few future generations of palms! Dypsis confusa Calyptrocalyx hollrungii Hydriastele kaesialicuala cabaloni Kentiopsis piersonorium reinhardtia gracilis Chuniophoenix nana
  2. happypalms
    Variegated lanonia dasyantha still growing true!
  3. 96720
    @SCVpalmenthusiast they wont take our full blazing sun in Phoenix I love the palm I have 3 but have killed 5 trying to grow 1 in full sun!!!
  4. Merlyn
    And here's a totally unexpected success story! I planted three clusters of Ptychosperma Salomonense last April as pretty small palms. One triple cluster completely died, but this pair look good with several new leaves: And this triple still has 2 good looking survivors! The vast majority of other small seedlings of other species all died, but 4 of 8 is remarkably good for unprotected 1' tall seedlings at 22.5F!
  5. happypalms
    I might have to drag @DoomsDave in on this one and see if he has an idea as to if my one is similar to the one he has and gave you seeds from his palm.
  6. happypalms
    If it’s blackie I wonder if it will look like the one I have.
  7. Brad52
  8. kinzyjr
    The month of May finished with ~3.5 inches of rain, slightly lower than average. Disappointing, but not unexpected. The average for June is ~8.7 inches here. We got ~ 0.5 in. yesterday. Thankful for that much at least, as the last few days have been cloudy all day with no payoff. <vent> The weather forecast for my region has followed the same general pattern for the last four years: 48 hours out: 90% chance of rain 24 hours out: 50% chance of rain Daily: Rain expected to start in 2 hours. Daily - 2 hours later: Rain possible this afternoon. Daily - late afternoon version 1: Rain possible tomorrow. Daily - late afternoon version 2: Rain expected to stop in the at _______ (fill in blank with time half hour later) NOTE: It never started raining. Let me know when it starts and I'll worry about when it stops after that. If it does break character and rain, then we usually get multiple inches of rain in one go and then it doesn't rain again for 2-4 weeks - unless we have a CFPACS meeting 🤣 . During the no rain stretch, it's unbearably hot (97F-103F, with humidity >= 80%) because we have horizon-to-horizon sun and no cool down from our formerly daily showers. </vent> Anyway, hope the drought really does break this year. We could use it for all of the stuff recovering from February's visit from old man winter.
  9. Harry’s Palms
    2 points
    For whatever reason , they are inconsistant here . Some are beautiful and growing strong , others just die. I have two small ones in the ground right now that are growing well but I lost two large ones that were planted out . One was growing well for over 7 years . My friend , a few blocks away , has a huge one that produces viable seed . He planted two , one died within the first few years . Good luck with yours @Palms1984 but I would not expect recovery on that one. Harry
  10. happypalms
    X2 that’s pretty fair I would say, and I do trades for the the good old treddly or in my day we called them the deadly treadly. I still remember going to the swimming hole in the creek after school and making a jump so we could jump our bikes into the creek, we trashed our BMX bikes and loved it. Or better yet doubling your girlfriend around on the pedally now those were the days!!! Richard
  11. happypalms
    Nice one a great way to get a few palms growing, a true Johnny apple seed!
  12. Husain
    Hybrid latania new frond
  13. realarch
    I would agree with ‘the other Tim,’ in that C. pembana has flatter, wider pinnae than C. cabade. I used to have a C. pembana which was removed. it was a more robust palm and a prolific clumper. The C. cabade, I used to have two, both bifurcated only once and grew rapidly with thinner trunks and ‘V’ shaped leaves. The remaining C. cabade, with two trunks, have grown into tall skinny specimens. Tim
  14. DoomsDave
    It’s pretty but I’m pretty sure it’s not a blackii. Leaves and general configuration are totally different.
  15. Harry’s Palms
    Yes , @DoomsDave is very knowledgeable on this palm . Hopefully Dave can shed some light on this for you on the palm you have. Harry
  16. PR00636
    I visited The Huntington yesterday and took a picture of their large clump of R humilis, and a closeup of the leaves, so yes, probably that clump I have in Puerto Rico most resembles Rhapis humilis. Now I have another rhapis across from it on the other side of the path. I'll be posting images of that one soon to help solve the species mystery.
  17. happypalms
    I like winter, I can get my projects done. Building is a lot easier in winter especially sheds and roofs. And the plants get to relax from heat. I can’t be breaking out in a sweat in the garden working to hard we can’t have that in a modern world. Richard
  18. Looking Glass
    Whelp, this year everybody is flowering. I changed fertilizing around a little and that seemed to do something maybe, to several palms in the yard. Tons of flowers… and mess and seeds. Now three of the Pseudophoenix are flowering this year. I plan to cut them off before the seeds come, but after the stalks mature. The one-Armed Bandit is making another 4 flower stalks…. Charlie Brown’s Christmas Tree is making a few… This fast-growning subspecies turned out to be a slow poke, but an early flowerer… These two regulars out grow it by far, but no flowers yet. I am starting to think the Pseudophoenix Decline is strongly associated with flowering. It is a disease of only mature Pseudophoenix, and the flower stalks definitely create gaps in the crown that collect water all year. The stalk later dies off, and rots under fronds that won’t drop and reveal them for 1year+ sometimes. This seems to accelerate rotting and subsurface damage to the crown. I continue to treat prophylacticly with Daconil, but it’s getting close… where flower stalks sat pressed against the crown all year. I suspect this will turn into an observational study of Pseudophoenix Decline as these age and out grow my ability to treat topically as the gain height. They are already too tall for me to reach the spear. This area of damage penetrated the leaf base/wrap where a flower stalk was pressed all year.
  19. SCVpalmenthusiast
    What about an alfredii? I was deciding a few months ago, and im glad I chose the alfredii. Its an elegant palm with beautiful pinnate fronds.
  20. realarch
    Bloom time for the Coelogyne In the garden. Tim
  21. aztropic
    Definitely worth a try if you can plant it on an eastern exposure, between houses, or under a covered patio so that it will have minimum exposure to our afternoon summer sun. I have one on the south side of my house that has been in the ground from a 5 gallon for over 20 years. It has completely defoliated at least 3 times over the years due to winter freezes,but has always come back. Be aware that most foxtails you will find for sale in the valley of the sun are recent Florida imports that are coming from humid South Florida,and have never experienced the extreme heat and single digit humidity levels of the valley. Every plant is an individual with its own genetics, and some may not be able to adapt to the new extremes before calling it quits. aztropic Mesa, Arizona
  22. PalmsandLiszt
    My guess is that it protects the apical meristem & soft, developing fronds/flowers from grazers/insects. Once fronds are fully hardened off they are less palatable. Much the same reason why many palms have red emergent fronds (red leaves resemble brown, dead leaves in monochrome, keeping herbivores away from leaves that have yet to harden off). Not sure how they would help in wind storms; if anything, one might expect an adaptation against wind would allow the wind to pass through more easily, not the opposite.
  23. Harry’s Palms
    This was in December of last year . A spathe finally opened and the flowers were beautiful , but no fruit. Harry
  24. happypalms
    Thanks Hussain, just living the dream of gardening at its finest!
  25. happypalms
    This cycas was a gift from a friend, it was too top heavy for him to pick up after it kept on falling over. Planted about 2 years ago and it has had a good flush of leaves, which leaves me wondering what is this cycas varietie!
  26. Harry’s Palms
    A while ago @DoomsDave sent me some seeds . The first three batches were Chamaedorea Oblongata , Ptychosperma Caryotoid , and Chrysalidiocarpus Blacki. When I was taking the lids off to check moisture I think I may have mixed up the lids to the containers . The id was written on the top. I’m fairly confident they are not Chamaedorea . Harry trying show seed sorry , dirty hands. Been gardening Thanks for whatever help you can give . Dave said wait until it shows a jagged leaf edge . He’s leaning towards Dypsis/Chrysalidiocarpus. The pot in front has the two smallest sprouts . Happy with the yield on this micro batch. Harry
  27. flplantguy
    Any leaf litter from trees or soil in the crown can do it too, mine is done from being laid down in the nursery before i bought it 3 years ago. All the fronds from then on had issues, i just thought it would grow out of it. Like you say, they dont drop old leaves fast enough. Not sure what to do with my others now, since the open yard will get frost most years. Hopefully yours are fast enough to push it aside
  28. DoomsDave
    Only trouble with that idea is that most of the time the fruit hangs down below the crownshaft, which therefore isn't much of a deterrent, unless whatever it is that wants to eat the fruit is coming down from the crown of leaves.
  29. Hillizard
    First year of multiple blooms on my Brachychiton discolor and on the skyrocketing shoot from the rootstock of my dwarf grafted Jacaranda plant.
  30. Harry’s Palms
    Like the thorns and needles on other palms . A defense mechanism? Harry
  31. Husain
    Pritchardia pacifica opening a new frond
  32. happypalms
    Geonoma pycnostachys, I absolutely love this palm!
  33. happypalms
  34. happypalms
    Dypsis black stem, not black petiole.
  35. Harry’s Palms
    Ouch! Those were expensive at that size. I do think they can be moved out of the way of the power poles. They haven’t been in the ground that long. It ain’t gonna be cheap though. Harry
  36. happypalms
    You can see why they call the cabadae the blue cane palm, very distinctive colour.
  37. Harry’s Palms
    Yes , and then , if the palm has fruit , it can take more than a year for them to turn red! Red is good.👍 Harry
  38. Harry’s Palms
    Thank you for the response . I was pretty sure I had the lids right but couldn’t be certain. Learning as I go. Either way I am stoked. Now , if they survive the transition into the pots …… Harry🤞
  39. DoomsDave
    Patience Grasshopper! Soon enough you’ll be up to your eye teeth in seeds. I concur with @Harry’s Palms .
  40. aabell
    I would say I'm 90% sure that those are Chrysalidocarpus over Ptychosperma.
  41. DoomsDave
    One thing I can promise: they won’t be ugly! I’d never send anyone ugly palm seeds, or seeds to ugly palms.
  42. DoomsDave
  43. DoomsDave
    I’d say that’s a pembana, @Cape Garrett ! They kinda sit awhile then EXPLODE in height. Here’s some of mine after about 10-15 years in the ground.
  44. Harry’s Palms
    The Roystonia Oleracae is a better alternative to the Regia , in areas that can grow them . The fronds are no more deadly than a large Archontophoenix. True , not quite the statement as a Regia , but very nice looking palm with a more slender trunk . They are , as our friend @DoomsDave says , “swamp things” . Meaning they love tons of water . Harry
  45. Harry’s Palms
    @Tyrone i hope you have success , they are lovely palms . The R. Regia has proven to be quite resilient here in Southern California . I just didn’t have room at the time . It had to be tough to have your prior collection removed by the new owners. My old house still has a lot of the palms I planted 30 years ago. Every time I pass by on my way home , I get a smile . I was only there 7 years so a lot of my collection was still potted and got planted here . I don’t know if the greenhouse is still in the backyard , I really miss that feature. Harry
  46. Harry’s Palms
    My Roystonia Oleracae drops its fronds on occasion . I try to cut the fronds from the base prior to it happening to reduce the risk of any damage to my other palms. The Oleracae isn’t nearly as heavy as Regia ( also a bit more tender to grow) . I chose it because it is not as massive as the Regia . The tree is getting to the point of being too tall to reach though. Harry This was a couple of winters ago after a trimming of the Syagrus on the left . I was told that it would not survive in my area so I planted it under the Queen Palm for a bit of protection.
  47. Harry’s Palms
    Very nice !! Those fronds can be dangerous if they fall at the wrong time. They can also wipe out understory plants. Harry
  48. happypalms
    We need somewhere to post the brom flowers!
  49. Looking Glass
    The One Armed Bandit’s first flower spathes (two) are emerging this week. Will be interesting to see what they do over time.
  50. Mytropicalyard
    ***update*** my burnt palm pushed out a new leaf. I have kept this palm under a shade cloth, 50% shade. It has thrived in that environment and the burning has stopped. Meanwhile the new leaf was slowly growing and here it is.

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