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Showing content with the highest reputation on 11/19/2025 in Posts
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7 points
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I love these posts. I can never get enough of the red. I only get to see mine when I’m on the roof now that it’s squirting out the hole I made for it. I missed it at its reddest but I am happy to see that it’s finally starting to acclimate to full sun. It has had a rough go since popping through the roof. Summer heat would burn it and winter frost would hit just as it thought it was in the clear.6 points
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Wow two months is a long while to hold a redder! I think that the day length influences red duration more than temperatures. I’ve had hookeri throw redder in November that lasted red for almost two weeks, even when it hit the 90s for days on end. (Not happening this year!)5 points
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Yeah. It turned silver on top when it Al was about 3-4 feet tall. I between the pleats it stays a little greenish. I’m hoping it will flower soon. It seems to be about the size I’ve seen them flower in habitat (I’ve seen photos only. Not in person). I can only get a good pic of the top now when I’m on the roof. I blew it I guess because I was up there this weekend hanging Christmas lights. Here’s a few shots from tonight. You can see the tops a bit from this angle.4 points
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This is the 5th winter in the ground. The " Love Palm" (there's a story there) was purchased as a juvenile at a Home Depot in 2012. It has lived in two apartments, a town house, an office, briefly in a storage unit and in a garage before putting down roots five years ago. On nights below 29 or so it gets the Christmas lights and blankets treatment. Last winter we had snow on the ground for about three days and since the fronds are now way up there and too high for my ladder, I was unable to protect them. It experienced about 80% defoliation. But here we are in November and looking pretty good. The Washingtonia next to it was two feet tall five years ago. I can't protect it because it's so covered with thorns that any fabric would come off in shreds but it's been fine against that south facing wall.4 points
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I don't approve of naming plants for persons, although this is common. I prefer the 'old school' practice where the species epithet refers to a unique or distinctive detail of the plant. Dr. Croat observed that he had never seen a species in the Belolonchium section with green berries. Therefore it was my wish that it be named Anthurium 'green berries', (in Latin). So, Dr. Croat and Dr. Hodel honored my wish for the name.4 points
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Like Harry, I was drawn to the site of a rainbow 🌈 visible from my walkway, looking west. Unfortunately, to get to the end of this rainbow, I would need to dawn my wetsuits and paddle out to find it. After all the pollution runoff, I will wait a couple of days before returning to the ocean. The palms lining my walkway were also a draw for my eyes.4 points
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Nice one, I thought @tim_brissy_13 packed his plants in, I take it you have a suburban backyard as well as Tim. Oh I love having freedom to plant in my garden. Only trouble is the bigger the garden the more work!3 points
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Fear not it will toughen up a lot as it gets older and bigger.3 points
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I’ve noticed a number of past “regulars” here that haven’t posted much lately seem to show up on the Facebook International Palm Society page more regularly.3 points
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@Tracy Very nice! I love the gate you have , the palms are beautiful. Somebody beat me to the pot of gold! ( stinking leprechauns ) . Too cold to paddle out up here , even with a 3/3 Psycho. Harry3 points
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Maybe it is time for some update The last freeze was in 2018 and the "jungle" is getting nice, maybe a bit out of control Archontophoenix cunninghamiana, with only 1,2 meter of stem, it is flowering continuously Another Archontophoenix, probably x albang Butiagrus Bismarckia Beccariophoenix alfredii Caryota obtusa Brahea armata Chrysalidocarpus decaryi Brahea edulis Copernicia alba I will post more later3 points
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I have two specimens in the ground one definitely a hookeri the other probably not . (On the left the hookeri) The hookeri produced a very colorful leaf in autumn (Pictures of front and backside) while the other one produced a leaf during summer which far less and only partly colorful and color lasted for a very short time, one day or two) And one specimen still in pot in my cold frame opened a new leaf about two weeks later after hookeri. It is supposedly 5he watermelon variety3 points
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It’s one beautiful palm. Such beautiful colours. It splits the trunks so technically not a clumping palm iam sure peachy would love it! Richard3 points
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Looking out 10AM today 7 days after opening and the transmitted red light is as good as it gets. Winters here are great for these palms, summer they hold spears and sit there and are short lived in color. When the wind blows, the leaves exhibiting transmitted red vary kind of like a flame. But they are slow growing, 3-4 leaves a year at this size.3 points
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I agree that direct , full day sun , reduces the color and length of time that the new frond has . Mine is in full sun almost all day and the red leaf only lasts 3-4 days . I am inland so it is warm here , not like near the coast . With regular flood watering and a bit of organic fertilizer , the burning has been significantly reduced and the palm looks much better than previous summers . The “ red leaf” still doesn’t last but a few days . I only have the one Macrocarpa , no Hookeri . Harry ‘The new frond shows a burgundy color but only lasts a few days. I will say , these palms get huge fronds when they mature. Mine is getting a flower spathe this year.3 points
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Some intresting stuff popping up this week. The warm weather is making a difference for the licuala varieties, some licuala seem to take forever and a day. While there no instagram pics, there on there way and that’s what makes the difference they have begun germination so no dud batch’s of seeds and great sign!2 points
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It doesn’t have to be fast car, just as long as it gets you from A to B oh and to happypalms nursery and back! Richard2 points
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I most certainly did get a few from those seeds, and they are still popping up now the Oraniopsis, very sporadic germination!2 points
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One of my hookeris exhibits a dark red from one direction and brilliant flame from the other. Sun at your back is not nearly as stunning as palm between you and the sun. I was advised here that the macrocarpa hookeri was a deeper from red than the regular macrocarpas by those with experience here. Last sunday the leaf opened and a 5 days later its seen 39 degrees 2 nights and is looking great. WInter and shade seem to make these palms stay red longer in my yard, even more true for the regular macrocarpa which for me turns fast to salmon green in 4 days or less. sun at my back its a dark red/maroon leaf seconds later the 180 degree view shows the "flame" the palm is known for with a transmitted light that is a brighter red.2 points
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Still here and just posting less frequently. That's partially due to "finishing" my yard and moving on to other big tasks, and partially because a certain member keeps "spamming the board" with 20 or so new and yet somehow highly repetitive topics per day.2 points
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We're all here. It's Fall... Winter coming up. Most places get cold and slow down a bit i reckon JD2 points
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@Than Thank you. The wall helps, but it has provided a false sense of confidence. I have unsuccessfully tried zone pushing skinny robustas and a majesty palm in the past. Tarp covering on a really cold night is now my protection limit. I have a regular white Nerium Oleander and a “Petite Red” oleander. I trim the petite red every year a bit, but it doesn’t get much taller than what you see. I have thought about removing it due to space constraints, but I love the flowers plus it helps support the fronds on my Butia (hybrid?) The white oleander is a monster at about 15’.2 points
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I ordered my watermelon chambeyronia today! I just couldn't keep looking at your photos and knowing I ain't got one of these beauties in my life!2 points
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i completely understand that. became good news ... Incidentally, according to ETH Zurich, where an acquaintance of mine used to work, the climate in Switzerland appears to be warming significantly. Less air pollution leads to clearer air, which in turn leads to stronger solar radiation throughout the year, which in turn leads to warmer temperatures, as he wrote in a short e-mail this morning ...2 points
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It seems that there is variability in both. My best color on my plants comes on the Chambeyronia hookeri forms and they seemed to perform better at younger ages in more sun than the macrocarpa. My only hookeri in my garden here in Leucadia just opened a new frond a couple of days ago but there are no sunbeams coming through to uplight or backlight the leaflets right now, only clouds and rain.2 points
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Coincidentally I just watched that last night. My Youtube algorithm is getting to know me a lot better 🙄1 point
