@Rtwilson8 it does look a bit splotchy, but that can also happen after a few minutes of air exposure. I just cut down a triple Foxtail last night. It was 100% defoliated in February's record freeze, and just never recovered. Here's a classic Thielaviopsis symptom, rust colored bleeding from the trunk: And a cut section of trunk with random dark splotches around the perimeter. It should be consistent pale off-white, like most of the middle. This one is infected, but it hasn't progressed too far yet. It's still d-e-d, but just not as visually obvious what killed it: The smaller of the three was really bad. This is about 2-3ft above ground level and ~5ft below the top of the crownshaft: And near ground level on the same palm. Normally with a Thielaviopsis infection it'll start looking more clean white near the bottom. This one looks just as bad. It may be that it's just been dead for a couple of months, or that it's actually got a Ganoderma infection. I could take a sample and send it to the local State AG department for analysis, but I'm just going to take out as much of the rootball as possible. I probably will NOT plant another palm in this spot, just in case. Thielaviopsis is floating around in the air all the time, but Ganoderma can stay resident in the soil for decades. I'll probably plant an Encephalartos Whitelockii here, or divide the Bambusa Textilis "Ladyfinger" from next to it. If you decide to take a sample, I think either the Gainesville IFAS/UFL lab tests them, or https://agronomy.ifas.ufl.edu/media/agronomyifasufledu/turfgrass-science/-rtd/rtd-pdfs/UFPDC-Form-Sample-Submission-General.pdf Or halfway down this page the AG department will ID samples: https://www.fdacs.gov/Agriculture-Industry/Pests-and-Diseases/Plant-Pests-and-Diseases/How-to-Submit-a-Sample-for-Identification