Skip to content
View in the app

A better way to browse. Learn more.

PalmTalk

A full-screen app on your home screen with push notifications, badges and more.

To install this app on iOS and iPadOS
  1. Tap the Share icon in Safari
  2. Scroll the menu and tap Add to Home Screen.
  3. Tap Add in the top-right corner.
To install this app on Android
  1. Tap the 3-dot menu (⋮) in the top-right corner of the browser.
  2. Tap Add to Home screen or Install app.
  3. Confirm by tapping Install.

Leaderboard

  1. sonoranfans

    sonoranfans

    IPS MEMBER
    3
    Points
    6,164
    Posts
  2. kinzyjr

    kinzyjr

    IPS MEMBER
    2
    Points
    6,822
    Posts
  3. Ben G.

    Ben G.

    IPS MEMBER
    2
    Points
    760
    Posts
  4. Jim in Los Altos

    Jim in Los Altos

    IPS MEMBER
    2
    Points
    5,583
    Posts

Popular Content

Showing content with the highest reputation on 07/19/2026 in Posts

  1. Looking Glass
    1 point
    My house has changed after 5 years on this forum…. It’s a jungle out there. (After many holes dug, a truckload of fertilizer and mulch, and a zillion gallons of water) Thanks for all the assistance.
  2. kinzyjr
    1 point
    @Looking Glass Everything looks great! Keep up the great work!
  3. Merlyn
    1 point
    I was pretty sure that I remembered you planting Princeps. Maybe mine are just runts, or maybe they gain speed once trunking, or maybe the limestone really helps! I haven't noticed any deficiencies in mine, just using generic fertilizer. It also could be that mine get burnt to the ground almost every single winter... 🤣
  4. Brad52
    Fresh Pnanga caesia again today…
  5. Ben G.
    1 point
    I am in the Cibolo/Schertz area northeast of San Antonio.
  6. Ben G.
    1 point
    Just a few midsummer yard shots from today: Starting with the biggest and the fastest...my filifera continues to grow larger by the day: Next, we will see the smallest and slowest growers I have in the ground, a couple of Trachycarpus fortunei x waggies: Both are growing fine...just quite slowly. They sit on the east side of my home and I am planning to remove the grass in this entire area in the fall to create a nice bed. Right next to the back porch I have a corner with 3 C. radicalis in it. One mature non-trunking form, a juvenile trunking form, and second year from seed non-trunking form: The rest of that same bed is occupied by my Rajapuri bananas and some dypsis lutescens that I grew from seed my daughter collected on a past vacation: My Sabal mexicanas that both spear pulled last winter after 20F and freezing rain (had to trunk cut the second one) : My Butia that also had to be trunk cut after the freezing rain: Silver Chamaerops, P. sylvestris, and second year mule seedling: From left to right C. radicalis seedlings, BxJ, and S. mexicana community pot. And the mule that replaced my Butia in the ground after the spear pull and trunk cutting: I know it should be less hardy than the Butia, but it is definitely getting established quicker. Fingers crossed for a winter or two of zonal average lows and no freezing precipitation so it can really get going strong.
  7. Tracy
    This plant I acquired as Encephalartos arenarius × woodii has been a vigorous grower. I planted it in late 2010 from a 15 gallon. The id might be incorrect as it could be arenarius × natalensis but I still find it's glossy dark green leaflets attractive. It is different than an Encephalartos natalensis × arenarius I planted a little before this one, which is growing in my Carlsbad property. This is the first flush on it this summer. I expect all the other pups and main caudex growth point to follow soon. I removed a few leaves today to allow this flush space to push up.
  8. gyuseppe
    Konstantinos I would add that rhapidophyllum also behaves like this
  9. sonoranfans
    On the news, st petersburg got 5" yesterday with flooding. More moisture coming this week is the prediction.
  10. kinzyjr
    My stations are currently showing totals between 5.5 and 6.5 inches of rain so far. Hopefully we'll finally have an above average month to put a dent in the drought deficit we've had.
  11. sonoranfans
    We finally had some more rain, more than half an inch the last two days. Just 12 miles north in ruskin they got 3". Im hoping for more today.
  12. Gitano Iwan
    My dear palm friends! I water my palm now every evening when the hot sun is gone! And see what happened... Thank you all for helping me!
  13. Jim in Los Altos
    Pretty common in parts of Northern CA as well. Archotophoenix cunninghamiana is by far the fastest growing palm up here as long as they get plenty of water. There are quite a few mature ones throughout my neighborhood.
  14. tim_brissy_13
    There’s S romanzoffiana in Melbourne pushing 150 years old. I’d assume they can get much older than this if they don’t encounter lightning or other extreme weather events. This one doesn’t have a plaque from memory, but others a similar size in the Melbourne Bptakic Gardens were planted in the late 1800s. This one dwarves the nearby Phoenix canariensis. I’d say it’s at least 20m/70’ tall at a guess.
  15. FlaPalmLover
    1 point
    Did you transplant the satakentia from a nursery? Your yard kind of looks like it could've been generated by AI. Hopefully that bismarck won't become a lightning rod.
  16. Robert Cade Ross
    1 point
    The Verizon over in Galveston randomly has at least 3 uresana planted in the parking lot lol .
  17. Meangreen94z
    1 point
    Another one of my Sabal uresanas . This one sourced from NTCHP right before they went out of business
  18. DoomsDave
    Just a quick note: The Palm Society of Southern California is having a meeting in Fallbrook tomorrow: Garden No. 1: Nick Quinn's garden: 310 Burma Road, Fallbrook CA 92028 Garden No. 2: John and Leland Otto, at 1617 Prince Street, Fallbrook CA 92028 Both are LARGE LOTS; Mr. Quinn has critters, including parrots and emus! Hope you can make it!
  19. idontknowhatnametuse
    I have had no good experience with malayan dwarves. They get damaged very easily. My Orange Panama Tall has had no damage in drops to temperatures like 4⁰C. And only minor spotting in older fronds with -1⁰C.
  20. Maddox Gardening-youtube
    Here is another update: since march is has grown 4 new frawnds not all are opened but has lost a decent amount also due to stress. I am going to strap a clear giant plant sic tarp over the coconut tree since there are 3 surrounding trees where I could attach a tarp to each corner of a tarp. For the winter, I am also going to line the perimeter with 50 gallon water barrels. My royal survived yet quit growing in may, my archontopheonix maxima and tuckeri are doing good, and my mango+star fruit survived
  21. Merlyn
    1 point
    @Looking Glass looks awesome! The growth rate on your palms is way better than most of mine, especially the Gaussia Princeps near the walkway. At least I think that's what they are. I have a bunch of them and they are all slugs...barely more than a foot tall after 5ish years. What kind of roids are you feeding them?!? 🤣
  22. Kim
    1 point
    You radical, you! 🤣 All that in 5 years is really impressive. Excellent choices, too!
  23. sonoranfans
    1 point
    The garden creates a beautiful space with more privacy, an outdoor living space. A well planted and spaced outdoor garden makes the lot feel bigger with privacy and height. We are of the same mind there. Your growth is excellent, keep doing what you are doing. I started about 15 years a go and added palms more slowly I think. Parts of Florida can give really fast growth. If my experience is like what you will see in the future 10 years, you should expect a lot of height. Palms that don't grow so fast(like the pseudophoenix) will balance out the garden canopies in 10 years as things get more height. As for selling the house, every day there has been made more special by the gardening effort. I find my garden very calming, a place to sit and relax. It is my blood pressure medication, and a much more healthy option in personal healthcare. Every couple years I will plant something small out now. Most of what I plant now will be slow growing and will not attain much height. I do have a few volunteers I may let go to maturity though.
  24. happypalms
    They grow by the thousands in my area. Just about every part of the subtropical rainforest you go into they are there. Often seen growing with Livistona Australis and linospadix monostachya and lepidozamia peroffskyana in their habitat. You have some great Australian palms there !
  25. Tracy
    I can't answer about the bottom end temperature that Encephalartos sclavoi will handle because I don't ever get frost on any plants in my garden. Mine does appreciate some shade. The shaded side holds it's green leaves longer with the sunnier side showing some decline earlier on old flushes. Here are some updated photos as he pushes out seven new cones.
  26. flplantguy
    1 point
    I'm about 2 years and multiple freezes behind you, and it shows! Great looking garden, hopefully for many years to come!
  27. realarch
    1 point
    Good job, that Pseudophoenix is the bomb. Tim
  28. SeanK
    1 point
    Is there still a house on the property?
  29. Harry’s Palms
    As was said , the watering is key . Also , when you get ready to plant , be careful with the root ball . The less you disturb this palm , the faster it will acclimate when it goes in the ground. Harry
  30. wimmie
    How much proof of this palm being a "wetneck" do you need!😎
  31. happypalms
    They love there water, as suggested above. Your little palm has been on the dry side of life. In habitat they thrive in wet gullies creek beds, almost cool temperate conditions in dark shaded areas. They break through the canopy and take all the sun they can get, while there root system is in dark forest wet conditions. They dislike drying out.
  32. Jim in Los Altos
    They can easily live to 100 years or more in a mild climate. There are healthy Queen palms in my area that were planted in the 1950s. Perhaps what you read pertained to lightning strikes when the palms are big since you’re in Florida. Lightning is exceptionally rare here.
  33. ExperimentalGrower
    After much commentary via social media and palmtalkers, it appears I too, may have a hybrid. Hybrid vigor seems to prevail with mine. I’ve seen much more rapid growth than what others describe DD as having, also this one has been quicker than my pure onhilahensis. Some suggested maybe it’s a hybrid of DD x lutescens. But in Northern California D. lutescens is a disaster. They can’t handle the cool wet. I have one as protected as I can offer, in a pot, up on a high deck. It’s the worst looking palm I have by far. The one in the pictures has never blinked an eye at the cool wet weather which makes me think it could be a DD x onhilahensis hybrid. I hope that’s it! Just planted in my yard this week, after seeing it triple in size over two years in a pot, and it’s looking like it is about to split into a quad!
  34. metalfan
    For the first time in 15 years I am beginning to question my choice of placement in a corner of the greenhouse for this palm

Account

Navigation

Configure browser push notifications

Chrome (Android)
  1. Tap the lock icon next to the address bar.
  2. Tap Permissions → Notifications.
  3. Adjust your preference.
Chrome (Desktop)
  1. Click the padlock icon in the address bar.
  2. Select Site settings.
  3. Find Notifications and adjust your preference.