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Showing content with the highest reputation on 02/17/2026 in Posts

  1. I have visited Fairchild Tropical Garden in Miami FL many times but always enjoy seeing new additions and checking on “old friends”. This Sabinaria caught my attention especially since it looks untouched planted outside despite the recent cold spell here. I eagerly await mine growing big enough to show off the gorgeous leaf shape and color! Below are two different Kerriodoxa elegans. Rhino beetles in Puerto Rico love these so not sure if I will get any to trunking size. I am really looking forward to seeing them in habitat in Phuket Island.Thailand on the soon to start IPS post tour. Calyptrocalyx albertisianus is a fairly new addition to my own farm after I saw a beauty at Dean Ouer’s place in HI a few years ago. Here is one at FTG reminding me that they are likely to be much taller than my other more shrub size Calyptrocalyx. I am including a striking cycad that I wish I grew. Microcycas calocoma.
    4 points
  2. I was able to force this color with 23 degrees but i don't think I’ll be able to maintain this look.
    2 points
  3. Nice double roebelenii! I almost bought one too - $70 at the orange store, right? I settled instead for a $35 foxtail and a $10 Dypsis lutescens. I managed to get both in my Nissan (somehow).
    2 points
  4. I gave this palm a fresh haircut and trim - i have to say that it looks amazing that way
    2 points
  5. 2 points
  6. My experience I don’t have a green thumb like Scott royals grow great here you don’t need to worry about cold so much what you need to remember is we live in hell the heat and intense sun are much more of a problem than cold I have 2 Chambyronia they are on deep shade they don’t like heat I rarely get a red frond and they are Sloooooow so if they get any damage they are probably toast I haven’t had any luck with Beccariophoenix in full sun I have 4 in the ground in shade I have lost 3 that I had in sun a palm that I have been amazed at is the teddy bear it is in more sun than any of my tropical palms and grows quite fast!! I know you didn’t ask about it but mangoes grow great here just make sure you don’t get one that is grafted because if they do freeze grafted ones are usually toast ones that aren’t grafted come back from the roots!!
    1 point
  7. Here are some Sabal Mexicanas(?) in Austin. I wanted to show how crazy long the petioles are. Much longer then the 35"-47" that wikipedia states, more like 144++" They seem to be most impressive at this size and perspective. I put the camera on a timer and added some fuzzy Doofus in the photos for scale. These are all from the Laguna Gloria Sculpture Park where they are growing near oaks and cypress. I have many of these growing from seed along with S. Uresana and S. Causiarum too. - thanks Joseph! I can only imagine what those will look like size-wise in the future. The sunny shot of the flowers is a week earlier than the shady one.
    1 point
  8. I like it. You're staying on topic rather than graphs, charts, statistical analysis and week long forecasts. Spring isn't far off. "What is your current yard temperature?"
    1 point
  9. What recent event would cause above average predicted temperatures there?
    1 point
  10. Maybe they could have sold them and had them removed intact. This seems like a stupid loss of a species that is slow growing... not 'invasive' material at all.
    1 point
  11. Upland or lowland form? One ..the upland form.. is supposedly easier to bloom / more adaptable than the form that grows at lower elevations ( Lowland form = Likes the same constantly warm / humid conditions that many other Catts from that elevation range in S.A. prefer ). Upland form is grown w/out too much trouble in the milder parts of CA, even in moderate amounts of sun, and can take temps down to about 38, if completely dry.
    1 point
  12. Did you cut them open? I have had seed sink, I cut them open, and no embryo. Some even hollow.
    1 point
  13. Wow, thanks for the ‘bump’ Richard. Well, an update. The sessifolia got tired of being frail and checked out. The simulans, which was acquired later, died of thirst. The rest of the Veitchia have done well. The metiti, IMO, is a rather unremarkable palm and better planted in a group. I find it interesting that a grouping planted close together can have such a large variation in stature. Anyway, here’s a photo of V. metiti. Tim
    1 point
  14. Amazing to get such great germination with a rare and exciting palm like this.
    1 point
  15. Thank you for all the great pics! I’m glad to see others with the same attraction to this palm. I hope to see more grown in my area. A hospital in Ventura installed some mature specimens a few years ago . Harry
    1 point
  16. When considering my available options for a rain event, I decided the best thing I could do is use Banrot on any species that appeared to be struggling with post-cold fungal growth.
    1 point
  17. Sounds perfectly fine to me. This stuff happens in nature all of the time and nature has it's own way of sorting this stuff out.
    1 point
  18. So here in Florida we had that cold front that did a number on all my Clusia plants and my two Christmas palms which are babies and were just put in the ground. The Sylvester palm is thriving great. what can I do to speed up the growth process? the Christmas palms have all turned brown and the new frond sprouting looks brown as well. They do seem to be alive, just need a lot of love. I have been watering them. Anything I can give them to help them.
    1 point
  19. They are more solid and robust looking and a different colour new leaf in comparison to macrocarpa, a good healthy macrocarpa you can’t go past though for the glory they are known for! Here’s a nice pic of a macrocarpa. Richard
    1 point
  20. Dypsis louvelli showing up the rest of the garden.
    1 point
  21. They are water hogs and love almost swampy conditions. The ones in metropolitan garden in Athens are huge, because they are benefited by the replaced water of the nearby duck pond.
    1 point
  22. @pj_orlando_z9b + @Kiplin + @PalmBossTampa + @gyuseppe These are my Phoenix reclinata hybrids with a juvenile coconut that got 100% defoliated for comparison. My best guess is that they are crossed with Phoenix canariensis since that was the closest other species, but they don't have enough trunk to say for sure. Guest appearances from Livistona chinensis, Syagrus romanzoffiana, and Washingtonia robusta as well.
    1 point
  23. I love them too Harry, I've got a dozen or so in the ground in a big group, which should look pretty cool in a few years. I collected the seeds from a little patch of bush in Southern NSW, which is pretty close to their southern native limit, and I've got another batch from Eungella in Nth Qld, 1600km further north near their northern limit. Both lots grow equally happily here, so they’re clearly very adaptable palms! They love water!!
    1 point
  24. A stroll around the slope today… mild winter and warm days between drizzle never hurt anyone…
    1 point
  25. Never get tired of Chambeyronia macrocarpa var hookeri new growth.
    1 point
  26. Dypsis basilonga seedlings looking good, somewhat a few years behind @Hilo Jason but they will get there.
    1 point
  27. I was able to stop by my old garden today and got these pictures of the parent plant. Much taller than it was about 18 months ago.
    1 point
  28. After a few months : dictyocarium lamarkianum first leaf !
    1 point
  29. 1 point
  30. My verschaffeltia splendida gaining size and opening a new leaf. and my Areca macrocalyx starting to show some nice colour.
    1 point
  31. I know this is not warm for a lot of people , but this is a very warm winter night for us in february its currently. 48f at 12:02 here in needmore Pennsylvania
    1 point
  32. Interesting flowers on the Chambeyronia Macrocarpa . This is the first inflorescence so I’m not sure fruit will happen . Previous spathes would not open at all. Harry By the look of the crown shaft swelling , maybe more on the way.
    1 point
  33. The Aliens 👾 did it when they landed!
    1 point
  34. Took Sancho for a hike through the woods today and we saw some interesting tree growth --- I have no idea what would cause them to grow like this. Maybe they were wrapped around something years and years ago? Anyway, cool stuff.
    1 point
  35. Sharing the lowest temps my home station recorded. Just SE of Raleigh. 12.9F maximum low A few nights right at 15F (probably 3 in 2026)? And the December 15th low of 14.8 - I would argue to say this did more damage than anything. that low started burning Washingtonias, and they just have gone downhill since. My windmills, butias, chamaerops, and most all sabals are fine. I had a few small ones get burned up (I think) S. palmetto pictured on Feb 4th - 48 hours after 13F. The matches the lowest temp seen last year as well.
    1 point
  36. Here's a hybrid Phoenix reclinata x roebelenii that I just germinated. Going into a 12" liner for the winter - after that we'll see...
    1 point
  37. 1 point
  38. Will I have better luck with germination this time?
    1 point
  39. Some can be thicker than others. Several growing here in my neighborhood with most having narrower trunks than this one in my yard. I have a second one that is in a more shaded position and it's trunk is narrower than this too.
    1 point
  40. I am not in Cali but have a similar climate. My teddy bear has taken 2 heat waves and a few below 0c nights and nothing seems to bother it. Mine came in a 13cm wide pot and was only 30cm high when I planted it 2 years ago. The one in my old garden took 6 years to reach a metre in height. I think my furry baby is looking pretty good, apart from the lowest leaf which is about to fall off anyhow. Peachy
    1 point
  41. Not a great pic unfortunately, only one I got =/
    1 point
  42. This will be my new setting. White pine, red spruce, and Frasier fir are pretty common there.
    1 point
  43. I was thinking I would share mine. It really just put on some size over the last year but now seems to be cranking out leaves. I plan on clearing out some plants in this area soon to add Chameadoria since there's more shade.
    1 point
  44. Couple of mine.. still kinda small but have been solid growers. Only have 3 total but they are nice
    1 point
  45. 1 point
  46. I got a Chamaedorea falcifera from a San Jose Nursery. It looks like a multi-trunked Ch. Oblongata with darker leaves.
    1 point
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