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Showing content with the highest reputation since 03/13/2024 in Posts
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Daryl O'Connor took a few of us around his neck of the palm woods to see some truly outstanding natural areas and private gardens. All were truly impressive, and Daryl was very generous with his time -- thanks again, Daryl! If I had to choose a single photo to share with palm lovers, this is it -- the Tahina spectabilis in the garden of Stan and Jane Walkley. Look for the guy next to the palm, that's Stan. And no, he is not a small guy.39 points
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As another Fall begins, I was beating myself up about about still having so many palms in pots (vs in the ground). My original goal was to have everything in the ground by this Spring... but life happened and there are still way too many palms in pots. 🙄 But there is ONE area of the yard that is looking pretty nice! So I thought I would post a video tour of my 1st completed area of the yard. ❤️ * I'm a graphic designer by profession, so my yard has a crazy amount of COLOR. I also try to have variety in palm form, heights, and leaf types. Basically it's what happens when someone who normally designs with pixels on the computer switches to using plants as their medium. Oh, and you'll see a few bromeliads & other tropical plants (bromeliads were my first love). Enjoy! @Josh-O - You mentioned you'd love to see the Mealy Bug & Sambiranensis again sometime. Here's a video. Huge thank you for everyone who sold palms to me (including many palms not shown here).38 points
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This will likely be the last time I'll get to post about this tremendous success story of growing Satakentia liukiuensis in California. Unfortunately, our home owners insurance has issued us a cancellation notice unless we're able to comply with basically removing all of the palms in close proximity to my home despite all of them being healthy, well watered, and none of them carry a skirt of dead leaves; basically zero risk of catching fire. We've searched around and no other insurance company will cover us as they're all trying desperately to exit the market. The insurance market in CA is a disaster, but that's a story for another day. I figured I'd post pics one last time of this palm that has yet to flower/fruit, but is thriving none the less. It currently stands at 15' tall overall w/ 5' of clear trunk.30 points
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Hi everyone ! Since I get precious advices and great pictures from old post I though I should introduce myself. I live in Guadeloupe, French West Indies. I have bought my house 3 years ago with a totally virgin garden, and have been planting since. I am lucky to have nice weather for palm tree, and have been able to have 40+ species. Most of them a young, started from seedling, or even from the seeds. Here are some pictures of my garden, hope you like it.30 points
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Back in late 2022 Hurricane Ian tore all our gardens apart. We lost dozens and dozens of palms and tropical trees and continue to lose others almost two years later. Members of PT generously donated replacement palms for which I will be eternally grateful. We lost 80%+ of our shade canopy - it's returning, but slowly. Early in 2023, my husband's lymphoma returned but this time did not respond to chemo. He became very sick and we were unable lay mulch, fertilize or plant. Our usual rainy season was replaced by record heat and drought. By midsummer he was accepted into Moffitt Cancer Center for CART treatment using his own engineered cells. We spent most of last fall living in Airbnbs while he was hospitalized for weeks.When we finally moved home I was his sole caretaker for the following 6 months. The winter was wet, sunless and chilly and I couldn't work in the yard until April. But starting a few weeks ago we were well enough to contemplate whether we could tackle yard work again. We bought multiple pallets of mulch and paid several people to spread it. We also bought about a dozen bags of time release fertilizer and managed to spread it before the mulch. I have also been repotting Aspidistras and investigating potted philodendrons. It's still something of a struggle finding shady areas to place them. We have palm seedlings we germinated as replacements for the many dead/dying palms. But the weather has turned hot and dry so we don't dare plant anything outside the irrigation zone for fear it will be burned to a crisp by sun and lack of rain. Planting will have to wait until at least mid-June. As I have posted few, perhaps no, yard photos for the past year +, yesterday I snapped some shots of our back yard jungle and part of the Garden Lot. First up: A few background photos Back Yard Jungle from the East Back Yard Jungle & Rhapis laosensis looking east Cocos nucifera looking SE in Back Yard Jungle Back Yard Jungle looking east Jungle Palms Areca catechu Semi-Dwarf Hydriastele beguinii 'Obi Island' Howea belmoreana Attalea butyracea 'Mutant Leaf' Howea forsteriana Ravenea julietiae Golden Adonidia merrillii Chambeyronia houailou Carpoxylon macrospermum Syagrus schizophylla Licuala rumphii i Large Cocos nucifera in Back Yard Jungle More photos tomorrow. Enjoy28 points
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I usually walk the entire garden in the morning and the evening with the dogs and wanted to share some photos First stop was to check out this massive flowering Chrysalidocarpus. Barely trunking but flowering like crazy and a very large palm already. Check out the size 10 shoe for scale on the second photo. around the corner and lining the fence is a row of Chrysalidocarpus Sp Mayotte and here’s one of them. Most likely a hybrid as I have 2 very different looking palms as Mayotte grown from the same seed batch. This looks like a “white triangle” type hybrid: Chrysalidocarpus Robustus getting to the size that it will really get going now:25 points
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Before Hurricane Milton hits i took some pics of a few palms that are looking nice in my South Florida garden (Zone 10b). The yard got hammered pretty bad from Ian in 2022 but i only lost two canes on clustering palms and the garden grew back to normal in one year. Chambeyronia houailouensis Chrysalidocarpus lutescens 'Thai Dwarf' Chrysalidocarpus psammophilus Chrysalidocarpus lanceolatus Adonidia dransfeldii Chrysalidocarpus mananjarensis Pinanga coronata 'Kuhlii' Carpoxylon macrospermum Last one is my oldest son helping me plant a Rhapis excelsa 'KOBAN'25 points
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I walked the Garden Lot around noon today and the heat and swelter were overbearing. I noticed my juvenile Tahina spectabilis has sent up several pristine leaves after growing little in summer 2023 or winter 2024. During Hurricane Ian in 2022 it was crushed by falling Livistonas and Bismarckias. I really thought it was a goner but gradually it produced leaves again from its underground meristem. Summer 2023 was hot and drought-stricken. We got less rain that rainy season than we got the previous winter. Winter 2024 was chilly, cloudy (94+ days of clouds) and wet - just what tropical palms hate and mine limped into spring with a lot of yellow cold-spotted leaves. But since the heat and normal rainfall have returned my beleaguered palms are happily growing again, my lone Tahina included Tahina spectabilis, Cape Coral, FL, July 202425 points
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Well dreams come true and I finally got the chance to visit this legendary garden on the big island of Hawaii! I feel like the majority of the palms I saw were firsts for me! Click here for all of the photos with labels Sclerosperma walkers Masoala madagascriensis Ravenea musicalis Areca gurita Geonoma atrovirens Manicaria saccifera25 points
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Into the “jungle planter” which is the first area planted about 3.5 years ago. This was all just bare grass hillside originally. Filling in nicely and creating pathways through it all now for the dogs and myself: Rocky 2.0 stopped to check out this crazy mutant Chrysalidocarpus Malcomberi Hybrid that has decided to split like crazy: Coming out of the jungle path you see Metroxylon Amicarum: looking down the driveway. Chrysalidocarpus Prestonianus hybrids on each side: further down the driveway are Chrysalidocarpus Hovomantsina on each side:24 points
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Hawaii Island Palm Society (HIPS) had an Ice Cream Social & garden tour in my old garden yesterday, September 28. The garden, now in the expert care of new owners Bob and Andy, has a new name (above). I had just arrived an hour earlier after a 24 hour journey from New Zealand and was fortunate to be able to attend, arriving just as the garden tour was about to begin. First a few random photos of the group.24 points
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I'm 81 now and was in great shape until March when I came down w/shngles. Yea I got the shots and still got it. Then as that was clearing up something swelled up below and to the right of my belly botton. After an Ultra Sound, a CT scan and a MRI my Dr's said they don't know what it is but it's not a hernia or any cancer. Pain is gone now but still swollen enough that bending over to put on socks or shoes is uncomfortable. As they say getting old is a bitch but it beats the alternative. LOL Anyway back to palms....I can finally use my weed wacker for the first time in 3 1/2 month. Spent about 3 hours w/a lunch break clearing the "back 40" which is a triangle of land about maybe 2000 sq feet... Some day I'm gonna measure it. LOL. It's the are labled Plumeria Patch. None there now but 40 years ago I was selling the flowers until I realized it was a twice a day job 7 days a week so I quit doing that. That long straight boundary is 700' long. Oh yea it' 2 acres. Here are two photo's before and after. I'll add some of the palms up there. Not to many planted way back there. This is in the lower portion of the "patch" looking at the long straight white line.24 points
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in summer 2014 3 years later the leaves were getting larger and more numerous but height was about the same then another shot in 2017 a couple months after hurricane IRMA hit. It lost ~ 8 leaves on the lower crown. late 2017 after IRMA hit y 2019 it was starting to put on trunk. Not sure that was delayed or accelerated due to the hurricane hit. Leaf bases were falling off no assisting them. here in 2021 a year before IAN Then IAN hit and it lost a dozen leaves mostly to windward and quite a way up the trunk, (asymmetrical losses to windward) I didnt take a lot of pics of the damage, I want4ed to forget about it. The damage it has sustained was from cat one max 97 mph gusts with 80 mph sustained for 3-4 hrs. This morning the palm shows 10' clear smooth trunk @28-29" diameter (all the way up so far) and about 13-14 foot trunk including dead leaf bases. the crown is not fully recovered but it is doing well. The thorns on the petioles of the newer leaves just shred the older leaves in this kind of wind.24 points
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Today I had the pleasure of meeting Tim "Realarch " from Hilo area Hawaii visit my garden. On one of my rare 80f plus days I showed Tim and Bob around my cloud forest at sea level garden. Always great to meet palm people from overseas. Thanks Realarch for coming around and enjoy the Tasmanian seafood tonight Troy23 points
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Off to the side is this planter with Ptychococus reaching for the sky. Very fast growing palms here. Turning off the driveway to head back into the garden where I did my first rock work to divide what was a hillside into terraces: New Caledonia planter with a couple of Chambeyronia (Kentiopsis) pyriformis on each side or a narrow path through the planter: the Madagascar planter is next to the New Cal planter and a favorite there is this Chrysalidocarpus Robustus Hybrid. Orania Trispatha is on the left of it:23 points
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I've since moved away from where I grew up/planted stuff since my teens (now 26) but I'm back in my garden for the weekend 😁. Can you tell I like zonepushing? Hopefully we get some normal to mild winters soon so the stuff on borrowed time can live a little longer under canopy. It's a celebration every time this Cyphophoenix elegans makes a new leaf Prime time for Euterpe edulis Lanonia dasyantha Chuniophoenix nana and a Chambeyronia pyriformis seedling Licuala fordiana Chuniophoenix hainanensis Chamaedorea cataractum back from the ground after 18F and a Everglades palm (how do you spell that Latin name LOL) direct seeded Lytocaryum hoehnei making a comeback after record heat, drought, and freeze Sable rosei Ravenea rivularis that refuses to die I have several of these Chamaedorea radicalis (thanks DoomsDave) spread throughout the yard, they are indestructible Livistona saribus I hope Sabal causarium is going crazy this year (and so is the Bahía grass LOL) Hoping for many many years with this Bismarckia Sable guatemalensis Livistona nitida Making Houston Queen palms ubiquitous again23 points
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Not sure if I got the image to load but this is a pure Queen palm in Wilmington,NC. I bought it at HD in 2012. It has lived indoors in various pots and locations until we moved here 4 years ago and planted it outside. It has survived winters on the south side of the house with the usual Christmas lights and wrapping on the coldest ( 19 deg F ) nights. It is impossible to protect the fronds so they burn extensively but come back as the weather warms. It is as high as the top of the roof now and the trunk is huge at the base. I'm posting it because I think it's notable for it's size at this latitude. The other two large plants are an Angel Trumpet and a Robusta that was about 18" tall 3 years ago.23 points
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I want to show you guys this Hungarian living in Slovakia how insane he is in a good way! He's growing Hyophorbe lagenicaulis, Bismarckia nobilis, Phoenix roebelenii, Dypsis decaryi, Latania lontaroides, Archontophoenix alexandrae, and other tropical palms and plants planted outside in his garden. In winter, you can see in the video how he protects them with heating cables in the ground and wrapped around the trunk and leaves. He even uses growing lights to keep them alive! This is just insane considering that Slovakia is in Zone 6 You can find him on Facebook as Jardín Tropical 2004! ScreenRecording_02-18-2025 22-55-57_1.mov22 points
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It has been many years since our current terms of service were updated. Yes, I am referring to that fine print most of us decline to read. The good news is there is exactly one additional sentence and it is just intended to streamline the registration procedures and membership management for our free level IPS membership. Here it is: Registration on PalmTalk.org without an existing membership in our society will constitute joining our society at a free membership level with associated benefits. In appreciation for your attention I will share a palm photo from my farm. Pigafetta , AKA the Black Wanga Palm22 points
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