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Showing content with the highest reputation since 11/29/2025 in all areas

  1. Seems like PalmTalk has been a bit slow lately and since I don’t post that much I figured now is probably a good time to post more. So here are a few photos of some palms in my garden. We just came out of the rainy season so most look pretty good at this time. First up is C lanceolata and S yapa to the right. A group of H lagenicaulis Another group but of H verschaffeltii This Pritchardia beccariana got planted last year and replaced a coco palm that got hit by lightning. You can still see the cut off truck of the lightning victim.
    26 points
  2. Here are 2 Allagoptera arenaria planted in the corner of the house. I finally got them to produce seed which are just starting to germinate. P sargentii also producing a bit of seeds. Serenoa repens which replaced another one that got too big and out of control. C proctorii Pinanga javana. This one is too exposed to the sea breeze but is hanging in there. Carpoxylon macrospermum. This one has grown well in this climate.
    22 points
  3. Thought it would be a cool idea to share some in situ Ceroxylon parvifrons pics from my last trip to Ecuador. Hop in if you have recent pics of these wax legends in habitat🙏
    20 points
  4. Itaya amicorum, I really like this one but it probably needs to be in a more protected area. A big clump of Walichia siamensis Caryota zebrina. This one deserves more then one photo. C crinita with C leptocheilos
    16 points
  5. Here’s a Syagrus x costae (S. cearensis x coronato) in the front garden a couple of years after planting and today, nearly 20 years later. These typically produce massive inflorescence but mine hasn’t flowered yet. It resembles a thin trunked more plumose Queen palm.
    15 points
  6. A few more photos of my palms. The first is Coccothrinax crinita sp. brevicinis Dictyosperma album Ravenea hildebrandii in the middle of a few Encephalartos Here’s an unknown Dypsis with a Wodyetia and A alexandrae in the back ground Arenga hookeriana clump. It’s hard to keep these looking good here. A clump of Hydriastele rostrata (?) The moon raising over C. decaryi. I just noticed the new fronds look bad. Not sure what’s going on but hopefully it recovers. I’ve already lost 2 of these. Moquitos are coming out. I’ll continue posting a few more photos in the morning.
    14 points
  7. Moving on to some Licualas. Most I’ve lost the names to but this one is L spinosa. Unknown Licuala. I just noticed it has some ripe seeds I need to plant. Another unknown Licuala This one is seriously overcrowded by a Heleconia. Unknown Licuala This one probably gets too much sun. That’s it for now. I’ll see if I can post a few more palm photos this afternoon. Thanks for looking!
    14 points
  8. Its been a while since I've posted anything, and figured I'd step it up and document the life of a copernicia fallaensis in my front yard. Here's when I first got it. It was all alone and looking for a forever home. Grown by Josh Allen at his Vista nursery, it was ready to move out and make a life of its own. Hitchhiked it's way to my house in Fresno back in May. Life's been good to it so far. A good, deep, sandy loam (some 80% sand), a warm climate (many days above 100F) and plenty of water. Some cool, though spiky, neighbors as well. No tantrums yet, though we've been enveloped in a thick fog for the better part of 2 weeks. Seems to not mind the chill.
    13 points
  9. That’s a chunky Chamby frond Dave! Here’s a 28 foot P. torralyi frond stretching across my entire front lawn area that I just removed the other day.
    13 points
  10. I am very, very thankful that my Tahina #1 is still alive. This photo is how it looked 12/29/2022. All those leaves browned seemingly overnight. They were cut off and the palm was treated with an anti-fungal. For a long time it sat with a single leaf slowly decaying, and I was sure it was dead. That left a small hole in my heart. But experience has taught me to be patient. I refused to cut down the palm. Perhaps 18 months later, the tip of a spear appeared emerging from the center of the palm! By June of 2024 there was a strong, fat spear undeniably gaining height, but reluctant to open. I marked the spear and occasionally measured the progress. Slow at first, then gaining speed during rainy periods. Even as recently as March 2025, the new spear was only partially open, but now at last, the new leaf has spread, gathering sunlight, feeding the palm. It is still a sad sight, but it's alive! Well worth celebrating, and I am very thankful.
    13 points
  11. That’s kind of a tough question being that I appreciate all the palms in the garden. My Chrysalidocarpus decipiens would at the top of the list being that it’s taken nearly twenty years to get to where it is today. The other species that is special to me is not because it’s rare. It’s because the groves of them I gave created massive canopy in just a few years and remain an integral part of the garden. That would be Archontophoenix cunninghamiana and ‘Illawara.’
    12 points
  12. Oenocarpus distichus is getting big. Rocky 2 and Suubi stayed still long enough to provide some scale.
    11 points
  13. A nice kerriodoxa new leaf gleaming away.
    11 points
  14. Sitting in my home office yesterday in the middle of one of those Eternal Zoom Conferences when I hear this sudden crash thud and see a shadow across my nearby window. it turned out to be an abscised leaf from my watermelon hookeri. Okay, not big like a royal but still big. Maybe you have palms and/or parts of same with unexpectedly large size?
    10 points
  15. Three new leaves on our little onilahensis
    10 points
  16. Hi Steve in 2010 pogo sent me seeds from his biggest Hedyscepe Today I proudly show the results of those seeds as Hedyscepe grow like escapees in the ground in my coastal Tasmania garden. I also have a smaller one from San clemente garden
    10 points
  17. My Chrysalidocarpus Decipiens. It survived me digging it up and transplanting it when I moved back in April. It did really well! I attribute it to me digging as much of the root ball as I could. I actually broke my shovel in the heavy clay soil, trying to get it out.
    10 points
  18. I have been so impressed with the growth of this one. It had no pinnate fronds when I planted 3 years ago. It’s how 7-9 feet tall and growing like a weed. Santa Ana, CA.
    9 points
  19. First flower on Chrysalidocarpus “Orange Crush”:
    9 points
  20. I have some nice, blue Sabal uresana available for shipping within the US. They are in liners and busting out of the bottom. I have 10 available - some have multiple plants in them and you could separate them if you wish, but i would prefer to ship these potted to avoid bare-rooting at this time of year. $20 each for these + shipping from Fresno. Cheers! 🤙🏽
    9 points
  21. A nice little order from RPS. After somewhat of customs debacle arriving a bit later than normal. The details of the holdup are to long to put in words but let’s say phone calls and emails many of which later where the order of the 6 week delay. Not good customs Australia! With the Australian government boosting funding for our bio security control they need to get there money back from the importers and the new paperwork (emails) logistics and changes in protocol are taking there toll on importers. Many are not bothering anymore to import with importers taking big hits in there bank accounts thanks to the government.
    9 points
  22. This Aiphanes aculeata came from seeds I gather from Jardim Botânico in Rio de Janeiro. It looked much better there than it does here. Kentiopsis oliviformis. These grow very well here. I got a few of them in the garden. Another one of my favorites C. Pempana Got to go. I’ll post a few more this afternoon. Thanks for looking!
    9 points
  23. Some stuff that they claim is slow can grow much faster in the right conditions. I’ve found that crinita is actually pretty fast here for a medium sized palm and they start looking good while still fairly small. This particular crinita is only 14 years old.
    9 points
  24. Two beautiful dypsis saintlucei caught my eye today.
    9 points
  25. From my trip to Andean Peru in 2013 - a group and a closer-up single:
    8 points
  26. Greetings, Attached is my updated price and availability sheet for palms in the Orlando, FL area. 1 - 7 gallon sizes available, all grown from seed here at my backyard nursery. I am located near Wekiwa Springs in Longwood, just north of the city. Please contact me to set up an appointment for pickup. Pickup only at this time. Cash, Card, Zelle, PayPal, Venmo accepted. Let me know if you have any questions or if you want any additional photos. Thanks for your interest! -Alex
    8 points
  27. Pinanga coronata “Kuhlii” Kerriodoxa elegans. I use these to block the view of our power transformer. Some type of Rhapis but I don’t remember which one. Another unknown. Ptychosperma Something? Here’a a Pinanga dicksonii. I got knocked over in a summer storm but seems to be recovering well. Here is another one that hard to capture in photos. Hydriastele microcarpa
    8 points
  28. Parajubaea torallyi underneath a Japanese Maple.
    8 points
  29. No, this palm is in a private garden in south Florida. It's quite rare in cultivation.
    8 points
  30. A beautiful little palm perfect for the understory the triphylla. A real gem of a palm, definitely the miniature look for a palm that fits into any spot that’s beside a path or an entrance way. As we would say in Australia an absolute bonza of a palm!
    8 points
  31. Ponapea and friends in the morn light did grab me.
    8 points
  32. 8 points
  33. Beccariophoenix Alfredii. Backdrop to a lot of horseplay. This was yesterday, it witnesses a lot
    8 points
  34. Saw this in recent news: Decades-old palm trees in Rio de Janeiro flower for the first — and only — time https://www.msn.com/en-us/news/world/decades-old-palm-trees-in-rio-de-janeiro-flower-for-the-first-and-only-time/ar-AA1REF1F
    7 points
  35. Just checking in on the hand pollinated Chuniophoenix nana, and it looks like we have lift off! 🌱
    7 points
  36. also love p. sargentii (called buccaneer or cherry palm in florida). they say extremely slow growing, but here is four years' growth on mine.years' growth on mine.
    7 points
  37. I agree completely with Bill's observation about the 'Hedyscepe complex'. They are erratic, even within the same seed lot. I have a slender trunked one that makes excellent, strong seedlings and a thick trunked one with poor seedlings. They are not like Howea or Chamaedorea, where all the seedlings are quite regular. A strong Hedyscepe seedling will have a fully pinnate eophyll with 3 or 4 leaflets on each side of the rachis. Also, they dislike pot culture beyond the 1 or 5 gallon size, this is one reason, (besides the basic slow growth), that large plants are so expensive.
    7 points
  38. Been quite a while since I checked in! All good here on the Space Coast, Brevard County FL USA! Here is a scene looking north from the west side of our home in the 32951.
    7 points
  39. Imagine an attractive palm from the tropics that can take quite a bit of cold, down to 0c, very fast growing, very tough, can handle full sun from very age and tolerate a bit of neglect. I am talking about the gorgeous Carpentaria palm. With such impressive looks and fast growth, my big question is why aren't they a popular garden palm in cool sub tropical areas. They are easily propagated but it took me many years to find one. We have a lot of over looked native palms in Australia. Admittedly some are touchy or very slow growing but these do not go under that category. What does everyone think about Carpies and why don't they have one ? Peachy
    7 points
  40. Just looking at this thread again, was looking at mine this morning and thought I’d post an update. Tim
    7 points
  41. A Dorset Canary… 🇬🇧 A fat old trunk on that specimen…
    7 points
  42. Thanks Harry. The lanceolata is clumping although it only clumped at an early age. Here is a photo of the base.
    7 points
  43. An absolute monster of a palm my Caryota maxima getting taller the gum trees up there about 35 meters or so.
    7 points
  44. Apparently, I have two of them, each was obtained from different vendors as Veitchia species but ID’d here from pics as Carpentaria.
    7 points
  45. Two is not enough, I have six in the ground !
    7 points
  46. A beautiful almost white silver colour on the elegans flower at the moment, the ground is covered in tiny star dust looking particles. It’s just a shame it’s 7 metres up in in the sub canopy. The iPhone pic just quit can’t capture what the naked eye can see.
    7 points
  47. Bentinkia seedlings thriving under a plastic baggy.
    7 points
  48. There is a couple of super tall ones in Ventura at one of the Sullivans apartments . Harry I've posted this before but worth a second look!
    7 points
  49. Mine is definitely getting bigger and happier as the canopy closes in even after a rough winter. Not exactly a show stopper but sometimes you have to wait a long time!
    6 points
  50. I miss these from my former San Clemente days
    6 points
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