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Thought I’d post a couple of recent photos of this Australian palm that’s been in the ground for 14 years. It’s been a steady grow here in East Hawaii and is robust in stature. Might be a few years yet before it starts trunking. Check out the shove for scale. Richard posted photos of his sprouts a few weeks ago, the transition is slow, but well worth it. Tim10 points
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My chamaedoreas are flowering. I have already done the adscendans. I have been observing the Metallicas and have had two male plants that have been ready to collect pollen from. I just cut some male flowers carefully and the white pollen falls in my hand then I just close my hand around the female flowers with the male flowers. I was successfull last year with only about a dozen seeds setting. That’s enough seeds for future generations to be replanted in the garden. See how I go this year. I could use an artist brush that might be more successful but when iam working in the garden I casually observe and if any pollen is ready i collect it there and then. Once the seeds are set I put them in a plastic bag with a few holes cut in the bottom to keep the rats and possums away.9 points
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Easy answer - Dypsis Chrysalidocarpus (that counts as ONE right?) As much as I love my Licualas, Chambeys, Archies, etc... no one can convince me there's a palm genus with more variety in size, shape, color and cool factor as my beloved Chrysalidocarpus collection. Only one of these is my palm (the mealybug) - and mine might not grow to be *quite* as glorious as these (since I'm in CA not Hawaii). But I still love all of them - especially the colorful ones - and think it's the best genus of them all, when taken as a whole. Palms shown: C. carlsmithii, C. baronii "black stem", C. decipiens, C. mananjarensis ("mealybug"), C. hovomantsina, C. onilahensis ("weepy" type), C. leptocheilos ("teddy"), C. saintelucei, C. paucifolius ("orange crush")8 points
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Some update photos: First is sun grown High form (red new leaf). Second is mostly shade grown High form (new leaf has a beautiful grey cast). Last is the Mid form which is much more delicate, hence the cage to protect from falling fronds, though the leaves are becoming leathery now and the growth rate is improving. New leaf is green. I only managed to keep one alive. It's surprising to me that these weren't split in the recent review of the genus.8 points
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Houston queens aren't like sandy Florida queens 😝, must be something about the heavy gumbo clay. They love it! Only place I've seen consistently good queens in Florida is closer to Jacksonville. Queens love the New Orleans swamp too. Not century level bulletproof in any of those places but "zone push" is ridiculous lol. Let's make queens the #1 by a landslide most common pinnate palm in Houston again. But on private property so the other people in this thread don't raise the pitchforks LOL Yes here's your bimonthly dose of luxuriant Houston queens a la broken record😄 . This thread needs more positivity 🌴7 points
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Southern California Joey checking in! Mine has actually been catching my eye a lot lately. So much so that I'm testing it out in a more prominent place in the yard. I bought it in 2021 and initially had it in an extremely sheltered (and mostly hidden) location. But it outgrew its spot recently, and seems to have grown a lot this summer. Here's another shot of it, taken this morning...6 points
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Normally I take photos of palms when they are looking their best. Sometimes I take a photo when I am happy to find them alive. Johannesteijsmannia magnifica, first photo July 2023 at time of tree fall, second photo February 2024, still growing There is this situation on my property where trees fall over. Above is a massive branch from a Cecropia that peeled off one day. Amazingly, it is a rare event for the fallen tree to take out a palm, and here you see one such lucky example. I also have a juvenile Johannesteijsmannia altifrons getting a bit too much sun. Still searching for a photo.6 points
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Spent the afternoon in the garden planting a few palms just for fun. Howea is an old plant that has been in the container for 20 years just sitting around. The lanceolata I germinated about 4 years back. The Areca loaensis I purchased from Plumtree pocket nursery it got planted in a vacant spot in the garden. The dasyatha is from imported seeds. With the weather being perfect for planting get as many palms in the ground as soon as possible. Also an unknown chamaedorea got plantetd just for fun. So a few more palms tucked in the garden the only one that’s new to the collection is the loaensis. The rest are already in the garden but you can never have enough palms planted.6 points
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@HillizardIf you put it in the ground it will grow much faster. I have 6 of them and I finally planted one, it is easily double if not triple the size of the ones I left in the pots after only 6 months.6 points
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I'm lucky to have acquired these 3 uncommon Syagrus from a dear friend who wishes to remain anonymous. They arrived in pretty bad shape after a long trip bare root, but have recovered nicely over summer in my little greenhouse. (Santosii spent nearly 2 months in customs and arrived barely clinging on to life). I'm bringing them indoors to not risk losing any over winter in Central California 🙃 Has anyone had experience with any of these species? I will keep them potted for some time but I would eventually like to put them in the ground if they seem to be hardy enough.6 points
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This is my fifth attempt to grow this palm, and was finally successful under my large Brahea Moorei, which I keep very wet. But now - how to move as it was getting into full sun? I remembered Dwight telling me a technique. Here it is! Patience is absolutely necessary. I dug down on one side of palm and excavated half of root ball area, approximately 6-7” deep, and 3-4” wide (take no prisoners) and packed with very moist spaghum moss. A year later I went deeper by sacrificing any roots another 2” on same side, I used very long trenching shovel, I also dug out in mud areas of that side of rootball that didn’t have any roots and packed same wet peat moss in the pockets in root ball, waited at least six months, maybe a year and then took entire plant out, and put in my palm soil mix. I cut many of the branches, kept in shade, with a little filtered light. Here it is! I live in Contra Costa county and I know Florabunda has seedlings but this is a touchy palm. I hope this help's someone!6 points
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Marcus, I got here in 2004 and a lot of queen palms had made it from 2004 -2021, even in New Braunfels. Many recovered from the 2010 and 2011 freezes. These palms were mature in 2004, so they likely had been planted in the 1990’s and lived all the way to 2021. It happened.5 points
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