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Posted

Thanks for the comments guys!

I also thought the Arenga looked like undalatifolia at first, but then I talked myself out of it...

The roots of the Eugeissona were for eating! I never had a chance to try any, so I can't comment on the taste...

Jack Sayers

East Los Angeles

growing cold tolerant palms halfway between the equator and the arctic circle...

Posted

. I still have a LOT of photos of a LOT of additional palms, so stay tuned...

Yes we do!

Thanks, Jack

looking forward... soon?

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Philippe

 

Jungle Paradise in Sri Lanka

 

Posted

Great shots. Where did you all stay at Batang Ai? Looking forward to the Kubah N.P.photos.

Posted

Thanks for the comments!

In Batang Ai we spent our first two nights at Nanga Sumpa, then the next three nights at Lubok Kasai. Both lodges were built and maintained by local Iban communities.

At long last, I have a few of the palms from Kubah ready to go. First up is Areca furcata, which was fairly widespread. This is a small palm, maybe 2 m (6 ft) tall, with multiple stems approximately the diameter of my thumb.

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Jack Sayers

East Los Angeles

growing cold tolerant palms halfway between the equator and the arctic circle...

Posted

Areca insignis, which we only saw in the park palmetum. The terminal leaflets were very distinctive! This is also a small palm, with stems not much larger than A. furcata.

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  • Upvote 1

Jack Sayers

East Los Angeles

growing cold tolerant palms halfway between the equator and the arctic circle...

Posted

Here's another very distinctive palm that we again saw only in the palmetum. The leaves are VERY thick, almost like cardboard. Areca subacaulis.

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Jack Sayers

East Los Angeles

growing cold tolerant palms halfway between the equator and the arctic circle...

Posted

Caryota mitas, which we saw a few of...

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Jack Sayers

East Los Angeles

growing cold tolerant palms halfway between the equator and the arctic circle...

Posted

Iguanura palmuncula. We saw this palm scattered in a few locations, but I wouldn't say it was common. This is a mid-sized palm, the biggest one we saw was probably 3-4 m (10 ft) tall.

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Jack Sayers

East Los Angeles

growing cold tolerant palms halfway between the equator and the arctic circle...

Posted

We saw a few Johannesteisjmannia altifrons. Just as in Bako, they were restricted to one very small area in the park. They were much less impressive than the ones in Bako, with leaves that were noticeably shorter...

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Jack Sayers

East Los Angeles

growing cold tolerant palms halfway between the equator and the arctic circle...

Posted

That's it for now, but I still have quite a few more photos from Kubah...

Jack Sayers

East Los Angeles

growing cold tolerant palms halfway between the equator and the arctic circle...

  • 1 year later...
Posted

Ok, the next stop was a couple hours up the Delok river from Batang Ai. We spent 6 days in this area doing a lot of hiking looking for Orangutans, and we saw a lot of palms during the hikes. I don't have IDs for many of these palms, so any help would be appreciated.

First up is an unknown Arenga species. We didn't see too many of these. I'm pretty sure it's trunkless, as I don't remember seeing one that was "off the ground", but the leaves are huge (maybe 10 m or 30 ft long).

attachicon.gifBatang_Arenta_1.jpgattachicon.gifBatang_Arenta_2.jpg

I am up in Kota kinabalu, Sabah Borneo at the moment. These Arenga undulatifolia are growing everywhere here even 20 ft off the main coast road.

Fabulous looking palm and stand out a mile. Leaves are HUGE. They are growing alongside Oncosperma on slightly disturbed rainforest slopes

chris.oz

Bayside Melbourne 38 deg S. Winter Minimum 0 C over past 6 years

Yippee, the drought is over.

Posted

Can't wait until the 2016 Biennial!!! :drool:

  • Like 1

Searle Brothers Nursery Inc.

and The Rainforest Collection.

Southwest Ranches,Fl.

  • 3 weeks later...
Posted

Wow! Great stuff. We were in and around Kuching in Dec 2012/Jan 2013 for a couple weeks. We stayed up near Santubong at Permai Rainforest Resort and, yes, saw very few palms other than the mangrove palms you showed in the estuaries.

I did get down to Semengoh and got a tour of their arboretum and ethnobotany garden but not the palm garden. Here's an unknown (to me) that was growing along a fence with both flowers and fruit.

Down by Serian, near the Indonesian border, I was attracted to this road lined with what looks to my Florida eyes like royal palms.

I'm really excited about trying to attend this biennial! Any idea of what level of budget I need to be socking away?

Dave

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Posted

awesome thread guys! did anyone see L. orbicularis on Sarawak?

Posted

Plenty of L. orbicularis in Kubah National park. Also the L. sarawakensis. Very lovely palms.

Posted

We did a lot of hiking, and saw quite a bit of the park. However, we only saw Johannesteijsmannia altifrons growing in one very small section.

attachicon.gifBako_Joey_1.jpgattachicon.gifBako_Joey_2.jpgattachicon.gifBako_Joey_3.jpgattachicon.gifBako_Joey_4.jpgattachicon.gifBako_Joey_5.jpgattachicon.gifBako_Joey_6.jpg

Nice, that must be the same ones I had seen in Bako in 2002. And I had never seen them before that in the wild!

Also lots of Nepenthes in that area, about 6 species. Its a sandstone area. Also a kind of Cycas growths in that area.

Alexander

Posted

We saw two species of Salacca in Bako, both with red emergent leaves. Here is the less commonly seen of the two - who knows the species?

attachicon.gifBako_Salacca1_1.jpgattachicon.gifBako_Salacca1_2.jpg

Probably affinis. Great photos as usual, Jack--also very nice meeting you at Dr. Block's Garden.

  • 4 weeks later...
Posted

Jack,

Thanks for the pictures. These palms look a lot like the euterpes that grow around my part of the tropics.

dk

Don Kittelson

 

LIFE ON THE RIO NEGRO

03° 06' 07'' South 60° 01' 30'' West

Altitude 92 Meters / 308 feet above sea level

1,500 kms / 932 miles to the mouth of the Amazon River

 

Manaus, Amazonas, Brazil - A Cidade da Floresta

Where the world´s largest Tropical Rainforest embraces the Greatest Rivers in the World. .

82331.gif

 

Click here to visit Amazonas

amazonas2.jpg

  • 6 months later...
Posted

very nice trip!!!!!!!!!!!!!! :yay::yay: . Palm tree, IN SITU is amazing!!

Posted

Jack, is this area where the IPS biennial will be next year?

Len

Vista, CA (Zone 10a)

Shadowridge Area

"Show me your garden and I shall tell you what you are."

-- Alfred Austin

Posted

I haven't tracked this thread as well as I should have... I do have more shots from Kubah that I should add...

To answer Len's question - yes, this is where a portion of the 2016 biennial will be. We do not yet have signed contracts, etc., so the itinerary is not set in stone, but the plan is base part of the biennial in Kuching. We will visit Bako and Kubah, where many of my photos were taken. We will also visit the Semenggoh Orangutan Sanctuary and it's palm collection (I did not visit this location during my trip).

Jack Sayers

East Los Angeles

growing cold tolerant palms halfway between the equator and the arctic circle...

  • 2 weeks later...
Posted

beautiful Trip, amazing!!!!!!!! :yay::yay:

Posted

Description of general plans (NOT FINAL) for 2016 Biennial Palm Trip:

https://www.palms.org/newsletter/August2014.pdf

Kim Cyr

Between the beach and the bays, Point Loma, San Diego, California USA
and on a 300 year-old lava flow, Pahoa, Hawaii, 1/4 mile from the 2018 flow
All characters  in this work are fictitious. Any resemblance to real persons, living or dead, is purely coincidental.

  • 3 weeks later...
Posted

Wonderful pix--Thank you!

  • 6 months later...
Posted
On 5/12/2013, 3:48:14, elHoagie said:

Saw this Salacca, I think it's the same species as the first Salacca from Bako (the pictures from Bako are MUCH better than these)...

 

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Salacca can get confusing. Salacca zalaçca has separate male and female plants that exhibit different characteristics although they are the same species. Another oddity in the palm world.

What's not to love about palms in habitat.

Coral Gables, FL 8 miles North of Fairchild USDA Zone 10B

  • 3 weeks later...
Posted

Wow! Nice habitat photos! Thank you very much!

 

Carambeí, 2nd tableland of the State Paraná , south Brazil.

Alt:1030m. Native palms: Queen, B. eriospatha, B. microspadix, Allagoptera leucocalyx , A.campestris, Geonoma schottiana, Trithrinax acanthocoma. Subtr. climate, some frosty nights. No dry season. August: driest month. Rain:1700mm

 

I am seeking for cold hardy palms!

  • 4 years later...
Posted

Thanks for sharing these.  The joeys were fascinating to view in their native habitat.

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