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Posted

Here are a few from a local garden. Any idea what they are:BDEC0892-6EFC-4202-A90A-FE4413E4A2A2.thumb.jpeg.94aaccf96778471add70980d7a7dc525.jpegB0B4C8EA-DA4B-4B88-9064-24A731B7CA17.thumb.jpeg.d0d8d076273d2a74e1fb71b7a208854a.jpeg8141A146-AA3A-49F4-A977-BC6D51966AEC.thumb.jpeg.2b7f30a1c6c4045cfc4cbf6c1a3ce73d.jpeg

  • Upvote 1

What you look for is what is looking

Posted

The first picture to me sort of looks like either a Christmas Palm or a Montgomery Palm. 

  • Like 1

Palms - Adonidia merillii1 Bismarckia nobilis, 2 Butia odorataBxJ1 BxJxBxS1 BxSChamaerops humilis1 Chambeyronia macrocarpa1 Hyophorbe lagenicaulis1 Hyophorbe verschaffeltiiLivistona chinensis1 Livistona nitida, 1 Phoenix canariensis3 Phoenix roebeleniiRavenea rivularis1 Rhapis excelsa1 Sabal bermudanaSabal palmetto4 Syagrus romanzoffianaTrachycarpus fortunei4 Washingtonia robusta1 Wodyetia bifurcata
Total: 41

Posted

The second one is very similar to a palm that I got years ago as Dypsis 'Laffa'.

It might be called something better now.

  • Like 1

Cheers Steve

It is not dead, it is just senescence.

   

 

 

Posted

First one looks like a Christmas palm the second maybe some kind of Chamaedorea

  • Like 1
Posted

The first is not Adonidia merrilli (Christmas tree palm/Manila palm),  which can be quite large and are ubiquitous in this area. All Veitchia montgomeryana's I have seen are clustering but they are skinny. Second palm may be Dypsis laffa. I am beginning to believe that a number of the skinny folks are forms of Ptyosperma...

  • Upvote 2

What you look for is what is looking

Posted (edited)

This is the kind of skinny I am talking about. It is in the middle of this picture and you can barely see it:F2BD08A8-BACE-4FBD-903D-4DCFE2945486.thumb.jpeg.22cbc9c8a152bd2b95541848f5386f46.jpegp

 

Edited by bubba
Screw up
  • Upvote 1

What you look for is what is looking

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