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Posted
49 minutes ago, Las Palmas Norte said:

I give those away when my clump of basjoo gets too large. Looks good.

Sadly that one died, i easily pulled it up because it wasn’t established at all 😢

My Youtube: Click to go to my YT Channel!
Palms (And Cycad) in Ground Currently: Rhapidophyllum Hystrix (x1), Butia Odorata (x1), Sabal Causiarum (x1), Sabal Louisiana (x1), Cycas Revoluta (x1).
Recent Lows: 2025:
-52024: -3F 2023: 5F 2022: -5F 2021: -5F 2020: 4F

Posted
On 3/13/2025 at 10:21 AM, DTS said:

Sadly that one died, i easily pulled it up because it wasn’t established at all 😢

I expect you'll have better luck with the new one.

  • Like 1
Posted
On 3/13/2025 at 11:31 AM, Las Palmas Norte said:

I give those away when my clump of basjoo gets too large. Looks good.

Send me one my way lol. But in all seriousness, thats a very nice sized basjoo. I’m hoping my experiment of a banana survived, basjoo x xihuanshangisaesis.

Posted
On 3/10/2025 at 5:38 AM, Leelanau Palms said:

April 2024 planting: 

image.thumb.jpeg.ea52b04ad46bff3940d353d03bc7f0e8.jpeg

image.thumb.jpeg.9e808e20940e150463cab81f79dfce01.jpeg

November 2024 before covering: 

image.thumb.jpeg.3901226c6ca9e9093732d79a22854475.jpeg

November after covering: 

image.thumb.jpeg.cf67e5d90a2f87045cfeb0333fd16625.jpeg

I'm watching the weather for the big spring reveal. Stay tuned.

 

I uncovered these a few days ago.

image.thumb.jpeg.ef8ea9d06f9d215f3a9ccf23638d9a88.jpeg

From left to right, here our the palms now....

From the far left is a needle purchased from Mail Order Natives and planted spring 2025: (quite a bit of frond damage)

image.thumb.jpeg.fad77c5f80127e89c9a7928e0c850fa5.jpeg

image.thumb.jpeg.b59cb42e0b42af51137f3b71d91abcce.jpeg

Middle palm is from Northeast Ohio palms (it looks surprisingly good): 

image.thumb.jpeg.02689bfb23911113fb7db16cd147e415.jpeg

image.thumb.jpeg.94f7574e4240ea03739791dc5964d4c7.jpeg

Far right palm is from southern supplier (can't remember which one) and was in my house for one winter before being planted (looks pretty beat up).I found 2 (dry?) rotted blooms on this one when I uncovered it:

image.thumb.jpeg.a8122e3e48c6eb9ea1c7de0838db85e1.jpeg

So overall, lots of frond damage after being mulched and covered in our average to cold winter with a minimum temp  ~ -1F and 44 extra inches of snow. I expect lots of frond loss. Pups/offsets look pretty good. Spears look pretty good, but will be pulling on them as it warms up.

  • Like 2

Zone 6b maritime climate

Posted
2 hours ago, Leelanau Palms said:

I uncovered these a few days ago.

image.thumb.jpeg.ef8ea9d06f9d215f3a9ccf23638d9a88.jpeg

From left to right, here our the palms now....

From the far left is a needle purchased from Mail Order Natives and planted spring 2025: (quite a bit of frond damage)

image.thumb.jpeg.fad77c5f80127e89c9a7928e0c850fa5.jpeg

image.thumb.jpeg.b59cb42e0b42af51137f3b71d91abcce.jpeg

Middle palm is from Northeast Ohio palms (it looks surprisingly good): 

image.thumb.jpeg.02689bfb23911113fb7db16cd147e415.jpeg

image.thumb.jpeg.94f7574e4240ea03739791dc5964d4c7.jpeg

Far right palm is from southern supplier (can't remember which one) and was in my house for one winter before being planted (looks pretty beat up).I found 2 (dry?) rotted blooms on this one when I uncovered it:

image.thumb.jpeg.a8122e3e48c6eb9ea1c7de0838db85e1.jpeg

So overall, lots of frond damage after being mulched and covered in our average to cold winter with a minimum temp  ~ -1F and 44 extra inches of snow. I expect lots of frond loss. Pups/offsets look pretty good. Spears look pretty good, but will be pulling on them as it warms up.

Hopefully when it warms up, they mostly recover from the damage! The Northeast OH Palms one is definitely is more reliable then the ones from warmer places it seems.

  • Like 1

My Youtube: Click to go to my YT Channel!
Palms (And Cycad) in Ground Currently: Rhapidophyllum Hystrix (x1), Butia Odorata (x1), Sabal Causiarum (x1), Sabal Louisiana (x1), Cycas Revoluta (x1).
Recent Lows: 2025:
-52024: -3F 2023: 5F 2022: -5F 2021: -5F 2020: 4F

  • 1 month later...
Posted

Sothe Butia died.. Probably should have gotten a hardier one from northeast ohio palms instead if a florida grown one.

IMG_8402.thumb.jpeg.b3c8372edef7ee4a93e4ec2326ccb8ac.jpegIMG_8401.thumb.jpeg.4cd15e660ecf2420d19cc76a033b8f61.jpeg

My Youtube: Click to go to my YT Channel!
Palms (And Cycad) in Ground Currently: Rhapidophyllum Hystrix (x1), Butia Odorata (x1), Sabal Causiarum (x1), Sabal Louisiana (x1), Cycas Revoluta (x1).
Recent Lows: 2025:
-52024: -3F 2023: 5F 2022: -5F 2021: -5F 2020: 4F

Posted

Wonder what I should put here now?

IMG_8403.thumb.jpeg.6e7afe1d1306dbe427bd37fb6aacb689.jpeg

  • Like 1

My Youtube: Click to go to my YT Channel!
Palms (And Cycad) in Ground Currently: Rhapidophyllum Hystrix (x1), Butia Odorata (x1), Sabal Causiarum (x1), Sabal Louisiana (x1), Cycas Revoluta (x1).
Recent Lows: 2025:
-52024: -3F 2023: 5F 2022: -5F 2021: -5F 2020: 4F

Posted
19 minutes ago, DTS said:

Sothe Butia died.. Probably should have gotten a hardier one from northeast ohio palms instead if a florida grown one.

How does that work? Is there a Butia with a different lineage that's hardier? Maybe a Sabal minor 'McCurtain' as a replacement?

 

Posted
29 minutes ago, Las Palmas Norte said:

How does that work? Is there a Butia with a different lineage that's hardier? Maybe a Sabal minor 'McCurtain' as a replacement?

 

it would be like getting a needle palm that was grown in florida that never seen cold weather. It would be less hardy than mine because of that. Leelanau Palm’s post above kinda shows that lol. A McCurtian is definitely a good suggestion!

My Youtube: Click to go to my YT Channel!
Palms (And Cycad) in Ground Currently: Rhapidophyllum Hystrix (x1), Butia Odorata (x1), Sabal Causiarum (x1), Sabal Louisiana (x1), Cycas Revoluta (x1).
Recent Lows: 2025:
-52024: -3F 2023: 5F 2022: -5F 2021: -5F 2020: 4F

Posted

I think this is what i’ll replace it with!

 

IMG_8407.thumb.jpeg.29ae391e896d187344e3c91b886758d2.jpeg

  • Like 2

My Youtube: Click to go to my YT Channel!
Palms (And Cycad) in Ground Currently: Rhapidophyllum Hystrix (x1), Butia Odorata (x1), Sabal Causiarum (x1), Sabal Louisiana (x1), Cycas Revoluta (x1).
Recent Lows: 2025:
-52024: -3F 2023: 5F 2022: -5F 2021: -5F 2020: 4F

Posted

Some leaves broke when grtting it into the car 😭 but it’s here!

IMG_8410.thumb.jpeg.dc37de93a9a6f948bb5feabc37d892dc.jpeg

 

  • Like 3

My Youtube: Click to go to my YT Channel!
Palms (And Cycad) in Ground Currently: Rhapidophyllum Hystrix (x1), Butia Odorata (x1), Sabal Causiarum (x1), Sabal Louisiana (x1), Cycas Revoluta (x1).
Recent Lows: 2025:
-52024: -3F 2023: 5F 2022: -5F 2021: -5F 2020: 4F

Posted
23 hours ago, DTS said:

it would be like getting a needle palm that was grown in florida that never seen cold weather. It would be less hardy than mine because of that. ...

Some of what you state has merit, but palms don't increase winter hardiness from being subjected to colder climates. Palms have a genetic threshold at which cell damage occurs. Prolonged or repeated cold exposure combined with climactic conditions regardless of where they're grown, will severely damage or kill them. I think what you might be trying to convey is winter readiness, a situation were a palm gradually is conditioned to it's environment, but still staying within it's range of temperature and environmental surroundings. Text book ratings for winter hardiness are typically stated for mature palms and depend largely on which eco-system they're grown in.

Best of luck on your next palm venture.

  • Like 3
Posted
On 4/19/2025 at 11:12 AM, Las Palmas Norte said:

Some of what you state has merit, but palms don't increase winter hardiness from being subjected to colder climates. Palms have a genetic threshold at which cell damage occurs. Prolonged or repeated cold exposure combined with climactic conditions regardless of where they're grown, will severely damage or kill them. I think what you might be trying to convey is winter readiness, a situation were a palm gradually is conditioned to it's environment, but still staying within it's range of temperature and environmental surroundings. Text book ratings for winter hardiness are typically stated for mature palms and depend largely on which eco-system they're grown in.

Best of luck on your next palm venture.

All true. There is short term adaptation and long term adaptation look it up.   

  • Like 1
Posted
15 hours ago, Chester B said:

All true. There is short term adaptation and long term adaptation look it up.   

Curious. Where can that be found? I'm interested. Generic search a or specific article you can point to?

  • Like 2
Posted
11 hours ago, Las Palmas Norte said:

Curious. Where can that be found? I'm interested. Generic search a or specific article you can point to?

It’s a very old concept in biology.  Short term adaptation is like I’m more used to hot weather living in Texas than you are and can tolerate it better but we will both die if exposed to temps outside normal human ranges.  My short term adaptation is reversible like if I moved to the Yukon I wouldn’t be able to tolerate the heat like I can after a year of living up there. Long term adaptation is something that happens over generations. 

  • Like 1
  • Upvote 1
Posted

@Las Palmas Norte @Chester B Interesting discussion on adaptation short and long.  How does evolution fit into this difference between short and long term adaptation?  Some plants like Citrus seem to adapt and evolve at the same time where acclimatization to a new climate will sometimes produce a sport or branch on a citrus tree that is distinctly different from all the others.  For example I have a 45 year old Satsuma Mandarin which when it was younger went through several winters of freezing weather, during this time most of the branches and limbs died except for a couple which suffered much less freeze damage.  These surviving and apparent more cold hardy branches eventually replaced the older limbs and for the last 20 years have never defoliated even during similar freezes in its youth.  This is an observation only and I have no explanation why or what is going on in the tree.

Posted

@Banana Belt I was immediately reminded of an Atwood Naval (Atwood early) citrus I had some years ago. It originated from a regular Washington Naval from a bud sport on the property of Robert Atwood in 1935.

Some palms seem to be more adaptable or flexible allowing them to be grown in a wider range of conditions, while others are more specific and have little tolerance for surviving conditions outside of it's required environmental conditions. 

  • Like 1
Posted
1 hour ago, Las Palmas Norte said:

It originated from a regular Washington Naval from a bud sport on the property of Robert Atwood in 1935.

This has happened so many times to Citrus I can't name them all. The history of Citrus as it followed humans around the world is amazing and crazy too.  It has been said that early citrus probably originated in SE Asia where there were just a few varieties.  Today's varieties found in the stores did not exist several thousand years ago, but this is true with so many plants.  Hybridization of Palms produces many mules but sometimes something fertile altogether different.

  • Upvote 1

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