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Posted

So glad to see my Jubaea chilensis thriving at our old place (in Kingswinford, West Midlands, UK). The current owners were wonderful and let me into the back garden to take a closer look. Impressed how much it’s grown over the last 6 years. Wish I could have taken it with me when we emigrated.

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  • Like 9
  • Upvote 2

For those of you that frequent Facebook, I’ve set up a group called “Pommy palms”, where many of the palms I’ve seen since emigrating to Australia have been documented. If you wish to be a member, copy and paste “Pommy palms” into Facebook to view the page and click “Join group”.

Posted

Couple of other standouts included this Trachycarpus ukhrulensis. Totally forgot I’d planted it.

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  • Like 5

For those of you that frequent Facebook, I’ve set up a group called “Pommy palms”, where many of the palms I’ve seen since emigrating to Australia have been documented. If you wish to be a member, copy and paste “Pommy palms” into Facebook to view the page and click “Join group”.

Posted

…and this Trachycarpus nova. Not a huge fan of the species as they tend to look quite battered if exposed to wind. This one doesn’t appear too bad, but reckon it’ll be a different story once it gets over the fence line.

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  • Like 5

For those of you that frequent Facebook, I’ve set up a group called “Pommy palms”, where many of the palms I’ve seen since emigrating to Australia have been documented. If you wish to be a member, copy and paste “Pommy palms” into Facebook to view the page and click “Join group”.

Posted

Once that Jubaea goes skyward, it'll overpower those Trachys. Everything looks healthy.

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