THERE S A PALM FOR JUST ABOUT ANY PLACE YOU RE PLANTING.

Similar documents
The Florida 11 Paul Craft

SOUTH COAST PLAZA PALM COLLECTION. Self-Guided Tour

Mediterranean Plants

Legend : Height Sunshine Irrigation Flower color

NOT YOUR AVERAGE PALM

Sotol Dasylirion wheeleri

STEELE SWCD TREE PROGRAM BY THE STEELE COUNTY SWCD OFFICE

GVG 2014 Spring Plant Sale. Alex Shipley. Wholesale Manager Civano Nursery Civanonursery.net

Ornamental Palms for South Florida 1

Evergreen Huckleberry Vaccinium ovatum

Cactus family Cylindropuntia imbricata Size 6 High x 5 Wide Blooms Magenta flowers in late spring Water Very low Exposure Full sun Areas All

Japanese Acers & Bamboos

10 Common Palms of the Tampa Bay Area 1

Cedrus, Cedar (Pinaceae)

Forest Hill Residential Park Recommended Tree & Plant Options Prepared By: Terra Landscape. March 20, 2017

HISTORY USES AND HEALTH BENEFITS. Figure 31. Nanking cherries

Client Wildscape for the Property Situated at: 5 Apbiol Road

Nyssa Sylvatica Black Gum

Residential Tree Guide 2017

LARGE FLOWERING TREES. Brownea Brownea grandiceps is an evergreen tree with a low, dense crown; it can grow 6-8 metres tall.

Species: Juniperus chinensis

All Time Favorites Still Available

Chorisia speciosa or Ceiba speciosa

Mediterranean Plants

Mediterranean Plants

Unique and Unusual Plants

Invasive Plant Species of Big Island

American Arborvitae (Thuja occidentalis)

Common plant species of Seattle Parks (winter 2010) BIOL 476 Conservation Biology

What s That Bloomin Thing?

French Cabaret Red Hibiscus Hibiscus syriacus Mindour 1 PPAF

AGRICULTURAL EXTENSION SERVICE UNIVERSITY OF MINNESOTA -- U. S. DEPARTMENT OF AGRICULTURE INSTITUTE OF AGRICULTURE ST. PAUL MINNESOTI' 5~

Welcome to Thanksgiving Point s Children s Garden

2011 Sun City Grand Plant Palette for Maintained Homes Plants and Shrubs

Grow Fruit Naturally: A Hands-On Guide To Luscious, Homegrown Fruit Free Ebooks PDF

American Chestnut Castanea dentata

Native Plants in the South Pasadena Nature Park - #1

Plant Identification. California Natives and Exotic Weeds

Species Qty Price. Total. Name: Address: Address: City/State/Zip: Daytime phone:

Custom Landscape Proposal for Mr. & Mrs. Jim Brown

Arecaceae palm family Washingtonia filifera California fanpalm

Trees_Children_2007.doc 16/03/2007 Page 1 of 7

Conspiracy Garden Starts. varieties. COnSpIRACY garden

Myrtle Rust A GUIDE TO IDENTIFYING. Myrtles in your backyard. Myrtles and myrtle rust

SWAMP MILKWEED. Asclepias incarnata

KIDS' HOUSE Texas State Symbols Coloring Book

Potassium Deficiency in Palms 1

2018 Small Fruit Plant Sale Variety Information

! " Alternatives to Ash: Native Trees for Southern Wisconsin" Compiled by the UW Madison Arboretum! January, 2014!

Feb. 23, 2019 Plant Sale Cacti/Succulent List Plants highlighted in Green are available in limited quantities. Pet Safe (Cats/Dogs)

Mediterranean Plants

American beech. (Fagus grandifolia) Description: Only species of this genus found in North America.

Ceiba pentandra Kopok tree, Silk-cotton tree

CITY OF THORNTON. Trees for Tomorrow. Forestry

Previously Used Scientific Names: Kalmia angustifolia var. carolina (Small) Fernald

Converse County Conservation District

The following plant species were installed in 1981 as specified by the Landscape Architect.

Basil Mild basil flavor, that is sweet. Purple Ruffles Color adds drama to garnishes and herbal vinegar.

Plant Identification. California Natives and Exotic Weeds

Suitable Flowering Trees for Fair Lakes Court Available at Merrifield Garden Center, Fair Oaks

American Beech. Beautiful smooth bark. Large tree. Dark green leaves

The Huntington Palm Collection Background

Edible Gardens. See pricing, information, and more pictures of all plants featured in this video!

Evergreen, informal small to medium, densely rounded tree with moderate growth to 30 feet with a spread of 30 feet. Leaves are 4-5 inches long and

Sw. Moraceae. Brosimum alicastrum. LOCAL NAMES English (ramon tree,bread nut); Italian (capomo); Spanish (ramon,masico,capomo)

Monthly Update September 2015 INSIDE THIS ISSUE

Report of Subtropical Fruit Committee

3197 S. CHICAGO ST. JOLIET, IL Follow us on Facebook

Westlock Tree Makers 2019 Tree Species

Small and Compact Ornamental Trees

2019 BAPTISIA Phlox. ACORN FARMS INC Worthington Rd. Galena, OH / ph 614/ fx.

JUNE TURK S CAP PLANT OF THE MONTH. npsot.org. Flaigg, Norman G., Lady Bird Johnson Wildflower Center"

Chapter from Erythroniums in Cultivation Erythronium revolutum

For sale by the Superintendent of Documents, U.S. Government Printing Office Washington, D.C Price 10 cents Stock Number

DEADLINE FOR ALL ORDERS: FRIDAY, MARCH 16, 2018 HOW TO ORDER:

It s found in all six New England states.

CRAWFORD SWCD 2019 TREE SALE

Dry Riverbeds in Your Garden. A Sustainable Landscaping Theme. See pricing, information, and more pictures of all plants featured in this video!

Common Name: AMERICAN MOUNTAIN-ASH

GVG 2013 Fall Plant Sale. Alex Shipley. Wholesale Manager Civano Nursery Civanonursery.net

Pacific Madrone. Scientific Name: Arbutus menziesii Family: Ericaceae. Statistics

Common shrubs shrub-steppe habitats

Arecaceae palm family Washingtonia filifera California fanpalm

Common Name: ALABAMA WARBONNET. Scientific Name: Jamesianthus alabamensis Blake & Sherff. Other Commonly Used Names: Jamesianthus

Open Research Online The Open University s repository of research publications and other research outputs

Ornamental Grasses 2018 SHADE GRASSES:

6600 SW Philomath Blvd., Corvallis, OR ~ (541)

Fruit Tree List. Apples

Asian Pears The term Asian pear describes a large group of pear varieties having crisp, juicy fruit, when mature. The fruit are good to eat when harve

Norway Spruce Colorado Blue Spruce Scotch Pine White Spruce White Pine Douglas Fir

Asparagus officinalis

Ribes aureum. Ribes sanguineum. Shrubs

Common Name: PONDSPICE

Sweetbay Magnolia: Are you missing an opportunity?

Tucson Cactus and Succulent Society. Opuntioid Garden Proposal. Tucson Prickly Park

HANSON'S GARDEN VILLAGE HOSTA LIST FOR 2018 HOSTA (BY SIZE) MOUND SIZE DESCRIPTION MINI HOSTAS Appletini MINI Bright yellow leaves change to

2019 CLEMATIS & VINE CLEMATIS $19.99 each OTHER ASSORTED VINES $ $24.99 each. clematis.

Rice Paddy in a Bucket

EVERGREEN EMERALD TWIST DOUGLAS FIR Pseudotsuga menziesii emerald twister

A Realtor s Guide to California Native Plants. California Native Plants for Curb Appeal and Ecosystem Support

Transcription:

FOREGROUND / PLANTS PALMS OUT THERE S A PALM FOR JUST ABOUT ANY PLACE YOU RE PLANTING. BY JANE BERGER LEFT The coconut palm is ubiquitous in south Florida and other tropical locations. Native to Mexico, the endangered Guadalupe palm is prized as a specimen in California landscapes. Y ou can t always get what you want unless, that is, you re into palms. Lisa Gimmy, ASLA, of Lisa Gimmy Landscape Architecture in Los Angeles, finds palms uniquely suited to small gardens, given small root balls that leave a very tiny footprint on the ground. One that Gimmy likes to use is the blue hesper or Mexican blue palm (Brahea armata), native to Baja California, Mexico, with stunning, silvery-blue, fan-shaped fronds and creamy white flower clusters that cascade down from the leaves. Gimmy selects palms for spatial characteristics first, then for texture, leaf color, and the character of the trunk. They are like poems, she says. With the head up in the air, there s really nothing else like it. Gimmy also likes palms because they provide instant gratification, and that s very important in Southern California. Ray Hernandez, the president of the International Palm Society, told me a story about a friend who drives from Long Island, New York, to Florida every year to pick up specimens that will last for just the summer season. The folks that live out in the Hamptons and have 10 zeros behind their bank account can afford to haul up a coconut palm or something hardier and plant it in their landscape, and they do it on a yearly basis, he said. It s that whole mentality of bringing the tropics home with you. Although some palms will survive winter temperatures down to 5 degrees Fahrenheit, they are shrubby in form rather than the tall, majestic varieties such as coconut, royal, and date that many people associate with palm-lined avenues in Miami, Los Angeles, and other warm locations. Wherever they re from the tropics of the Amazon, the heights of the Himalayas, or the deserts of the Middle East palms share the same characteristics. They are flowering trees and shrubs that bear fruits from the coconut and date to the currently trendy acai berry that is said to have numerous health benefits. They have single or clustering trunks and leaves that look like fans or feathers. A few palms even have trunks or stems so thin they resemble vines and clamber up trees, shrubs, and other structures. Unlike hardwood trees, palms are monocots and do not produce secondary growth that, with age, increases BOTANICS WHOLESALE, LEFT; CAITLIN ATKINSON, 58 / LANDSCAPE ARCHITECTURE MAGAZINE JULY 2018

The Puerto Rico palmetto is known for its gray cylindrical trunk and deep green leaves. Leaves of the cohune palm look like feather dusters. ABOVE The sagisi palm arches over a patio. the diameter of the trunk on woody plants. Palms have adventitious roots instead of taproots, and most flower once a year. Tall, erect palms are often called trees, but the shorter clumping and vining palms are most often described as woody, shrubby herbs. There are more than 2,500 species of palms. The date palm was cultivated in ancient Mesopotamia more than 5,000 years ago, and it is mentioned often in the Bible and the Koran. Around the world, it has enormous economic importance. The coconut palm produces meat, milk, and water, and its outer husk, coir, is used to make ropes, baskets, brushes, and mats. The trunk is used by some for timber, and palm wine and vinegar are made from the flower stalk. Palm oil comes from African oil palms; wax palms from South America are used in polishes, candles, and varnishes; the black sugar palm of Malaysia is processed for fiber, sugar, wine, and arrack, a distilled liquor. The native American cabbage palmetto (Sabal palmetto) is used to make wharf pilings, baskets, mats, and brushes, and its buds are edible. Saw palmetto (Serenoa repens), another native, produces small black berries touted for prostate health. Other items made from palms include parquet and rattan, charcoal and dyes, fencing and jewelry, chess pieces, clothing, animal feed, cosmetics, handicrafts, medicine, bows, and spears. Jason Dewees, the author of Designing with Palms (Timber Press, 2018) and a horticulturist at Flora Grubb Gardens in San Francisco, says coyotes, foxes, and western bluebirds use palms for sustenance, hooked orioles create nests in desert fan palms, and the trees are a great source of nectar and pollen for pollinators. He explains that an individual palm inflorescence has an enormous number of flowers that open progressively, and a bee can come back to a flowering palm over and over again over the course of a couple of weeks and have a reliable source of nectar. Dewees has been obsessed with palms since he was a child, visiting his grandparents in Florida. At age 17, he was the youngest member ever to join the International Palm Society. As his knowledge increased, he turned his preoccupation into a career as a palm specialist, consultant, and designer. Dewees notes that the palm family is amazingly diverse. In Hawaii, he says, there are about 25 species of the native genus Pritchardia, a fan palm. Some are short; some are tall; some are big; some are small. Some grow up at 4,200 feet in the cloud forest, some down by the sea in a brackish environment. A wax palm from the Andes, Ceroxylon, prefers cool, foggy conditions. It grows at an altitude of 11,500 feet in Ecuador and Colombia, and with enough irrigation, thrives in the Northern California climate, he says. JUNGLE MUSIC PALMS, CYCADS & TROPICAL PLANTS, ; TAMARA ALVAREZ, TOP AND INSET 60 / LANDSCAPE ARCHITECTURE MAGAZINE JULY 2018

The Florida thatch palm is excellent for small spaces. TOP The yellow butterfly palm is often used to add color to landscapes. At Santa Monica s Tongva Park, the silver European fan palms stand out in this composition by James Corner Field Operations and the meadow expert John Greenlee, Affiliate ASLA. Most palms are happiest in tropical locations, but Dewees says some can be grown successfully up north. He says the farthest north palms are reliable on the West Coast is near the Canadian border of Washington State along Puget Sound. On the East Coast, shrubby palms, notably the needle palm (Rhapidophyllum hystrix), about five feet high with fan-shaped, deeply divided leaves, will probably survive as far north as Cape Cod. Given some protection with proper placement, he says, you might even see the Chinese windmill palm (Trachycarpus fortunei) in the Brooklyn Botanic Garden. It s said to be the hardiest tree palm, and Dewees believes that because of the Gulf Stream, it might prosper in Europe as far north as Edinburgh, Scotland. He says it s regularly seen in London, in Ireland, and on the south and west coasts of England. The number of palms in cultivation gives designers a great choice for specific landscape situations. Jesse Bergman and his father, Phil, own the Jungle Music Palms, Cycads & Tropical Plants nursery in Encinitas, California. They carry about 700 species of palms. Jesse Bergman says palms can be used to form a canopy, a centerpiece, to screen views, to create shade for foliage plants, and for that lush, tropical feeling that a lot of clients desire. Other clients want palms with thorns or bristles because they keep people and animals out of their yards. Bergman says the Canary Island date palm (Phoenix canariensis) is among the most common palms in California. It s ubiquitous in Los Angeles, despite the problem of fusarium wilt, a fungal disease that has killed many trees. The king palm (Archontophoenix cunninghamiana), with feathery green leaves and a ringed trunk, is also popular, often used as a street tree, in groves, or as a specimen. Bergman s favorites include the teddy bear palm (Dypsis leptocheilos) with a reddish-brown, fuzzy crown and the yellow butterfly palm (Dypsis lutescens), a multistemmed palm with a white trunk and a crown of yellows and golds, what we lovingly call the neighbor blocker. TAMARA ALVAREZ, ; JUNGLE MUSIC PALMS, CYCADS & TROPICAL PLANTS, TOP ; CAITLIN ATKINSON, BOTTOM 62 / LANDSCAPE ARCHITECTURE MAGAZINE JULY 2018

radiata) or the native Florida cherry palm (Pseudophoenix sargentii) for visual breaks at the property line so you don t see the neighbors. Date palms can be either single-stem or clustering, with angled leaflets and delicious fruits. TOP Designers favor the Satake palm for its shiny, purple-brown crownshaft and arching fronds. ABOVE The bismarck palm s silvery-blue leaves and generous crown span provide screening. Palms native to deserts, including the date palms (Phoenix spp.) and the California fan palm (Washingtonia filifera), do best in hot, dry climates like Palm Springs. The European fan palm (Chamaerops humilis) is valued in California, Florida, and South Carolina because it tolerates desertlike or oceanside climates and can be used as a singlestem specimen or pruned into a cluster for an attractive hedge. The clara palm (Brahea clara) thrives in California, either in foggy coastal conditions or the hot, dry climate of inland areas. The queen palm (Syagrus romanzoffiana) is also very forgiving, growing well in Florida and California and prized for its lush, feathery leaves and medium size. Craig Reynolds, a landscape architect in Key West, Florida, uses palms in almost every project. The species with palmate leaves come in different colors, he notes silver and light green and dark green and they re very bold and give you a lot of drama. Reynolds sometimes uses tall coconut palms (Cocos nucifera) to create ceilings in landscapes and smaller ones like Florida thatch palms (Thrinax As a specimen, perhaps contained within a deck near a swimming pool, Reynolds might use a Satake palm (Satakentia liukiuensis), with a deep burgundy-purple crownshaft and flat, pinnate fronds. It s very graceful and organized, Reynolds says, and it just looks like the perfect palm tree. The bismarck palm (Bismarckia nobilis) is another favored tree, 20 to 70 feet high with a crown spanning 18 to 22 feet. It has fan-shaped, silvery, rigid leaves that Reynolds uses to punctuate a landscape. Working mainly in south Florida, the Keys, and the Caribbean, Reynolds has innumerable options when selecting palms, and he orders some from Botanics Wholesale in Homestead, Florida. Mike Tevelonis, the firm s general manager, says there is nothing else quite like Copernicia palms, a diverse group of fan palms from the Caribbean and South America. They re known for their massive, smooth trunks that look like concrete pillars. Tevelonis says these palms are like living sculptures, with deep green, fan-shaped leaves that have a silver tint as well. JUNGLE MUSIC PALMS, CYCADS & TROPICAL PLANTS, ; BOTANICS WHOLESALE, TOP ; STEPHEN DUNN, BOTTOM 64 / LANDSCAPE ARCHITECTURE MAGAZINE JULY 2018

COYOTES, FOXES, AND WESTERN BLUEBIRDS USE PALMS FOR SUSTENANCE. The diverse Copernicia genus includes C. gigas and C. rigida, both native to Cuba, and the rare C. baileyana, with a trunk that resembles concrete and deeply cut, overlapping, fanlike leaves. BELOW The native Florida cherry palm is often used in Florida, here popping up in a narrow space among evergreen ground covers designed by the landscape architect Craig Reynolds. Some Copernicias, like C. baileyana, are rare to uncommon, with trunks 40 feet high and two feet in diameter. Tevelonis planted Attalea cohune on either side of his driveway. I wanted a tunnel to drive under, he says. This palm has upright, feathery, arching leaves, but it takes many years before it lifts up and forms a trunk. Jeff Searle, a partner at the Rainforest Collection in Southwest Ranches, Florida (Broward County), also grows rare and exotic palms. For something unusual, he recommends the flamethrower palm (Chambeyronia macrocarpa), a slow-growing, relatively small palm, just 30 to 50 feet high, with large, wide leaves that emerge bright red in a show-stopping display. Another captivating species is the sealing wax palm (Cyrtostachys renda), with a thin, 30-foot-high trunk that looks like bamboo and a brilliant scarlet crownshaft just below the dark green pinnate leaves. In Charleston, South Carolina, Cindy Cline, ASLA, of Wertimer + Cline Landscape Architects, has a narrower choice of palms because not too many survive the colder winter temperatures. She says the firm mostly uses the native cabbage palmetto (Sabal palmetto) the state tree because it s cold-hardy, tolerant of drought and salt spray, and can also thrive in brackish water. It s a tough and versatile plant, she says, that can create instant height on an otherwise treeless site. It s a relatively slow-growing palm, so Cline plants them at different heights and staggers them along a property line to make a living buffer. She also plants palms in a colonnade pattern, setting up a rhythm and order to deliberately shape a space or extend the lines of the architecture out into the garden. Charleston gardens are often small, and Cline says palms are perfect for narrow beds and tight spaces where not many other plants of any height would work. As an accent or specimen, she might specify the southern jelly palm (Butia odorata), with arching, bluish-green leaves, burgundy flower buds that open to creamy white, and edible fruits of gold to deep orange. Taller palms with notable characteristics include the Chinese windmill palm (Trachycarpus fortunei), hardy to 10 degrees Fahrenheit, which Cline uses to introduce another texture into the garden. It has green fanlike leaves and a trunk that almost looks furry. Although the plant palette in Charleston is limited, the ordinary Sabal palmetto contributes in a very sensory way to the space, she says. The palm fronds in a light breeze will rustle ever so slightly, and the sun, at certain angles, will highlight and catch the silvery green aspect of the palm leaves and throw interesting shadow patterns against walls. No matter where you work, palms are an attractive alternative to trees and shrubs if the weather is not too cold. Ray Hernandez of the International Palm Society says it s because it s a plant that looks like no other plant around. JANE BERGER IS A WRITER AND CERTIFIED LANDSCAPE DESIGNER IN WASHINGTON, D.C. BOTANICS WHOLESALE, TOP; BARRY FITZGERALD, BOTTOM 66 / LANDSCAPE ARCHITECTURE MAGAZINE JULY 2018