Тёмный

Top Five Winter Hardy Palm Trees 

Walking Talking Gardeners
Подписаться 5 тыс.
Просмотров 2,8 тыс.
50% 1

Опубликовано:

 

21 окт 2024

Поделиться:

Ссылка:

Скачать:

Готовим ссылку...

Добавить в:

Мой плейлист
Посмотреть позже
Комментарии : 22   
@egan1878
@egan1878 9 месяцев назад
EXCELLENT video 👏 👏. Really enjoy your videos. You chose well all beautiful 🌴 but my favourite is still trachycarpus wagnerianus more compact and stiffer leafs than standard trachycarpus
@walkingtalkinggardeners
@walkingtalkinggardeners 9 месяцев назад
Hi Egan and thanks for the comment, I do love a T.Wag particularly in a formal setting where they are genuinely fantastic, but (at least for me) the species has a wonderful primordial even prehistoric look to it, especially once mature for the more informal garden. That's just my opinion though. Kind regards, Simon
@Sanchez96d
@Sanchez96d 5 месяцев назад
Great video! I have the Pindo palm, they’ve done well in our area colder than that for years! Good picks . I really want a Jubea chilensis
@walkingtalkinggardeners
@walkingtalkinggardeners 5 месяцев назад
Love those Pindo palms! Jubeas are available around here, but only as massive specimens. Last time I looked they started at £600 but needed heavy equipment to move them around adding to the expense. Still want one though. Thanks for your comment. Kind regards Simon
@keithomelvena2354
@keithomelvena2354 8 месяцев назад
Great video. I'm not in England, but sort of mid South Island NZ. Not toooo dissimilar climate wise. Trachycarpus does well but best in a damp shady spot. similar to where a ree fern would like. People make the mistake of, it's a palm, it really needs heat, but no, here hot also means dry and usually windy, which makes the tree look tatty and unattractive. Phoenix canariensis? Really big! pretty bomb proof. Some years ago, '90s? We had an unusually low temp. -8-9degC. Large established Phoenix got badly burnt, but survived. Problem is, it takes years to shed those damaged leaves. Wouldn't want those temperatures every year. -5-6 handles ok without damage. Chaemerops, haven't tried that one. There are specimens around, but personally I prefer the lusher looking palms. Butia? A favourite. Really tough. Doesn't mind the wind, although all palms do best sheltered when young. The fruit are delicious. I have both Jubaea and Washingtonia in 85litre pots and they are looking great. With cold conditions the length of freeze is as important as the depth. My garden gets down to -2 several days over winter and none of my palms have an issue, keeping them watered over summer more so and wind. Two mentions worth a crack. Livistona australis, like a pricklier, lusher, less hairy Trachy and Rhopalostylis sapida, doesn't like freezes, but grows well under the shelter of protective overstory. Oh yes, another I've tried outside, when it became too big for my hothouse, is Syagrus romanzoffiana. Now that really has serious tropical vibes. To my surprise, it overwintered like a champ.
@walkingtalkinggardeners
@walkingtalkinggardeners 8 месяцев назад
Wow, Keith, what a fantastic comment. So much great information in there. We really appreciate it. Plus, you have identified a couple of other palm species for us and others to consider. Great work. Kind regards Simon and Lorna
@2023byoml
@2023byoml 3 месяца назад
I live near Portland Oregon and here we can grow some of these palms too. The problem here is we have hot summers especially this summer it’s been over 30 C for the high temp most days. Had a few days over 36 already this summer. The other bigger problem is the cold rainy winter and the last few winters we had late winter snow ice storm. Last winter it was a pretty mild warm winter than we had a rare late March snow and ice storm. And a very rainy spring that flooded a lot of plants.
@walkingtalkinggardeners
@walkingtalkinggardeners 3 месяца назад
Wow, that is a wide range of seasonal temperatures. It must be quite challenging to garden there. Thanks for your comment. Kind regards Simon
@EddyFeyen
@EddyFeyen 9 месяцев назад
Well the only palm i would cold hardy is the trachy. The canarypalm i certainly NOT advice and call cold hardy. For me cold hardy means -15°C And sadly it's not all about temp but more moisture. But as you say, for the UK these maybe grow well as long as there is no wet and cold winter
@walkingtalkinggardeners
@walkingtalkinggardeners 9 месяцев назад
HI Eddy, and thanks for getting in touch. I completely appreciate where you are coming from however the Royal Horticultural Society sets average winter hardy plants at between -5 to -10 degrees Celsius, cold winter hardy at -10 to -15 degrees Celsius, very cold winter hardy plants -15 to -20 etc and so on. So for the UK calling Canary Palms hardy is absolutely acceptable. Around where I live on the south coast, West Sussex, there are literally hundreds of these in peoples overfilling front and back gardens, the larger specimens of which have literally been here for decades. Winter temperature have been down as low a -8 degrees here which is fine for the mature plants but as I say in the video young plants can suffer cold stress at that temperature resulting in spear pull but will still survive. However, the -15 where you are is like to kill off any young plants before they are mature enough to cope. Great comment. KInd regards, Simon
@xdseba14
@xdseba14 Месяц назад
Phoenix canariensis can survive only -5 deagre Celsius
@walkingtalkinggardeners
@walkingtalkinggardeners Месяц назад
Hi there and thanks for getting in touch. As mentioned in my video, once they are mature, they will tolerate lower temperatures than that. Which is why they are so many mature specimens here in west Sussex. Temperatures went down to -7 Celsius in 2022, and they are all still here. You can check for them on google maps if you require further proof, but they are already featured in the video. Kind regards, Simon
@leemaharg3788
@leemaharg3788 3 месяца назад
I've found the butias are more hardy than the pheonix canaries palms
@walkingtalkinggardeners
@walkingtalkinggardeners 3 месяца назад
Yes, I agree with that. Simon
@mikej70
@mikej70 6 месяцев назад
Hardiest palm is the needle palm can take zone 6 5 below zero grows great in South New Jersey probably hardy to coastal Massachusetts However a small palm a shrub only 4 ft or so at full maturity but don't have to cover it . Takes freezing nights below 20 degrees regularly Keep out of wind protection mine by house. Even keeps growing yearound when it's. Milder. EUROPE MORE WARMER IN WINTER FARTHER NORTH BECAUSE OF GULF STREAM
@walkingtalkinggardeners
@walkingtalkinggardeners 6 месяцев назад
Hi Mike, you are correct. The needle palm is super hardy. I just don't like it, though. I think it's too messy, so I didn't include it in my top 5. However, Lorna does like it. But if I did a top 6 hardy palms.......!
@mikej70
@mikej70 6 месяцев назад
@walkingtalkinggardeners Thanks! ! Can't grow as many here trying windmill and maybe european fan palm . Trying to grow a more trunked palm here the needle is small want something taller and tree sized. Finding any is difficult very rare at plant stores online but the shipping and prices $$$$
@walkingtalkinggardeners
@walkingtalkinggardeners 6 месяцев назад
It's the same here, trachycarpus, and chamaerops are everywhere and well priced. Anything else is either too large to move without equipment, very expensive or just not available. It might just be a general lack of confidence or just a lack of knowledge in the garden retail industry. Simon
@leemaharg3788
@leemaharg3788 3 месяца назад
And I would never ever try to grow a washie again ,I lost 5 washies and 5 pheonix canaries palms and would never get them again 😮
@walkingtalkinggardeners
@walkingtalkinggardeners 3 месяца назад
I'm sorry to hear you lost those plants, Lee. I think that other than the mildest regions of the UK it's not worth growing them. And even then they will need winter protection.
@Slo-ryde
@Slo-ryde 5 месяцев назад
The “ sabal minor”….needs no protection!
@walkingtalkinggardeners
@walkingtalkinggardeners 5 месяцев назад
Hi Slo-ryde, you've hit the nail right on the head with regards to cold tolerance. Sabal minor is a fantastic choice. Sadly it doesn't do well here in the UK as we don't have warm enough temperatures for it to put out much in the way of new fronds but for mediterranean regions this one is ideal. Thanks for adding this one to the list. Simon
Далее
PALMS | Rare, Fast growing & Hardy species
37:10
Просмотров 11 тыс.
Gardening Unplugged - Hardy Palms with Bill Reynolds
23:15
Fake Referee Whistle Moments 😅
00:38
Просмотров 6 млн
Paint Projects
00:17
Просмотров 3,5 млн
I Ordered Cold Hardy Palm Trees From The Home Depot
9:19
Ancient future - saving the Wollemi pine
6:56
Просмотров 27 тыс.
20 Most Unusual Trees in The World
28:13
Просмотров 1,9 млн
Palm trees growing in snowy Lee's Summit yard
1:40
Просмотров 18 тыс.
Plant Profile: five unusual lilacs!
21:18
Просмотров 4,9 тыс.
Cold Hardy Windmill Palm Care & Info
14:34
Просмотров 8 тыс.
Fake Referee Whistle Moments 😅
00:38
Просмотров 6 млн