Beginning the germination process! - Part II
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- Large Palm
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Beginning the germination process! - Part II
I had started an earlier thread (part I), which can be found here: viewtopic.php?t=3519&start=0 . Please post any replies to either topic in this thread, as it will help keep PalmsNorth running smoothly!
E. pauciflora ssp. debeuzevillei seedlings, taken last week:
Pomegranates:
Cameron.
E. pauciflora ssp. debeuzevillei seedlings, taken last week:
Pomegranates:
Cameron.
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nice crop of E. deb's. Are you planning to separate them and do a mass planting? This will be a nice test for your area.
A few photos of some seedlings taken 2 minutes ago LOL.
<img src=http://i30.photobucket.com/albums/c309/ ... ffcc1a.jpg>
<img src=http://i30.photobucket.com/albums/c309/ ... 4d50ba.jpg>
<img src=http://i30.photobucket.com/albums/c309/ ... 19d791.jpg>
<img src=http://i30.photobucket.com/albums/c309/ ... 430852.jpg>
<img src=http://i30.photobucket.com/albums/c309/ ... b2ae9c.jpg>
I think I need a bigger yard!
A few photos of some seedlings taken 2 minutes ago LOL.
<img src=http://i30.photobucket.com/albums/c309/ ... ffcc1a.jpg>
<img src=http://i30.photobucket.com/albums/c309/ ... 4d50ba.jpg>
<img src=http://i30.photobucket.com/albums/c309/ ... 19d791.jpg>
<img src=http://i30.photobucket.com/albums/c309/ ... 430852.jpg>
<img src=http://i30.photobucket.com/albums/c309/ ... b2ae9c.jpg>
I think I need a bigger yard!
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- Arctic Palm Plantation
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Both of you guys need acreage.I think I need a bigger yard!
Well done.
I'm down to two pomegranates, not sure how to grow these except full sun.
Pinched off the bottom leaves to get more of a "standard" look with a trunk for a future patio pot.
Any hints of what fertilizer is best for poms?
Good idea Cameron with Part II of the topic.
Barb
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Noticed that the brownish tips on the Jubaea seedlings are the sheath for the first leaf.
<a href="http://www.flickr.com/photos/southslope/7473465434/" title="001 by edible_plum, on Flickr"><img src="http://farm9.staticflickr.com/8027/7473 ... f372af.jpg" width="375" height="500" alt="001"></a>
And here's the Pomegranate that germinated this winter.
<a href="http://www.flickr.com/photos/southslope/7473542498/" title="004 by edible_plum, on Flickr"><img src="http://farm9.staticflickr.com/8014/7473 ... 835118.jpg" width="375" height="500" alt="004"></a>
Barb
<a href="http://www.flickr.com/photos/southslope/7473465434/" title="001 by edible_plum, on Flickr"><img src="http://farm9.staticflickr.com/8027/7473 ... f372af.jpg" width="375" height="500" alt="001"></a>
And here's the Pomegranate that germinated this winter.
<a href="http://www.flickr.com/photos/southslope/7473542498/" title="004 by edible_plum, on Flickr"><img src="http://farm9.staticflickr.com/8014/7473 ... 835118.jpg" width="375" height="500" alt="004"></a>
Barb
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Nice Pomy Barb. I like your idea of creating a standard out of it. I'll proably do the same with some of the Crape Myrtles I have.
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- Arctic Palm Plantation
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Thanks Tim.
Standards take up so little space on a patio, plus it's fun to do and looks good in containers.
Crape myrtles would be stunning trained to standards.
Noticed at nurseries standards are always so much more expensive than the same plant in a bush version.
Barb
Standards take up so little space on a patio, plus it's fun to do and looks good in containers.
Crape myrtles would be stunning trained to standards.
Noticed at nurseries standards are always so much more expensive than the same plant in a bush version.
Barb
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Jubaea chilensis (blue) pushing second leaf:
<a href="http://www.flickr.com/photos/southslope/7923524908/" title="005 by edible_plum, on Flickr"><img src="http://farm9.staticflickr.com/8301/7923 ... c231_z.jpg" width="480" height="640" alt="005"></a>
In a "jury-rigged" 12-inch pot.
What pot size should I now go to?
<a href="http://www.flickr.com/photos/southslope/7923529930/" title="007 by edible_plum, on Flickr"><img src="http://farm9.staticflickr.com/8459/7923 ... 1188_z.jpg" width="480" height="640" alt="007"></a>
Barb
<a href="http://www.flickr.com/photos/southslope/7923524908/" title="005 by edible_plum, on Flickr"><img src="http://farm9.staticflickr.com/8301/7923 ... c231_z.jpg" width="480" height="640" alt="005"></a>
In a "jury-rigged" 12-inch pot.
What pot size should I now go to?
<a href="http://www.flickr.com/photos/southslope/7923529930/" title="007 by edible_plum, on Flickr"><img src="http://farm9.staticflickr.com/8459/7923 ... 1188_z.jpg" width="480" height="640" alt="007"></a>
Barb
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You have a nice Jubaea there for its first year Barb already working on its second leaf. I think you can leave it in that size pot for 1-2 more years as it probabbly only has 1-2 roots so far. I have 3 year old Jubaeas in a 4inch wide by 14inc tall pot and they are still doing well.
Dylan
Dylan
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- Large Palm
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Great shots Barb & Tim! I will post some updated pics soon
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Thanks Dylan for confirming I can leave it in the 12 inch homemade pot.
I see a white root at the drain hole so was wondering.
Can you post a pic of your 4-inch x 14-inch pot?
Have never seen any.
Cameron, look forward to seeing seedling updates, especially the Nannorhops ritchiana.
Mine croaked
Barb
I see a white root at the drain hole so was wondering.
Can you post a pic of your 4-inch x 14-inch pot?
Have never seen any.
Cameron, look forward to seeing seedling updates, especially the Nannorhops ritchiana.
Mine croaked
Barb
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Barb here is the link to the site I got mine from. They have a wide variety of different size pots and accessories including pictures of them. http://www.stuewe.com/products/treepots.php
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Thanks for that great link Dylan.
Will try to find a Canadian supplier as they'd probably arrive as confetti across the border.
I had previously searched for "palm seedling pots".
See now that the search term should've been "tree pots", which makes sense.
Barb
Will try to find a Canadian supplier as they'd probably arrive as confetti across the border.
I had previously searched for "palm seedling pots".
See now that the search term should've been "tree pots", which makes sense.
Barb
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- Large Palm
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Barb, Dylan has posted a great link there. I have contacted Stuewe regarding ordering in the past, and even including shipping their prices still beat any here in Canada (for the quantity of pots I was looking for at least ).
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The tall pots have been working out well for my seedling cycads and palms. They require less frequent irrigation for young plants as well as taking up much less space. I got some of the crates designed for their pots so that the seedlings are easy to store and don't tip over.
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Cameron_z6a_N.S. wrote:Barb, Dylan has posted a great link there. I have contacted Stuewe regarding ordering in the past, and even including shipping their prices still beat any here in Canada (for the quantity of pots I was looking for at least ).
When I first glanced at this I thought it said Bob Dylan
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- Arctic Palm Plantation
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After a fruitless search on eBay.ca, I ordered 100 of the 14-inch tall "TP414" from Dylan's link: Stuewe in Oregon.
2 inches taller than my Big Slurp 7/11 cups.
They even have 30-inch pots!!! (at bottom of this page)
http://www.stuewe.com/products/treepots.php
They immediately emailed me and confirmed they'd ship to Canada, also offering "part-cases".
Shipping from Oregon to BC is approx $45 for UPS, and pots are about 41 cents each.
I was really impressed with their customer service.
The only very small downside is they don't use PayPal for secure payment, but VISA was accepted over the phone (gulp ).
Thanks Dylan!!!!
(no, not BOB DYLAN.... )
Barb
2 inches taller than my Big Slurp 7/11 cups.
They even have 30-inch pots!!! (at bottom of this page)
http://www.stuewe.com/products/treepots.php
They immediately emailed me and confirmed they'd ship to Canada, also offering "part-cases".
Shipping from Oregon to BC is approx $45 for UPS, and pots are about 41 cents each.
I was really impressed with their customer service.
The only very small downside is they don't use PayPal for secure payment, but VISA was accepted over the phone (gulp ).
Thanks Dylan!!!!
(no, not BOB DYLAN.... )
Barb
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- Sprout
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My dad picked up some seeds from under a palm tree at Manhattan Beach, CA. Any idea what they are? I suspect some sort of King Palm, but I'm not sure. Here's a picture:
http://i.imgur.com/DMCs5.jpg
I can post more pictures and dissect one of the seeds if necessary! Also, if it helps, my hands aren't that big.
http://i.imgur.com/DMCs5.jpg
I can post more pictures and dissect one of the seeds if necessary! Also, if it helps, my hands aren't that big.
Barb, I had trouble finding tall pots untill I bought a few palms that came in pots with Stuewe's name on them. I got some of the TP414 for my 100+ sago palms I grew from seed and some other seedlings and young palms. I also got some TP616 for some of the larger palms. I have tried germinating seeds in the pots but several germinated seedlings rotted so it is probabbly best to wait for the first leaf to put them in the tree pots.
Many people think of Bob Dylan when they hear Dylan.
Many people think of Bob Dylan when they hear Dylan.
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RoboCaesar those seeds look like they could be Archontophoenix or kings probabbly Archontophoenix cuninhamiana as these are planted everwhere in Southern Coastal California.
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- Large Palm
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Here are a few pics taken last week:
Loquat:
E. p. ssp. debeuzevillei:
Kiwis:
Older kiwis:
T. "Tesan", Citrus, Hedychium, and A. neomexicana:
Loquat:
E. p. ssp. debeuzevillei:
Kiwis:
Older kiwis:
T. "Tesan", Citrus, Hedychium, and A. neomexicana:
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- Arctic Palm Plantation
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Great successes you've got there, Cameron.
I think I see a palm seedling in the debeuzevillei
How are your Nannorhops ritchiana doing? Mine all croaked, unfortunately.
Barb
I think I see a palm seedling in the debeuzevillei
How are your Nannorhops ritchiana doing? Mine all croaked, unfortunately.
Barb
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- Large Palm
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Barb, I scattered some T. fortunei seeds around, one of them must have gotten mixed in eith the Eucs
I will post a pic soon of my largest N. ritchiana. They are definitely tougher to grow; I have tried to keep them warm and dry, but some of them ended up dying from too little water!
I will post a pic soon of my largest N. ritchiana. They are definitely tougher to grow; I have tried to keep them warm and dry, but some of them ended up dying from too little water!
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Did you order those kiwi seeds, or did you grow.em at random from fruit?
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- Large Palm
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Canadianplant, I just grew them from grocery store fruit seeds. They sprouted very easily and grew really fast!
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- Large Palm
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Hibiscus coccineus, red and white:
Outdoor "germination bed". I just throw seeds in here and see what comes up In this one I've got some type of tree (Paulownia?), pomegranate, kiwi, paw paw, Aloe sp., etc:
Another bed with Trachycarpus, Agave montana and A. parryi ssp. parryi, pomegranate, kiwi, etc:
Zantedeschia albomaculata:
Y. aloifolia from Damir:
Albizia julibrissin:
Plumeria, Citrus, Canna "Robert Kemp", Samanea saman, etc:
Baobab and Macadamia:
Dragonfruit:
Welwitschia mirabilis:
That's all for now!
Outdoor "germination bed". I just throw seeds in here and see what comes up In this one I've got some type of tree (Paulownia?), pomegranate, kiwi, paw paw, Aloe sp., etc:
Another bed with Trachycarpus, Agave montana and A. parryi ssp. parryi, pomegranate, kiwi, etc:
Zantedeschia albomaculata:
Y. aloifolia from Damir:
Albizia julibrissin:
Plumeria, Citrus, Canna "Robert Kemp", Samanea saman, etc:
Baobab and Macadamia:
Dragonfruit:
Welwitschia mirabilis:
That's all for now!
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- Arctic Palm Plantation
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You take the prize for number of species germinated, Cameron.
Nice work.
My pomegranates, germinated last winter, have stopped growing at 1 foot tall.
Summer heat nearly fried them in their pots.
Barb
Nice work.
My pomegranates, germinated last winter, have stopped growing at 1 foot tall.
Summer heat nearly fried them in their pots.
Barb
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- Large Palm
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Barb, we might have opposite problems with the pomegranates then! My area has to worry about getting ENOUGH summer heat for them
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nice update Cameron. Your Loquat is planted in the ground? Keep us updated on the Loquat.
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here's an update on a few of the seeds Cameron sent me:
A few aloes species:
<img src=http://i30.photobucket.com/albums/c309/ ... BA1360.jpg>
<img src=http://i30.photobucket.com/albums/c309/ ... C9E5AB.jpg>
Close up on Aloe
<img src=http://i30.photobucket.com/albums/c309/ ... 28E780.jpg>
A few aloes species:
<img src=http://i30.photobucket.com/albums/c309/ ... BA1360.jpg>
<img src=http://i30.photobucket.com/albums/c309/ ... C9E5AB.jpg>
Close up on Aloe
<img src=http://i30.photobucket.com/albums/c309/ ... 28E780.jpg>
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- Large Palm
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Tim, those look fantastic! Are the larger ones A. ecklonis? Did the Protea survive?
I have 4 or 5 loquats planted in the ground, and will keep you updated on how they do over the winter.
I have 4 or 5 loquats planted in the ground, and will keep you updated on how they do over the winter.
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- Arctic Palm Plantation
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Sheesh, Tim, seed updates usually show seedlings no taller than a thimble.
You've got some magic for growing stuff.
Well done.
Barb
You've got some magic for growing stuff.
Well done.
Barb
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If you drink, don't drive. Don't even putt.
Are the larger ones A. ecklonis?
Yes.......those are in year 2 now. They really took off this season......they were somewhat tiny going into last winter.
Did the Protea survive?
The Protea died after I transplanted them.......like 2 weeks later. I did not even disturb the roots/soil from the old container. The soil I placed them in must have been totally different? Not sure what happended. I was upset since they survived the winter in my garage with no issues.
I have 4 or 5 loquats planted in the ground, and will keep you updated on how they do over the winter.
Keep us updated on their progress. I'll probably plant one of my loquats outside in spring.
Yes.......those are in year 2 now. They really took off this season......they were somewhat tiny going into last winter.
Did the Protea survive?
The Protea died after I transplanted them.......like 2 weeks later. I did not even disturb the roots/soil from the old container. The soil I placed them in must have been totally different? Not sure what happended. I was upset since they survived the winter in my garage with no issues.
I have 4 or 5 loquats planted in the ground, and will keep you updated on how they do over the winter.
Keep us updated on their progress. I'll probably plant one of my loquats outside in spring.
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- Large Palm
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Tim, in a couple of years you should really consider trying those A. ecklonis outdoors with excellent moisture protection. I have heard that they are hardy close to a zone 7a. Protea can be really tough to start from seed. Hopefully I'll be getting some more seeds soon, and will send you a few.
Kiwis:
Loquats. The closer one is a little over 1', and the further one is close to 1' tall:
The Halifax area has had highs of 16 C and 18 C over the past two days, so the loquats are still putting out new leaves! The low so far this season has been -6 C, and that fried a lot of my outdoor plants.
Kiwis:
Loquats. The closer one is a little over 1', and the further one is close to 1' tall:
The Halifax area has had highs of 16 C and 18 C over the past two days, so the loquats are still putting out new leaves! The low so far this season has been -6 C, and that fried a lot of my outdoor plants.
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Hi Cameron,
those hardy kiwis look great. Your Loquats are about the same size as mine.
<img src=http://i30.photobucket.com/albums/c309/ ... 26A011.jpg>
Perhaps I'll plant out one of the Aloes next spring and see what happens. I was at Steve's garden in New Jersey (hardy palm board) a few weeks ago and he had a couple Aloe aristatas outside. Nice to see.
those hardy kiwis look great. Your Loquats are about the same size as mine.
<img src=http://i30.photobucket.com/albums/c309/ ... 26A011.jpg>
Perhaps I'll plant out one of the Aloes next spring and see what happens. I was at Steve's garden in New Jersey (hardy palm board) a few weeks ago and he had a couple Aloe aristatas outside. Nice to see.
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- Large Palm
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- Location: Halifax, Nova Scotia, Canada
Tim, that's good to hear. You're right, the loquats are about the same size.
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Hi Cameron,
here's an update showing the damage on the Aloe plants from a brief drop to 23F. I think they too much moisture in our climate and loose a lot of their hardiness.
<img src=http://i30.photobucket.com/albums/c309/ ... 1CCADC.jpg>
here's an update showing the damage on the Aloe plants from a brief drop to 23F. I think they too much moisture in our climate and loose a lot of their hardiness.
<img src=http://i30.photobucket.com/albums/c309/ ... 1CCADC.jpg>
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- Large Palm
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- Joined: Sun Dec 07, 2008 8:30 am
- Location: Halifax, Nova Scotia, Canada
Tim, I think you're right about the moisture.
I've recently germinated some Sabal species (brazoria, domingensis, palmetto, etc) with no bottom heat. They were placed outdoors during the summer, but were brought inside before germination. I'll post some pics soon!
I've recently germinated some Sabal species (brazoria, domingensis, palmetto, etc) with no bottom heat. They were placed outdoors during the summer, but were brought inside before germination. I'll post some pics soon!
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Some sources say not to let Aloes go below 45F so,
I would say your doing alright there
I would say your doing alright there
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- Arctic Palm Plantation
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- Location: Vernon BC, Zone 5a or 5b (close to 6A!)
Yes pics please.recently germinated some Sabal species (brazoria, domingensis, palmetto, etc) with no bottom heat.
Cameron, I'm curious how long it took for your Nannorhops ritchiana to pop last year.
Unfortunately the N. seedlings I got from you all croaked.
My "dune" aloe is in the cold building and looks great.not to let Aloes go below 45F
It looks worse in summer in full sun and hot winds, often bone dry too.
Barb
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If you drink, don't drive. Don't even putt.
If you drink, don't drive. Don't even putt.
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- Large Palm
- Posts: 1269
- Joined: Sun Dec 07, 2008 8:30 am
- Location: Halifax, Nova Scotia, Canada
Jim, normally I would agree! But one species, A. ecklonis, is from some of the highest mountains in the Drakensberg range. This species is supposed to be zone 7 hardy, but I think soil moisture plays a big role in this aloe's hardiness!
Barb, out of all of the seeds that I de-lidded, N. ritchiana was one of the fastest to germinate. I had the bottom heat somewhere around 30 - 35 C. Send me a PM!
Barb, out of all of the seeds that I de-lidded, N. ritchiana was one of the fastest to germinate. I had the bottom heat somewhere around 30 - 35 C. Send me a PM!
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