I came home from work this afternoon and W was not here. A few minutes later she showed up towing the extra-tall horse trailer.
This is what she had inside!
<a href=" http://picasaweb.google.com/lh/photo/e9B8YAGp5_NQwU3KfDRhXKi_WbB_4kw3emNYTE1gzWk?feat=embedwebsit e"><img src=" " /></a>
We're planting it on the SW side of the Gazebo she painted in Caribbean colors.
--Erik
Now that's what I call a keeper!
That is one sweet palmetto Erik! That's one W that knows her man! That will surely add some bling bling to your pool area as well as you tiki hut to serve up drinks to all your friends hanging out by the pool.
Dig a huge hole and plant with very sandy WELL drained soil and that bad boy will be around for a good long time in your area. I planted my Birmingham in the ground about two hours ago and have high hope for it too.
Killer Palm,
Bill
That is un-bloody-believably beautiful!
Both the palm and the woman are keepers!
You're a lucky man Erik.
Barb
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If you drink, don't drive. Don't even putt.
Dang,I half expected to see some dinosaurs walking around
in the background.
What a monster! 😯 😯 😯 😯 😯
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3 posts? How about some comments!
Bill
Nice Job Again to you and your Wife!
Sorry, Bill. Been busy with work.
The storms that same night were fierce. The TV reported a funnel cloud spotted at 151st and Harvard--where we live! I looked out the window and saw it coming down in my back yard but it rose up again. Phew.
The big Sabal was knocked over twice but is unharmed. Tough palm!
Both sagos (recently moved from pots to the ground) were uprooted, as were the new Ficus carica and some other plants.
Barb, Trachy (5?!?) are fine. Musa leaves tattered, but no surprise there.
----------------------------
I waited until today (after work) to start digging the S. palmetto hole to give time to let water run off/soak in. We've had >4" of rain this week!
I bought 100 lbs of play sand to mix with aged compost (horse manure, pine shavings for bedding, uneaten hay + chicken manure) to put in the planting hole.
I have a big enough hole, but am thinking I might make it even bigger as I struck clay when I got down deep. Does that make sense?
I have to work again tomorrow but will dig some more after. It will be in the ground by this time tomorrow or Saturday morning at worst.
We have nice temps coming up--highs of 90oF and lows of 70oF--but strong winds and I want it securely in the ground so it doesn't keep blowing over. So far it has only knocked over Hibiscus "texas star" but it could get worse.
--Erik
Erik
Probrably preaching to the choir here but highly recommend tying up the outer fronds around the spear for a month or so until roots are established so it lessens the "sail effect" of the leaves. i know ya'll get some fierce winds there. It will help the center spear from getting "frazzled" (is that a word!!!).
Penny,
preach away ! I did not know that.
Any other advice?
--Erik
See if you can find out if it was grown in full sun-
if not the leaves could get toasted.
You may need to cover it with shade cloth for a
while,you sure don't want those purdy leaves to burn up-
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Just don't "love it to death". Too much water,too much good soil ! Remember these things grow naturally in almost pure beach sand! I lost my first two many years ago here from what I believe was too much watering after transplanting. Since this is in a pot there shouldn't be any transplant shock to speak of. Good luck and by the way, how much did it set you back?
Thank goodness that storm didn't linger, Erik.
Four inches of rain in a week. Wow.
Glad those Trachies are surviving the storms (the poor things...yup, we used to have fronds), LOL.
Clay at the bottom of the hole...BAD!
Keep digging, add rocks for drainage to the bottom.
Hopefully there's some slope for drainage...even a bit.
Some very good points everybody made.
Re the sun-grown question. The palm looks like it's had great fertilizer applied during its nursery days.
Would unusually long petioles indicate it had been grown in shade?
They look normal?
Barb
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If you drink, don't drive. Don't even putt.
Hey All!!! This is W replying for Erik...
Just to set the record straight, I went shopping at a road side set up with plants from Florida at Erik's encouragement. He had talked about this for days and we just didn't have time to go together with our crazy schedule this month. He had recently complained that several of these big palms had sold over the past week and he was afraid he wouldn't get one. So I took the truck and Clydesdale sized horse trailer along with HIS credit card and went shopping!!!!! Other purchases included a variegated banana (E let our last one die over a bitter winter and I miss the colorful leaves), 3 fire bushes, a standard trained lantana and a standard trained gardenia....total bill was around $215 with OK state taxes.....can't remember what the big guy cost, didn't care once I saw them I HAD to have one!!!!!
By the way, around our house the plants that come in the house are all 'girls' and usually under my care and winter supervision while the ones that stay out are 'guys' and E's projects. S palmetto will be a guy palm as he will stay out all winter...the gardenia and recently purchased (as a gift for me) pygmy date palm are definitely girls!!!
So on to the care and planting of S. palmetto. Erik dug a good sized hole and about 2' down hit clay so will spend Saturday digging a wider hole and ensuring drainage and hopefully the roots will grow wide instead of trying to get through our OK clay base. I also found out about the tying the palm leaves together as the palms on display had just been untied. In fact the one I brought home came with a piece of rope to tie it up with during high winds. The old lady selling the palms told me to tie it up when there was bad winds to keep it from blowing out of the hole for the first year or so...I mentioned this to E, but I don't think he took me seriously so thanks Penny for the reminder. I'm betting this one will survive the OK winters and be one of our happy children for years. In case E didn't make it clear in earlier posts, his wife just LOVES palms and is willing to let him play at growing them in our back yard forever!
Thanks to all for your wonderful posts, keep encouraging him to keep them alive!!!
The Wife
Erik,
I wasn't talking about you buddy, I was talking about the other 140 people that looked at it and couldn't find anything to say.
I'm really glad the tornado missed you guys too that is some scary stuff especially when you can see it 😯
Good to hear from your wife too that was a nice surprise, she sounds like a real good women!
Bill
😀 😀 😀 😀 😀 😀 😀 😀 😀 😀 😀 😀 😀 😀 😀 😀
Good to hear your better half chime in Erik,I wonder how that Sabal will fare
in it's first few years?
Don't be surprised to much if you lose some are all of the leaves over winter.
Palms from warmer places will sometimes lose there warm climate grown leaves
that are not winter battle ready.
The good news is that monster will(if healthy/happy)replace them quickly.
That's when they become our palm,when they grow into the shape they will have in
"our"climate.
It really is wonderful to watch a palm put on it's Iowa,Mass,OK,Mn,Ca. (or where ever it's growing)
digs!
I would protect from wind/sun and cover the leaves when the Arctic wind blows in
winter.
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