In this country? Washingtonia
Re: In this country? Washingtonia
Yes there are a lot of large Yucca Eliphantipes in West London, this is one of the larger ones;
Re: In this country? Washingtonia
This Washingtonia is about a 10 minute walk away from my house by the sea on the Thames Estuary, undamaged the last few winters and no protection, South facing;
Re: In this country? Washingtonia
Very nice specimen Rob, it could have been taken somewhere in Spain. It's especially nice to see it having so many green fronds.
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Re: In this country? Washingtonia
i planted a big one out here but later found my winter water table was too high,although winter damaged,i think that on its own might not have killed it.sat in a sump of water that i unknowingly created,certainly finished it off rotting all the roots
mars ROVER broken down. headgasket faillure
Re: On the edge of extinction - in this country? Washingtoni
Nathan wrote:Well it seems the Tresco Washingtonia is alive & well after all... Photographed here in September by Kev Spence...Si wrote:If there was one at Tresco over 30 feet tall in 1984, it would be about 50 feet by now (nearly 30 years ago)Conifers wrote:TROBI records a W. filifera 10m tall at Tresco in 1984; I'd presume that's gone now from the lack of more recent measurements.
so that must be gone, else there would be thousands of pics of it, so, it must have died, and that proves my point, at some stage they die in a winter.
Don't forget IF you ever see them they're up against walls, buildings, and when they get tall enough (if they survive) they have to cope with the air higher up, away from the walls and umbrellas etc, wish I was wrong.
Any big ones you see are planted out are certainly from greenhouses, Dave's is pretty unique I'd wager.
So I guess they are a long term prospect in milder parts of the UK
great to see that, I'll have to get myself down to Tresco next year
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Re: In this country? Washingtonia
Just to put an update on mine which was rather late to get going due to below average temps until the last week in June.
Now has a good set of leaves with the severely damaged ones removed.
Now has a good set of leaves with the severely damaged ones removed.
Best regards
Dave
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Dave
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Re: In this country? Washingtonia
Dave Brown wrote:Just to put an update on mine which was rather late to get going due to below average temps until the last week in June.
Now has a good set of leaves with the severely damaged ones removed.
It looks huge now.
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Re: In this country? Washingtonia
Last year was wetter than average and it grew very well, even though it wasn't a people summer. I'll put an image from last year next to one of this year to see how much of a difference there is.Yorkshire Kris wrote:Dave Brown wrote:Just to put an update on mine which was rather late to get going due to below average temps until the last week in June.
Now has a good set of leaves with the severely damaged ones removed.
It looks huge now.
Best regards
Dave
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Roll on summer.....
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Dave
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Roll on summer.....
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Re: In this country? Washingtonia
Here are pics from 2012 and 2013 to make a comparison
Best regards
Dave
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Roll on summer.....
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Dave
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Roll on summer.....
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Re: In this country? Washingtonia
If most of those leaves on the 2013 pic are from this year, that must represent an impressive recovery after the very slow start to Spring, Dave.
My new one year planted filibusta only got going about a month ago. I was hoping that the slow start on this one was the formation of a healthy root system. A second big leaf is opening now so this seems to be on its way.
My new one year planted filibusta only got going about a month ago. I was hoping that the slow start on this one was the formation of a healthy root system. A second big leaf is opening now so this seems to be on its way.
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Re: In this country? Washingtonia
If you look at the pic below you will see that all the leaves on the palm in April are now gone. It has grown 11 leaves this season. 4 x up to 3rd week in June and 7 in the last 9 weeks.GREVILLE wrote:If most of those leaves on the 2013 pic are from this year, that must represent an impressive recovery after the very slow start to Spring, Dave.
My new one year planted filibusta only got going about a month ago. I was hoping that the slow start on this one was the formation of a healthy root system. A second big leaf is opening now so this seems to be on its way.
A year of contrasts.
Best regards
Dave
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Roll on summer.....
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Dave
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Roll on summer.....
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Re: In this country? Washingtonia
This plant was suffered some heavy leaf damage last winter but i noticed a few months ago that it had a nice new green spear, however sadly the owner probably through ignorance decided it was dead and sawed half the trunk off so now all that remains is a stump! Such a shame!Rob S wrote:This Washingtonia is about a 10 minute walk away from my house by the sea on the Thames Estuary, undamaged the last few winters and no protection, South facing;
Last edited by Rob S on Tue Aug 27, 2013 9:09 pm, edited 2 times in total.
Re: In this country? Washingtonia
Sorry but the picture in the 'quote' didn't come out but it's about 11 posts up if you're interested! Thanks
Re: In this country? Washingtonia
Blimey Dave that's some impressive growth. Mine lost all of its leaves thru condensation/rot as it was in my poly greenhouse. It's now thrown out 3 leaves and has 2 spears.
Mother in laws had no protection at all and looks mint! So no poly greenhouse for mine this year
Mother in laws had no protection at all and looks mint! So no poly greenhouse for mine this year