Trachycarpus fortunei trunk types Survey
- Dave Brown
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Trachycarpus fortunei trunk types Survey
There seem to be 2 main trunk fibre types that occur in Trachycarpus fortunei naturally (to my knowledge). These are what I call 'Shaggy' where the long fibres completely obscure cut petioles, and 'Hairy', which I think is the most common where the cut petioles are visible above the fibre. There is a third which is not natural and that is the fibre is stripped away leaving a scarred bare trunk.
I want to start a survey on what types of trunk members have. There are 3 questions..... Shaggy, Hairy, Stripped. and you have the option to tick 1 to 3 of them. The idea is to build up a profile of ratio of each.
I will start it off with a pic of those that I have so you can tell which category yours fit into.
I want to start a survey on what types of trunk members have. There are 3 questions..... Shaggy, Hairy, Stripped. and you have the option to tick 1 to 3 of them. The idea is to build up a profile of ratio of each.
I will start it off with a pic of those that I have so you can tell which category yours fit into.
Best regards
Dave
_________________________________________________
Roll on summer.....
http://www.hardytropicals.co.uk
Dave
_________________________________________________
Roll on summer.....
http://www.hardytropicals.co.uk
Re: Trachycarpus fortunei trunk types
Hairy,
Thank God its not the third. At some point in its life I will get my Gardner to strip it because they look attractive like that..
Thank God its not the third. At some point in its life I will get my Gardner to strip it because they look attractive like that..
Re: Trachycarpus fortunei trunk types
I don't get what you mean? Perhaps it's a marmite thing!kata wrote:Hairy,
Thank God its not the third. At some point in its life I will get my Gardner to strip it because they look attractive like that..
Re: Trachycarpus fortunei trunk types
Answered for the biggest i have dave, my other 3 which are small ones should shoot up for the sky a bit this year they have been planted 3 years now, so i will see, i will come back to the topic in a few years when proper trunk has formed on them.
Re: Trachycarpus fortunei trunk types Survey
No, its not a marmite thing..I don't get what you mean? Perhaps it's a marmite thing!
We were asked to choose, I chose hairy but wrote they look attractive/nicer stripped. For that I would at the right time get the gardener to do that.
Still not understanding?...ask again.
Re: Trachycarpus fortunei trunk types Survey
Voted in my hairy beast which brought my ratio up to 68%. This must be par for the course because I can't recall ever seeing a shaggy Trachytrunk in thirty years of growing TF. I've seen a few stripped including some BIG ones for sale at a price that would strip your bank balance
Re: Trachycarpus fortunei trunk types Survey
I have a few shaggy type's with about 4ft trunks & they are my favourite type!, there so hairy you could put roller's in them , the hairy type's are probably the most common version but are also attractive, I also love the stripped look as they add something very tropical looking to uk garden's karl.
Re: Trachycarpus fortunei trunk types Survey
I love the stripped look of the trunks to, i can't not wait to try it on mine.
Re: Trachycarpus fortunei trunk types Survey
The shaggy look is the ultimate for me, i've noticed my waggys are more shaggy than my fortunes as a whole. Majority of my fortunes are hairy.
After seeing the post when Ste stripped a Trachycarpus and it went wrong I don't think i'd even try the stripped look
After seeing the post when Ste stripped a Trachycarpus and it went wrong I don't think i'd even try the stripped look
Re: Trachycarpus fortunei trunk types Survey
I've seen one where its trunk has started to split open due to it being stripped. Is that a common occurrence?
- Dave Brown
- Site Admin
- Posts: 19742
- Joined: Sun Jul 09, 2006 10:17 am
- Location: Chalk, (Thames Estuary) Kent, England 51.5N 0.3E
- Contact:
Re: Trachycarpus fortunei trunk types Survey
Never heard of that, and wouldn't think it was due to stripping unless they used a chainsaw.samj wrote:I've seen one where its trunk has started to split open due to it being stripped. Is that a common occurrence?
Best regards
Dave
_________________________________________________
Roll on summer.....
http://www.hardytropicals.co.uk
Dave
_________________________________________________
Roll on summer.....
http://www.hardytropicals.co.uk
Re: Trachycarpus fortunei trunk types
Kata,kata wrote:Hairy,
Thank God its not the third. At some point in its life I will get my Gardner to strip it because they look attractive like that..
What I didn't understand was your opening words, 'Thank God it's not the third' which alluded to the image of the stripped trunk and your dislike for such.
Re: Trachycarpus fortunei trunk types Survey
Oh right, thanks Multim!
That stripped (third) It looked a right mess.
Its always best to get the expert in and mine is a long way off needing stripping. It gets plenty new leaf growth but not so much trunk growth.
Maybe I should feed it.
That stripped (third) It looked a right mess.
Its always best to get the expert in and mine is a long way off needing stripping. It gets plenty new leaf growth but not so much trunk growth.
Maybe I should feed it.
Re: Trachycarpus fortunei trunk types Survey
Yes, image #3 did rather make it look a bit rough around the edges - time will improve its looks.
The best stripped trunks on a Trachycarpus I've seen are at Heligan.
The best stripped trunks on a Trachycarpus I've seen are at Heligan.
Re: Trachycarpus fortunei trunk types Survey
Both your Images looks great Multim,
When I asked the supplier he said it was nine (three years ago) , It spent time in a pot. I repotted it on arrival cus pot was broke. I then left it two years till last year when I got the Gardner to plant it.
I cannot say with honesty its been well fed.
When I asked the supplier he said it was nine (three years ago) , It spent time in a pot. I repotted it on arrival cus pot was broke. I then left it two years till last year when I got the Gardner to plant it.
I cannot say with honesty its been well fed.