Q.
I moved here a year ago and have yet to figure out what my palm tree needs to
thrive. It gets plenty of water. I
located and uncovered the drippers to make sure it was getting enough water and
even moved some plants away from it so it got more water.
A.
Palm trees growing in the desert are “oasis plants”; they need to grow near water
but not in it. They like to be surrounded by other plants that also need water.
A big mistake to make with palm trees is to grow them alone, out in the middle
of nowhere, and surround them with rock. Growing them alone, in full sun, and
surrounding them with rock is asking for a multitude of different problems.
Many palms are quite large. They may be cute when they are small but when they get larger…watch out! |
A second problem with most palms is their
mature size. They are cute to look at when small, but all the palms get larger
as they get older. Their growing size forces homeowners to pay more for pruning,
and possibly removal, as these trees get larger.
choices for smaller residential lands
capes are the Windmill Palm and
Mediterranean Fan Palm. The Mediterranean Fan Palm can be put into hot windy
locations but requires pruning as it gets older. The pruning mostly focuses on
keeping it from getting wider. The second choice is the slow-growing Windmill Palm.
Windmill Palm should be placed on the East or north side of a landscape out of
the wind. Both should be surrounded by other plants and woodchips rather than
rock.
This is a windmill palm. Lets see it in five years when the organics in the soil are gone and the rock has impacted the landscape of this “oasis” plant. |