Xtremehorticulture

Palm Trunk Loss of Wood Growing in Lawns

Q. I live in a cold climate area in Australia. Palms are unfortunately rare in a garden in our area. But in our local park we have two big old palms. I have noticed the bases on them look a bit odd. Is this normal? Sorry, I don’t know what type it is. I have attached photos. On trees growing with overhead irrigation typically have loss of one from their trunks at the base. This is from irrigation water constantly hitting them. A. Usually that type of deformity (wearing of the “wood”) of palm tree trunks is caused by the irrigation sprinklers constantly hitting it. Palm trees are monocots and so their distribution of water through the trunk is different than for many other trees. Most trees rely on renewal of the water conducting tissue from a “ring” of growth (cambium) that grows just beneath the bark. Palm trunk starting to get grotesque             Nothing to worry about in palms. With lawn overhead irrigation, that is considered “normal” for palms. By the way, most palm trees should not be grown where there are lawns (we call these types of landscapes, “mixed landscapes”) but irrigated separately. Tree and shrub irrigation is different from lawns and they interfere with any overhead irrigation supplied to lawns. Cross-section of a dicot trunk. The water conducting tissue is produced by the cambium which is a circle in mature dicots. If this were the trunk of a monocot like  most palms the water conducting vessels would be in bundles dispersed through the trunk.

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What to do When Your Indoor Palm Has Sticky Leaves

Q. My indoor palm plant has developed a sticky-looking, shiny appearance on the leaves.  Also, small, 1/16″ brown spots/bumps on the leaves and stems.  What is this? Scale on palm leaf but unfortunately the plant also has spider mites judging from the yellow speckled appearance of the leaf A. This is probably one of the scale insects. It is living under this brown bump and sucking plant juices while totally protected by this bump or shell they build on top of themselves.             This brown bump is what keeps them alive when pesticides are sprayed on the plant. BUT they are susceptible to poisons or insecticides that are taken up into the juices INSIDE the plant.             So, systemic insecticides, those that are applied to the soil or sometimes sprayed on the leaves and taken up through the leaves, can be quite effective on these protected insects. Since it is a palm and you are not eating anything from it you can use these types of poisons on these plants.             You will have to try to find one at a nursery or garden center that carries a systemic insecticide that has a label specifically for houseplants and controlling scale insects. The shiny stuff on the leaves is sticky since this is the sugary excrement of these scale insects falling on the leaves. Frequently it attracts ants.

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Queen Palms Must Be Treated Like Queens If They Are to Survive in the Desert

Queen palms planted in front of a casino dead after winter freeze in Las Vegas Q. Hi, I’m a follower of your blog and I have two questions if you don’t mind answering them.  First, what is your overall opinion of queen palms in the Las Vegas climate?  It seems like every winter they struggle but eventually come back in the late spring, early summer.  My second question is, what is the best water requirement for a 15 gallon queen?  Is it best to have a few 4 gallon emitters over an hour time or many 1 gallon emitters over a few hours?  I’m just curious what is the best way to water them.  Also do I water every other day or 3 days a week in the summer months?  I would greatly appreciate a response!  Thanks in advance A. Queen palm is not the best choice in palm trees for our climate in general. This is a harsh environment for them particularly our very low winter temperatures, our lack of humidity, strong dry winds and poor soils. Once we recognize this then we can begin to address the situation and determine if a queen palm is a good choice for us and what we will have to do to get it to work here. The absolute worst thing you can do with a queen palm is put it directly into a very our harsh climate, fully exposed to the elements and not amend the soil or amend it very little.             If you were to plant it in our desert environment then you would try to find a place for it out of strong winds, protected from extreme winter low temperatures and amend the soil adequately at planting time and use organic surface mulches that break down and improve the soil over time. This is hard to find here in Las Vegas so planting them here will have poor results unless you can find this ideal micro environment; not impossible but hard to find. Queen palm planted in rock/desert landscape and yellowing or chlorotic due to poor soil conditions             Palms are high water users in the small space that they occupy. So water does not have to be applied over a large area but should be applied in an area equal to at least half of the spread of their canopy. The water should be applied so that it soaks the soil down to about 24 inches each time you water.             The soil should never go totally dry and surface mulches will help in this. Also planting understory plants that require more frequent watering will also help. How many gallons does a 15 gallon palm require? About 7 to 10 gallons each time you water or about half to 2/3 of the volume of the container (even though a 15 gallon container does not hold 15 gallons).             Four emitters would be good in a square pattern about a foot from the trunk. How many minutes (or hours) should you run it? I don’t know. Depends on your emitters. If these are 2 gallon per hour emitters then 60 to 75 minutes.             The other question to answer in watering is how often. You are asking about a one day difference in your watering. I really cant tell you that without knowing more about your soil and how much water it holds. If it drains freely and doesn’t hold much water then every other day now. If this is a soil that can hold a bit more then every third day would be good.             Why don’t you try using a houseplant soil moisture meter to help determine the how wet the soil is before you irrigate. Once you do this a couple of times it will become more intuitive about how often to water.

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