whats the name of this library? i’d love to check it out
@jiafeiqueen12 күн бұрын
also i don’t remember if it was you or if i said it to someone else that you should check our the cherry hill palms
@timmillan670113 күн бұрын
That opening shot of the ‘hedge’ of Sabal minor against the wall looks great. Now imagine that look against/below the mural at the other NJ location. That’s the effect I was talking about when I commented about spreading those minor seeds along the foundation of the building.
@larroyo197313 күн бұрын
The mural is at the Palmyra nature park location. And those windmills are starting to gain size.
@ShoeTELEVISION13 күн бұрын
@@timmillan6701 I agree with Luis. The new windmills and Sabal minors are starting to put on size. Don’t get me wrong I like the hedge but not at Palmyra…plus maintenance seemed to be a issue in the past
@Snoopypalms13 күн бұрын
looks good
@gasubtropics13 күн бұрын
huge sabals
@user-ggkkiiyy454420 күн бұрын
3:44 Sabal minor Louisiana?
@ShoeTELEVISION20 күн бұрын
No, I was told it’s a North Carolina ecotype. More of a blueish tint to the leaves. Sabal Louisiana is at 8:20
@user-ggkkiiyy454420 күн бұрын
@@ShoeTELEVISIONIt seemed to me that the North Carolina ecotype had larger leaves than the Louisiana ecotype, perhaps just a more mature plant. Before that, I thought that Louisiana was the bigger and largest of all the minor Sabals.
@user-ggkkiiyy454421 күн бұрын
Looks nice! 1:44 its Rhapidofilum hustrix?
@ShoeTELEVISION21 күн бұрын
Yes it is
@jimcharles970525 күн бұрын
Always look forward to the Minors that are seen in this clip at 3:44. My own, a couple hours' drive north of Bethany, are about in the same size range or better. Mine have made the most of 3 unbelievably mild winters in a row. I keep thinking that one winter our luck will run out.
@nathanielalgernon97527 күн бұрын
wow, not too far from here
@ShoeTELEVISION20 күн бұрын
@@nathanielalgernon975 nice!! Wish I lived down there. You gotta try some hardy palms!
@jiafeiqueen28 күн бұрын
looks nice. my palms are doing well (except for one frond on one of them that got assaulted by our lawn people). i put wilt stop on them both to hopefully keep it safe thru the winter on top of my protection.im in south jersey by philly btw
@Snoopypalms28 күн бұрын
wow looks good my parlor palm and ponytail palm in ground r doing good they r protected rn
@mickobrien3156Ай бұрын
What town is this? PS: Great video! This gives me hope. In June 2023 I planted 5 palms in Closter, New Jersey (USDA Zone 7A/7B).... 1 Saw palmetto, 2 needles, and 2 Sabal minors... they all sailed through the winter without any protection and suffered absolutely no damage.
@ShoeTELEVISIONАй бұрын
Rehoboth Delaware like much of the Mid-Atlantic is experiencing a drought with no real rain for 1 month. That is why some of the palms look stressed.
@jimcharles9705Ай бұрын
Everything looks really good except the clump of Trachies at the very end of the clip, which look drought stressed. Perhaps they're not very well established, or, perhaps the very harsh drought of northern Delaware extends to Rehoboth as well. The Sabals at what was the Red Rose Inn never fail to impress me. Lots of other cool things in that collection as well, like at least one oleander. There used to be other great things there many years ago like Yucca Aloifolia (ripped out / safety hazard) and a monkey puzzle.
@ShoeTELEVISIONАй бұрын
THANKS! Forgot to mention Rehoboth is also in a bad drought and it can be seen on the palms. Hopefully my Johnny Appleseed attempt works out. Some of the seedlings popping up are really hurting @ 2:36 and 2:51 . They just got some rain this week just like NYC.
@timmillan6701Ай бұрын
If I lived somewhere named Palmyra, I would feel obligated to at least try some palms. This location has a place in hardy palm cultivation legend EDIT: If I was casually checking out those minors, I think I might accidentally strip those ripe seeds off that seed stalk and distribute them ever so gently along that entire foundation . That would fill in nicely in a couple of years
@user-ggkkiiyy4544Ай бұрын
Nice 👍👍
@user-ggkkiiyy4544Ай бұрын
Looks nice! What type of Sabal palm in 7:00 minutes?
@ShoeTELEVISIONАй бұрын
They’re Sabal minors but I believe the large one with the unique frond that looks folded appears to be a Sabal Louisiana
@timmillan6701Ай бұрын
@@ShoeTELEVISIONI was thinking it might be a S. palmetto ‘Birmingham’ because it is so costapalmate. A friend of mine just sent me a picture of a S. minor ‘Louisiana’ that I planted almost 30 years ago at my job in Williamsburg Va. The palm is about 8’tall and 8-10’ wide. The fronds have a definite arch to them ( compared to S. minor), but they are definitely not as costapalmate as the one in your video. In my experience, Birmingham is much slower than Louisiana . Of course, there is always variation due to environmental and cultural factors Edit: After a few more views, I am not as sure about the identity. However, if you find yourself in the area next late Spring, check to see if any flower spikes have emerged from that palm. I would say that if it does flower at that size with spikes coming from ground level, it is probably Louisiana, as palmettos are not inclined to flower until they get some trunk - and generally then not from ground level.Again- there could be some variation or anomaly EditEdit: So I just viewed your Summer 24 video of the same palms and noticed that all of the minors had flower spikes and the palm in question did not. At least I couldn’t make out any flower spikes on it. Do you recall if that plant flowered? If so, it is most probably Louisiana
@ShoeTELEVISIONАй бұрын
@@timmillan6701 I do not recall that flowering but I'll have to check out my other videos on them. If you check out my video "Rehoboth Beach Delaware Palm Trees Spring 2018" the palm you're mentioning is small and appears to be a sabal minor.
@kennyhamilton7620Ай бұрын
Transitioning into cold season, hoping the best for the palms, looking good.
@SnoopypalmsАй бұрын
Wow so many palms amazing to see
@АрменМизорянАй бұрын
Looks nice!
@larroyo1973Ай бұрын
Hopefully the windmills get to reach the size of the previous ones that got zapped in 2015 in that abnormally brutal winter. I still think those original windmills survive the polar vortex if only they'd been cut just below the crown Instead of the trunk...
@jiafeiqueenАй бұрын
mason said he'll take one of my musa basjoos a couple weeks ago so there will be one next year :) i also had a field trip here for my environmental science class here and we went in the water
@ShoeTELEVISIONАй бұрын
@@jiafeiqueen That’s awesome! Great that you made a contact there!! I would recommend planting the bananas near the fig tree or not on the wall with the mural. My bananas are spreading more than expected and popping up on my windmills/sabals . Wish I planted them away from my palms
@SnoopypalmsАй бұрын
Wow lots of palm trees
@jailtonnascimento5217Ай бұрын
They look great!
@jiafeiqueen2 ай бұрын
does the moss survive with no protection? I bought some spanish moss for 2 of my trees this summer and im not sure if it'll make it but i really want it to bc it's so pretty. im also donating a banana plant to palmyra, mason was very happy with my offer
@ShoeTELEVISION2 ай бұрын
@@jiafeiqueen yes mine survived last winter
@ShoeTELEVISION2 ай бұрын
I got the Iphone16 and used the cinematic option a few times...just in case it doesn't look right.
@Snoopypalms2 ай бұрын
thats nice i accidently underwatered my musa do yk how long it takes for it to start growing again it stopped growing :C
@ShoeTELEVISION2 ай бұрын
usually 1-2 weeks to recover. It is towards the end of the year so it might be longer
@Snoopypalms2 ай бұрын
Wow those musa basjoos look good hopefully mine grows like that
@tntropics2 ай бұрын
Nice the needles look great
@northeasthardytropicals5412 ай бұрын
Nice! Those yucca rostratas are incredible man.
@northeasthardytropicals5412 ай бұрын
Did you go to Savannah Bananas?
@GreenCanvasInteriorscape2 ай бұрын
Had no idea how warm you guys stayed over the winter, do the bananas die back? I'm in Minnesota and here they die back to the ground and mostly reawaken early June & rarely if ever seen
@ShoeTELEVISION2 ай бұрын
They die back every season.
@jimcharles97052 ай бұрын
I remember around 2007 or so when the hardy bananas were beginning to catch on. Today, they're in every neighborhood. To me, they've been overdone. Palms? They never get old. Yuccas? They're awesome too. But the bananas do nothing for me these days because they're everywhere.
@jiafeiqueen2 ай бұрын
i was literally just there on that exact street! how did i not see these? 😭 maybe bc i was focusing on driving i guess
@northeasthardytropicals5412 ай бұрын
😆
@ChrisDalton00992 ай бұрын
Can windmills grow in Philly? Their climate is similar to NYC, no?
@ShoeTELEVISION2 ай бұрын
Yes if planted in the right area. They had nice ones in Palmyra NJ and the OG Palm Legend Steve, has a few doing well. Of course it would require protection at some points and could ☠️ in a polar vortex.
@ChrisDalton00992 ай бұрын
Yeah, I was just wondering cause I've only seen minors and needles being grown in Philly
@garciamario54362 ай бұрын
Sheltered micro climate only way those yucca and palms can survive in philly
@ChrisDalton00992 ай бұрын
Philly is a 7b/8a yucca, minors and needles should be failproof there
@cincytropics2 ай бұрын
Wrong!
@timmillan67012 ай бұрын
There are needles and minors at Longwood Gardens, which is W-SW and farther from the water than Philly. As for the yucca (rostrata), I have seen that growing at the entrance to the Denver Botanical Garden, at least a zone 6
@cincytropics2 ай бұрын
@timmillan6701 there are some needle palm and sabal minor here in Cincinnati zone 6b!
@garciamario54363 ай бұрын
Pindos are Chunky 🪵 and the sagos and some of the Large Sabal ❤
@DavidThompson-i8c3 ай бұрын
45 years ago, I moved from the Phila area to the Atlanta area. I tried planting palms in 5:15 none would survive the winter. Today, It's possible to find several different palm varieties doing very well here. The influence of the warm Atlantic and climate change is contributing to their ability to thrive so far north.
@pellandfriends41143 ай бұрын
Wow 😮 it’s so cool that those kind of trees can survive that far north
@northeasthardytropicals5413 ай бұрын
Wow they have it all at the boathouse! The agave looks awesome. The Sabal minors are thriving and look at all those seeds and seedlings!
@CitrusPalmsWithTom3 ай бұрын
I wonder if those Butia are protected in winter.
@ShoeTELEVISION3 ай бұрын
I dont think so. They might if it really dips low but I have been down during the holidays/new years and they were not protected. Bethany Beach is a warmer climate than Rehoboth...a few degrees can help out a lot.
@victor_17103 ай бұрын
Wow
@jiafeiqueen3 ай бұрын
im hoping to visit maybe next year. its an hour and a half from me in jersey. maybe ill just stick to the big windmills in my area for now
@ShoeTELEVISION3 ай бұрын
@@jiafeiqueen Sabal minors and Needle Palms are the best/easiest to keep in our area.
@jiafeiqueen3 ай бұрын
@@ShoeTELEVISION yeah i took some sabals from the library near me that naturalized themselves but i put them in the ground and one of them folding up so much that its a point now. so im gonna dig them up tonight or tomorrow and put them in a pot for now
@3DThrills3 ай бұрын
I've got 600 of these seedlings 8:46
@timmillan67013 ай бұрын
Now designated as Zone 8😳
@Snoopypalms3 ай бұрын
Wow looks good I’m visiting Kentucky !
@DaveCollierCamping3 ай бұрын
Amazing
@ChrisDalton00994 ай бұрын
Ever thought about growing palmetto? A variant like BHI would be a good zone push for your area.
@ShoeTELEVISION4 ай бұрын
@@ChrisDalton0099 I have a BHI and had a Mocksville. I planted my Mocksville in Rehoboth, Delaware since it’s a zone warmer. I don’t have a space for one in this garden…unless I start planting palms everywhere lol
@nathanielalgernon9754 ай бұрын
TN Tropics lost a Sabal minor Louisiana this past winter, went down to -6F there. I guess you don't have any of those, they seem to be one of the most temperature sensitive. Garden looks really nice.
@ChrisDalton00994 ай бұрын
NYC hasn't seen -6 or lower since 1943!
@nathanielalgernon9754 ай бұрын
@@ChrisDalton0099 TN has quite a few unprotected Sabal minors, that one was the only one to die I believe so it was the least cold tolerant. He says that they start showing damage at 5F, perhaps they will die at 0F or 5F.