Needle Palm in North Tennessee
1:49
9 сағат бұрын
Which USA State is the most Southern?
14:32
Gorgeous tall Crepe Myrtle
0:59
28 күн бұрын
Crazy find in the woods!
3:34
Ай бұрын
Musa basjoo banana PSA!
2:59
Ай бұрын
Are we sure about River Birch?
1:58
Talkin’ Tropicals: Episode 5
5:59
Gulf = GOAT
0:59
2 ай бұрын
What is wrong with these Royals?
2:49
On the Suncoast in SW FL!
6:59
2 ай бұрын
Sunset over Little Sarasota Bay
0:24
Beautiful Bougainvillea!
2:37
3 ай бұрын
Rhododendron’s showing out!
1:58
Пікірлер
@tntropics
@tntropics 3 күн бұрын
Nice
@justhereforthefoliage
@justhereforthefoliage 3 күн бұрын
@@tntropics Yes!
@tntropics
@tntropics 3 күн бұрын
Nice update enjoy the lake
@justhereforthefoliage
@justhereforthefoliage 3 күн бұрын
@@tntropics Thank you, we sure did!
@Palmguy24
@Palmguy24 4 күн бұрын
Pretty cool find! Yeah it's probably fully exposed to the elements there.
@justhereforthefoliage
@justhereforthefoliage 4 күн бұрын
@@Palmguy24 Yes, for sure!
@Palmguy24
@Palmguy24 7 күн бұрын
That's pretty cool and so true!
@justhereforthefoliage
@justhereforthefoliage 7 күн бұрын
@@Palmguy24 Yes, anyone with four seasons, and even most without, can attest to this if you look at it holistically like this!
@Palmguy24
@Palmguy24 7 күн бұрын
I've debated adding one of these to my landscape. They have an attractive trunk and the silver undersides of the leaves are an added bonus!
@justhereforthefoliage
@justhereforthefoliage 7 күн бұрын
@@Palmguy24 Where you’re at, you should definitely consider it! The silver underside is definitely the coolest thing about these, for me anyway!
@Palmguy24
@Palmguy24 7 күн бұрын
That thing is amazing and beautiful. I've seen some large ones in south Georgia, south Alabama and South Carolina, but haven't been to peninsular Florida in years. Awesome find!
@justhereforthefoliage
@justhereforthefoliage 7 күн бұрын
@@Palmguy24 Yeah who knows which is the biggest, but either way, this thing is massive and should be protected at all costs! So cool to see live and in person! I wouldn’t even consider JAX peninsular FL to be honest. If you travel due west, you never run into the Gulf, so that’s the “cutoff” to me. I think Gainesville is kind of the barrier between N FL/S GA and peninsular FL to me!
@Palmguy24
@Palmguy24 7 күн бұрын
@@justhereforthefoliage True on Jax not peninsular. I guess I should've been more speciflc in that I've only been to the panhandle in recent times. I'm sure there must be some huge ones further down in Florida. That one in your video looks bigger than any I've seen. I love live oaks, one of my favorite plants. I grow them here and there are others around locally. I did a video earlier this year of some large ones (large for no-where near the coast) just down the road from me in Dalton Georgia zone 7B.
@justhereforthefoliage
@justhereforthefoliage 7 күн бұрын
@@Palmguy24 Yeah, that makes sense. Good call. Which town are you in again?
@Palmguy24
@Palmguy24 7 күн бұрын
@@justhereforthefoliage I'm outside of the Chattanooga area.
@justhereforthefoliage
@justhereforthefoliage 7 күн бұрын
@@Palmguy24 Oh gotcha, that’s what I figured when I heard you mention Dalton was right down the road. Home of the Reds AAA affiliate, Lookouts! One of the best logos in sports! Can see seven states from up top, right? I’m heading to N TN tomorrow, Norris Lake.
@Palmguy24
@Palmguy24 8 күн бұрын
Do some brief research on alligators in west Tennessee. They are there and have been there (and reproduce) for years now. I assume migrating up from Mississippi. Also, southeastern Oklahoma has native sabal minor populations. Perhaps your specifically speaking of palm "trees." Here in Tennesse, where I reside, we have populations of naturalized sabal minor, one area I know of and have seen, for over 50 years. As a native northeast Ohio Buckeye, people in southern Ohio and southwestern Pennsylvania and West Virginia have southern accents, lol. There's probably a big difference between northern West Virginia and southern West Virginia for that matter. Interesting topic, and these aren't criticisms, just observations. Nor do I claim to have all the answers. Pretty neat video, regardless.😊
@justhereforthefoliage
@justhereforthefoliage 8 күн бұрын
@@Palmguy24 Good insight and conversation, and I appreciate your disclaimer! Too many people pop off without being kind or showing respect, but you did both, so thank you for that. All good points and I’ve certainly watched the videos of the TN gators along the river, but I work with someone who is from rural NE MS and now lives in Memphis, and she didn’t even know they were a thing, so I don’t think it’s all that common. I think she even got down to like -2° this past winter or something like that and like a week straight of freezing, so I’d imagine that will kill or at least send those gators packing. You’re right about naturalized minor living in OK and TN. No doubt about that. I was more going from the textbook definition of where they were originally and native, before people started spreading them and their seeds. Point taken though. Fellow Ohioan! I’ve never been to NE OH, but I always envisioned OH being split up just like the country is. NE OH is similar to New England. Central OH is similar to the Midwest. Cincinnati and Portsmouth (et al) represent the South. I’ve heard folks from CLE and MI say that us here in CIN have accents, but I never noticed it and think we literally have no accent whatsoever lol! Good stuff, thanks for the view and will check out your channel!
@njw1383
@njw1383 11 күн бұрын
Been growing Musa basjoo for many years but I have never managed to grow them tall like yours. Mine grow to about 4 or 5 feet max. I dont know why. They get about 6 hours full sun.
@justhereforthefoliage
@justhereforthefoliage 11 күн бұрын
@@njw1383 Wow! That’s really interesting. Mine only get about four hours of sun. What town are you in?
@njw1383
@njw1383 11 күн бұрын
I live in Yorkshire in the UK. I have tried in the past, moving them to different locations and tried with different soil types. They get watered regularly in the summer. I often wonder if they were mis labelled when I bought them. I wonder whether they might actually be something like a dwarf Cavendish, but I'm not sure how to check. They survive the winter here ok so they are definitely a hardy variety. I have just bought a new Musa Basjoo today from a trustworthy source so it will be interesting to compare the growth next year. I've planted the new one in a large container. The old ones are currently planted in the ground. They died back to the ground last winter and are currently only about 2.5 feet tall.
@justhereforthefoliage
@justhereforthefoliage 11 күн бұрын
@@njw1383 Oh okay, interesting! You could absolutely be right in the mis labeling! I also think you may struggle with lack of heat and high dew points in the summer. I think UK is pretty far north, so that might be a part of it as well! Let me know how your new one does for you and if it’s any different than the others!
@njw1383
@njw1383 11 күн бұрын
@@justhereforthefoliage what sort of temperature is best? It's been about 25c this week which is about 77f
@justhereforthefoliage
@justhereforthefoliage 11 күн бұрын
@@njw1383 They like hot summers so over 85°F with high dew points over like 73°F.
@jonrolfson1686
@jonrolfson1686 12 күн бұрын
When I first moved to Maryland in 1969 it was culturally and politically still a southern-tilted border state, of the Tidewater type, with the Tidewater suite of southern accents south of the Patapsco River. Baltimore though, as a port and a then still somewhat industrialized city, had much in common with the other decaying north-eastern cities of Interstate 95-ville. The suburbanized counties that immediately abutted the District of Columbia were the bedrooms of Federal Government employees and Federal Government contractors, people recruited from all over the country; the Southernness of those areas was already substantially diluted. Annapolis, though co-located with the U.S. Naval Academy, was still almost a caricature of a southern state capital. Native Annapolitans’ speech in the late 1960s and early 1970s was much of a muchness with the dialect of Virginians who lived in small cities and rural areas near the Chesapeake Bay. A large statue of Chief Justice Roger B. Taney stood on Maryland State House grounds from 1872 until 2017 (Chief Justice Taney was the author if the infamous 1857 Dred Scott Decision). Half a century onward Maryland is just a generic east coast mid-Atlantic New Jersey want-to-be that suffers from muggy four to five month summers and a substantial lack of specific identity.
@justhereforthefoliage
@justhereforthefoliage 12 күн бұрын
@@jonrolfson1686 Wow, great insight and feedback! Helpful to know all of this! Thank you!
@andrewtaylor3167
@andrewtaylor3167 12 күн бұрын
I don't normally associate Alabama with palms. Other than Virginia and Maryland, I'd put the rest of the ocean touching states above it, especially the Carolinas. (It's mostly small shrub-like palms in swampy areas that I think of for Alabama, whereas South Carolina has its palmettos everywhere)
@justhereforthefoliage
@justhereforthefoliage 12 күн бұрын
@@andrewtaylor3167 Great insight and feedback! Thank you!
@johnguill6129
@johnguill6129 13 күн бұрын
Washington D.C. and Maryland are not "Southern." Although south of the Mason-Dixon line, but that is geographical, not cultural. Virginia is "Southern," but the southeast corner (where I was born, raised, and currently live) is filled with transients, and northern Virginia is overwhelmed with out-of-state politically involved transients. But the rest of Virginia is still "Southern." Culturally speaking, if you know about (whether you eat them or not) okra, grits, and collards, then you have experienced "Southern." If you know how to use "you," "y'all," and "all y'all" you are in "Southern" territory. If you have Summers at 90 degrees and 90% humidity and it's still not raining, yet, and a Winter day at 30 degrees is time to wear a heavy coat and limit outdoor activities, that is a "Southern" town.
@justhereforthefoliage
@justhereforthefoliage 13 күн бұрын
@@johnguill6129 That’s the beauty of it all! Everyone has their own opinions on it and that’s what makes it fun to talk about and debate! Agreed on your food themes. In today’s WFH workplace and having teams all over the country (and world), I’m not sold on words or phrases being defining elements of where someone is from. We use some of southern phrases in my family but aren’t from there. I pick up on things from my team at work that are from rural MS and South Georgia and North Florida. Then of course there’s social media and country music, so people pick up things from those too. Virginia doesn’t have any SEC schools though! That’s a bridge too far for me lol! I’m closer to a SEC school(s) than most folks from VA and NC are. What I’ve learned over the years is that you can’t put people into a box. Even though on paper someone should be this or that, there’s a real chance that in real life they are neither one of those things. It’s fun!
@justhereforthefoliage
@justhereforthefoliage 13 күн бұрын
@@johnguill6129 Also, about the temperature and weather thing, I used to think it mattered where you are from for what you liked or not, but I have changed my mind on that. Your body has an opinion that’s more important than your home location. For instance, I’m from a hot summer/cold winter location that has legit four seasons, but my body prefers year round heat. I can’t stand the cold. I wear sweatpants and sweatshirts until about 86°F. I am all about the heat all the time and anti any kind of cold, let alone middle of January brutal freezing. So location does play into “what you’re used to”, but body preference matters more.
@derfman1963
@derfman1963 13 күн бұрын
I associate Pines more than Palms with the south. I am surrounded by Pines and Palms, but the Pines are much more prevalent.
@justhereforthefoliage
@justhereforthefoliage 13 күн бұрын
@@derfman1963 You’re not wrong and that’s certainly one way to view it. I respect that opinion and can see the validity in it. Of course, I have to make the joke though that you aren’t south enough if you have more pines than palms lol. But, I’m a palm nut so that’s just me haha!
@TD402dd
@TD402dd 13 күн бұрын
The truth is you know nothing about the South. People don't sit on their porch playing banjos. Georgia and Florida are dominated by people who moved there from the North.
@justhereforthefoliage
@justhereforthefoliage 13 күн бұрын
The truth is you didn't listen. I never once said the word "banjo". Of course Florida is dominated by people who are not from there. That's been true since the beginning of it's origin and won't change anytime soon. I challenge you to find me a reputable source that shows with proof that Georgia is dominated by people that were not born there. I consider dominated to mean more than or equal to 60%. I'll sit back and wait on that one. I created my own rubric and guidelines for this video, and this is what I came up with. I don't even necessarily agree with my findings at the end, but this was my scoring system. Using my scoring system, what would you have changed?
@TD402dd
@TD402dd 13 күн бұрын
@@justhereforthefoliage The population of Georgia in the 1960s was 2.6 million, and now it is 10.8 million. Do you honestly think Georgia couples had that many babies. When I went to school 1-12, the number of kids from the West Coast and Northeast filled the schools. I grew up in Cobb County (north of Atlanta), and it has Lockheed Corporation that decreased from 38,000 to less than 15,000 but the influx of people from the North and West continued to grow rapidly. The voting went from predominantly a Red state to now a toss up. Does that sound like a local growth?
@justhereforthefoliage
@justhereforthefoliage 13 күн бұрын
@@TD402dd I’m not debating folks have moved to greater ATL from all over the world. It’s a major USA city with the world’s busiest airport. It’s full of transplants. We can all agree on that. I still disagree with your original statement of Georgia being “dominated” by people from the north. Georgia flat out does not have 60% of its people from the north. That’s just crazy to believe and it’s simply not true. Don’t forget a lot of Georgia’s growth (primarily ATL) has also been from other southern states. So that’s folks from AL and MS, etc. and other southern states moving to GA. So that wouldn’t make GA less southern. You’re bringing anecdotal facts based on where you lived as truth, but there’s no data to support your claim (because it’s false). What does GA being a purple state have anything to do with them being southern or not? I live in a red Ohio but I’m sure you would call OH, the “north”. So that logic does not compute.
@subtropicalohioplants267
@subtropicalohioplants267 13 күн бұрын
I like your take on Waffle House; there are some in Northeast Ohio. I view commonly planted loblolly pines, southern live oak, southern magnolias, crepe myrtles, Tabor azaleas and Spanish moss as landscape staples in The South, whereas sugar maple, eastern white pine, and Norway spruce indicate one is not in The South. As one travels south from northern Florida, loblolly pine, crepe myrtle and southern magnolia "drop out" as they get replaced with more tropical species from central and South Florida.
@justhereforthefoliage
@justhereforthefoliage 13 күн бұрын
@@subtropicalohioplants267 Those are all great takes and I agree with you! I just tried to keep it less “planty” since a larger audience may not know or even care about those, but I’m totally with you! Any idea where the Spanish Moss line starts? I think it’s pretty far south and also coastal?
@Palmguy24
@Palmguy24 8 күн бұрын
​@@justhereforthefoliageSpanish moss begins generally in the fall line cities of the deep south. These would include Columbia South Carolina thru Augusta and Columbus Georgia over to Montgomery Alabama and on westward. Incidentally I've grown spanish moss in zone 7B Tennessee that survives most winters, but birds constantly nest with it. One of my first youtube videos is of spanish moss, in fact.
@justhereforthefoliage
@justhereforthefoliage 8 күн бұрын
@@Palmguy24 Yeah, that makes sense. Good insight.
@alexlalonde4190
@alexlalonde4190 14 күн бұрын
To me South is anything below Virginia Beach. Southern Folks are found from Mid Georgia. Maryland, D.C. West Virginia 😮😮 Texas ain't South.🙃
@justhereforthefoliage
@justhereforthefoliage 14 күн бұрын
I think that is a very good way to look at it! Believe it or not, some folks apparently consider Delaware the South LOL! I couldn't even bring myself to add them to this list haha!
@roccosophie6498
@roccosophie6498 14 күн бұрын
I'd guess Alabama and Georgia. Florida is full of transients. And although I've lived in Florida most of my life, I was born and raised in south western Pennsylvania! Pittsburgh, area. I'm not, "southern," in any way.
@justhereforthefoliage
@justhereforthefoliage 14 күн бұрын
Yes, totally agreed! They scored much higher on my poll than I would have liked. Once you get south of UF, it becomes the least southern, southern state lol!
@russshaber8071
@russshaber8071 14 күн бұрын
The "South" is traditionally the states that joined the Confederacy and fought to maintain slavery.
@justhereforthefoliage
@justhereforthefoliage 14 күн бұрын
Yes, that is a very solid way to look at it, but I don't think it's 100% that simple, though that is a part of it for sure!
@r.deanmcknight136
@r.deanmcknight136 13 күн бұрын
Actually the south fought over states rights that the federal was trying to strip. It didn't become about slavery till 3rd yr of the war when the Proclamation of Emancipation was introduced. The constitution clearly says states have the right to govern themselves and federal was trying to strip that right due to the tarrifs the south was getting from import export of shipping goods. The "myth" that ALL of the south were slave owners is just that.... a myth. Only the small majority of rich politicians (democrat), banking tycoons, and big business. Let's not forget about the majority of blacks that owned slaves, 10 of them resided in New Orleans alone. Let's not forget that the very first slave owner in the New World was a black man. So do yourself a favor and actually do some historical research and not crap based on ideology of what slavery was. 😉👍
@BloominOnion1
@BloominOnion1 12 күн бұрын
well Kentucky and Delaware were slave owning union states, so how do you categorize them, and what were they fighting for?
@r.deanmcknight136
@r.deanmcknight136 12 күн бұрын
@russshaber8071 The "south" didn't join the confederacy to fight for slavery. The south fought against the federal government due to federal was infringing on the constitution of free state over tarrifs the south was getting from import export shipping of trades. 3yrs into the civil war is when slavery was used as a means ( giving the time the Proclamation of Emancipation was delivered), and that only applied to the southern states....Not the northern states. And don't forget, there was also Native Americans that fought on both sides as well, so what was their purpose???? Also even though Lincoln was the Republican president, his VP was a Democrat, so considering during the "reconstruction" period, all slaves didn't get set free. Not until several years later when several black representatives were elected, not only in congress but state level as well. Democrats didn't elect their first black into office well into the 1900's. History is being erased for a reason, to hide the truth of the real Democrat party. They don't want you to know there was more black slave owners than whites. Those in the south that owned slaves were the democrats, bank tycoons and big business owners and Wallstreet investors. The people of the south were poor and was treated as such. In New Orleans alone, there were over 10 black slave owners. The very first slave owner in the New World was a black man. So do your research before jumping on the propaganda of woke ideology bs and pass judgement onto something you don't truly know 😉👍
@justhereforthefoliage
@justhereforthefoliage 12 күн бұрын
@@BloominOnion1 Great question! I don’t hold onto the slave and confederacy thing, personally, but I know some folks do. KY is relatively southern and DE is the most classic mid Atlantic state. What say you?
@edstringer1138
@edstringer1138 15 күн бұрын
Florida man for the win
@justhereforthefoliage
@justhereforthefoliage 14 күн бұрын
@@edstringer1138 haha right?!
@sexysanta
@sexysanta 16 күн бұрын
Great stuff man, also growing basjoo in cincinnati for my first year
@justhereforthefoliage
@justhereforthefoliage 16 күн бұрын
@@sexysanta Nice! Congrats and welcome to the channel!
@elainegrant2091
@elainegrant2091 18 күн бұрын
HELLO, DO YOU THINK YOU WILL EVER GROW AND SELL THEM TO THE USA
@justhereforthefoliage
@justhereforthefoliage 18 күн бұрын
@@elainegrant2091 Nope, don’t have too much interest in growing anything to sell! Thanks!
@MiguelMatadotcom
@MiguelMatadotcom 19 күн бұрын
Thanks for the info! There's a few of those growing in my neighborhood here in Los Angeles and I always wondered what they were.
@justhereforthefoliage
@justhereforthefoliage 19 күн бұрын
@@MiguelMatadotcom Oh nice! I bet they are so pretty out there! Thanks!
@MiguelMatadotcom
@MiguelMatadotcom 19 күн бұрын
@@justhereforthefoliage I see people checking them out all the time . I never knew what they were named. Thanks for that.
@justhereforthefoliage
@justhereforthefoliage 19 күн бұрын
@@MiguelMatadotcom You’re welcome! Have a great weekend!
@DonPablo91
@DonPablo91 20 күн бұрын
I'm in zone 7b/7a (kinda hard to tell) and my Trachycarpus Palms never even struggled. How the F did those Trachys die in Texas o.O
@justhereforthefoliage
@justhereforthefoliage 20 күн бұрын
@@DonPablo91 Which town are you in? I’d like to look at official NWS data to see how cold you’ve gotten. When did you install your Trachy’s and I assume you have never protected them? I’d have to imagine you’ve gotten colder than -2 at some point as well, so it’s an interesting use case.
@DonPablo91
@DonPablo91 19 күн бұрын
@@justhereforthefoliage Hey, I'm close to Nuremberg, Germany. My Trachys have been installed for 5 years. Two of them I installed when they were fairly small (they have quadrupled their size since then) and my biggest Trachy I bought from a nursery which stands at about 4.5 meters tall now. So not only mature Trachys do extremely well here in central Franconia. I never even experienced a spear pull yet and was baffled by the amount of videos out there showing spear pulls. We also have a ton of Olive trees in Nuremberg which are not protected and I've also seen some Brahea Armata Palms which are not protected at all.
@DonPablo91
@DonPablo91 19 күн бұрын
@@justhereforthefoliage I forgot answering your question, yes, it regularly gets fairly cold here, although winters have gotten way milder lately. -5 degrees centigrade are not uncommon. Temperatures can even drop lower, however not for too long. I remember temperatures dropping to -9 degrees centigrade last winter.
@justhereforthefoliage
@justhereforthefoliage 19 күн бұрын
@@DonPablo91 Oh wow! I had no idea you were in central Germany and my mind is blown that it apparently doesn’t get too cold there! Wild! You are at 49°N and I am at 39°N, but I can’t grow any of that stuff there. Problem with the USA is that all the polar air comes straight down on the land from northern Canada and the Arctic and there’s nothing to stop it until it hits the Gulf of Mexico. No mountains, no oceans, nothing. You’re lucky because there is an ocean to the north of you that stops all the cold Arctic air from making its way to you. Weather patterns are fascinating! And frustrating as if I lived in my same latitude pretty much anywhere else in the world I could grow palm trees lol! Thanks!
@bigtomatoplantslover6205
@bigtomatoplantslover6205 22 күн бұрын
Gorgeous flowers 💐 Like 2 My friend thank you for good sharing. Have a good relationship
@justhereforthefoliage
@justhereforthefoliage 22 күн бұрын
@@bigtomatoplantslover6205 Thanks and you too!
@nativeandunusualplants3582
@nativeandunusualplants3582 24 күн бұрын
Amazing!
@justhereforthefoliage
@justhereforthefoliage 24 күн бұрын
@@nativeandunusualplants3582 Thanks!
@TheLordbal
@TheLordbal 25 күн бұрын
Psa, musa basjoo are not good for fruit, but you can eat the stem and flowers 😚
@justhereforthefoliage
@justhereforthefoliage 25 күн бұрын
@@TheLordbal I’ve heard that about the stems, but they don’t look too appetizing to me lol! We don’t have a long enough growing season for them to even flower and fruit, at least mine never have.
@rulyhernandez1528
@rulyhernandez1528 26 күн бұрын
El serenoa repens en México es el palmito
@justhereforthefoliage
@justhereforthefoliage 25 күн бұрын
@@rulyhernandez1528 Yes!
@subtropicalohioplants267
@subtropicalohioplants267 26 күн бұрын
Wow! That's tall for growing in Cincinnati! Around CLE, they grow as small shrubs to 4ft high.
@justhereforthefoliage
@justhereforthefoliage 26 күн бұрын
@@subtropicalohioplants267 Yeah, makes sense! This is one of the taller ones I’ve seen. My analysis says they usually top out at about 15 feet. This person could trim the trunks of these to give it a more tree like look.
@stratoleft
@stratoleft 29 күн бұрын
I'm going to give you and everybody else a lesson on Crepe Myrtle, dude. You're braggin' about how tall this one is, when that concept is gonna backfire on you. I can tell right now, the root system is being strained. This one in your video is well past the point of pruning requirements. Plus, the fact of where you are, your Septembers don't have the 80-85° heat there is here. Furthermore, if those inside branches coming up start clashing, you, or whoever is supposed to maintain this, have failed. I see people make this blunder CONSTANTLY. If you don't get out there with fertilizer, water, and keep this ground broke up, Crepe Myrtle will fail to bloom. It will look weak. Same principle with ANY rose bush. This one needs to be pruned back from top, sides, and all the way around to be shaped. I oughta charge for these lessons.
@justhereforthefoliage
@justhereforthefoliage 29 күн бұрын
@@stratoleft No one asked you for a lesson, dude. This homeowner clearly knows how to take care of these particular Crepe’s at this location. Google Maps Street View show these plants being installed prior to at least May 2012. Seems like if what you’re saying is true, wouldn’t they be long dead and gone by now?
@cincytropics
@cincytropics 29 күн бұрын
Crape myrtle and southern magnolia have only been planted en masse in the suburbs in the last 15 years. It'll be interesting to see in another 15 yrs how big crape myrtles locally will be.
@justhereforthefoliage
@justhereforthefoliage 29 күн бұрын
Yup, you’re right. Unfortunately, there aren’t a ton of Crepe’s in the city, mostly just in the suburbs, but obviously a ton of Southern Magnolias have been planted in the city since its inception. I can’t wait to see what future warming temps will do for our zone pushed plants!
@stratoleft
@stratoleft 29 күн бұрын
Crepe Myrtle is easy for me to grow and propagate because I'm on the gulf coast. Crepe Myrtle enjoys hot weather and all day full sun. I'm surprised they even bloom at all as far north as where you are.
@justhereforthefoliage
@justhereforthefoliage 29 күн бұрын
@@stratoleft Awesome!
@okpalms1
@okpalms1 Ай бұрын
we were actually in surfside beach tx (where it hit) staying in our rv for vaca.. decided to head out the day before landfall...it was wild
@justhereforthefoliage
@justhereforthefoliage 29 күн бұрын
@@okpalms1 Wow, so glad you decided to leave and miss it! Terrifying event down there!
@arnaudlottari2404
@arnaudlottari2404 Ай бұрын
Hello there, Maybe a Beccariophoenix 🌴
@justhereforthefoliage
@justhereforthefoliage Ай бұрын
@@arnaudlottari2404 Hi! Thanks for watching and commenting!
@cincytropics
@cincytropics Ай бұрын
Not too far from my house!
@justhereforthefoliage
@justhereforthefoliage Ай бұрын
Such a great vibe!
@zekeharley
@zekeharley Ай бұрын
I think I was the only one view , watching the wind blow. not surprising i guess.
@justhereforthefoliage
@justhereforthefoliage Ай бұрын
@@zekeharley Appreciate you!
@ghewins
@ghewins Ай бұрын
Google Street View 3624 Dahlia Ave Datona Beach Shores Florida
@justhereforthefoliage
@justhereforthefoliage Ай бұрын
@@ghewins Holy cow! How is that even possible? How long have they been there and are they protected in winter?
@ghewins
@ghewins Ай бұрын
@@justhereforthefoliage (All addresses Lake Placid, Florida) 102 Royal Palm St, 165 E Interlake Blvd, 155 E Interlake Blvd, 149 Lake Pearl Dr, 132 Williams Ave
@tobik.8135
@tobik.8135 Ай бұрын
That looks like a spindle palm for me and not a bottle palm. The leafs are darker on a bottle palm.
@justhereforthefoliage
@justhereforthefoliage Ай бұрын
@@tobik.8135 Oh okay, good call, thanks!
@Thomas-xy4sh
@Thomas-xy4sh Ай бұрын
Not spindle chamadorea radicales.
@justhereforthefoliage
@justhereforthefoliage Ай бұрын
@@Thomas-xy4sh Nice!
@ghewins
@ghewins Ай бұрын
On the West Coast, windmill palms can be found as far north as Vancouver, BC.
@justhereforthefoliage
@justhereforthefoliage Ай бұрын
@@ghewins Oh yeah, they go way up there and it’s well documented. I could have sworn I was looking at the cold hardiness zone maps and even saw some zone 7 or even 8 in Alaska right on the water.
@ghewins
@ghewins Ай бұрын
Look for the blossoms in 4 - 6 weeks. They smell like imitation grape soda. Apparently not the only member of the pea family with this trait.
@justhereforthefoliage
@justhereforthefoliage Ай бұрын
@@ghewins Oh okay, very interesting! Thanks for the info!
@JustMakinDoFarms
@JustMakinDoFarms Ай бұрын
I have a few not sure what kind they are but mine look like the ones you have. I just transplanted them. Thanks for the video.
@justhereforthefoliage
@justhereforthefoliage Ай бұрын
@@JustMakinDoFarms Great, for transplanting in the height of the summer, be sure to water them like crazy to get started. I don’t even water mine anymore at this point even during prolonged dry spells and they still do great. Thanks!
@blastoff577
@blastoff577 Ай бұрын
Those one palms on the left Is a Christmas palm on the right is called solitaire Palm
@justhereforthefoliage
@justhereforthefoliage 28 күн бұрын
Got it, thanks!
@subtropicalohioplants267
@subtropicalohioplants267 Ай бұрын
River birch trees are definitely better suited for growing along river valleys and streams, where they thrive within their native range. They are also resistant to the (native) bronze birch borer, which devastates heat and drought-stressed white-barked birch in Europe and Asia. Whereas the river birch are losing some leaves in these conditions, the non-native species would be completely wiped out.
@justhereforthefoliage
@justhereforthefoliage Ай бұрын
Funny, a tree with river in its name that should live near a river. Yet we plant them upriver in dried out areas lol!
@subtropicalohioplants267
@subtropicalohioplants267 Ай бұрын
Wow! That's blooming pretty early!
@justhereforthefoliage
@justhereforthefoliage Ай бұрын
Love it!
@cincytropics
@cincytropics Ай бұрын
I've always said that! Also Japanese crabapple ALWAYS look burned up in July and August but landscapers continue to plant them
@justhereforthefoliage
@justhereforthefoliage Ай бұрын
Good point! What to do, what to do lol?!
@cincytropics
@cincytropics Ай бұрын
@@justhereforthefoliage more magnolia, crape myrtle, and sabal minor!
@justhereforthefoliage
@justhereforthefoliage Ай бұрын
@@cincytropics Needle Palm for everyone lol!
@mariacolon7518
@mariacolon7518 Ай бұрын
Im glad they came back.
@justhereforthefoliage
@justhereforthefoliage Ай бұрын
Yes, me too! Doing great now! Thanks! Do you have any planted? If so, did they come back for you?
@nativeandunusualplants3582
@nativeandunusualplants3582 Ай бұрын
Sweet! Nice to see one so tall and blooming so early! I bought a 4ft Natchez this spring and am going to try to protect the wood in winter. fingers crossed.
@justhereforthefoliage
@justhereforthefoliage Ай бұрын
Awesome! Wishing you good luck! I looked on Google Maps and these have been here since at least 2012. Might come back in January to see if they are protected. Thanks!
@GrowTropicalMK
@GrowTropicalMK Ай бұрын
Thanks for sharing those are some very green looking palms !
@justhereforthefoliage
@justhereforthefoliage Ай бұрын
Thank you, appreciate it!
@cincytropics
@cincytropics Ай бұрын
You should see my friend Frankie's crape myrtles! He has two over 20 ft tall!
@justhereforthefoliage
@justhereforthefoliage Ай бұрын
Can I see them from the street? I’ll try and do a drive by to check them out!
@cincytropics
@cincytropics Ай бұрын
@@justhereforthefoliage one of them you can as it's right against the house
@justhereforthefoliage
@justhereforthefoliage Ай бұрын
@@cincytropics Okay, cool!
@cincytropics
@cincytropics Ай бұрын
I drove by and saw this today
@justhereforthefoliage
@justhereforthefoliage Ай бұрын
Pretty wild isn’t it??
@cincytropics
@cincytropics Ай бұрын
@@justhereforthefoliage it is indeed
@justhereforthefoliage
@justhereforthefoliage Ай бұрын
@@cincytropics Know any other large pockets of it?
@cincytropics
@cincytropics Ай бұрын
I've heard that there is some along Columbia parkway
@cincytropics
@cincytropics Ай бұрын
@@justhereforthefoliage also I heard of some near sunken airport somewhere
@subtropicalohioplants267
@subtropicalohioplants267 Ай бұрын
We're seeing multiple days of low 90s in CLE, with some areas near Lake Erie not exceeding the upper 80s!
@justhereforthefoliage
@justhereforthefoliage Ай бұрын
Awesome, glad y’all are getting some heat!