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Hot Gardens Newsletter - Winter 2007 Previous newsletters by month Gardening advice by topic Zero Palms. If the recent freezing weather has turned the fronds on your palm trees brown, your palms may have been damaged or destroyed. But do NOT remove these trees immediately nor cut off the seemingly dead fronds. Dry, brown fronds do not necessarily mean that your palm is a total loss. New fronds grow from the heart of the palm which is located within the top of the trunk. If this inner part has not been damaged by the cold, your palm may come to life again and grow new fronds in Spring. And with the cost of palms these days, it is wise to wait and see. In the meantime, continue to treat your palms -- and all other trees and plants -- as if they are thriving; water them periodically. The California fan palms
(Washingtonia filifera and w. robusta), as natives of the
Southwest, are the most likely survivors of our artic cold snap.
The Mediterranean fan palm, (Chamaerops humilis) may also be a
survivor. After all, it snows sometimes in Athens, where this palm
is a native. Our favorite, the fast-growing Queen palm (Syragrus
romanzoffianum), will probably be a total victim of the severe
temperatures. These graceful palms are not at all cold hardy. Frozen Shrubs and
Succulents. If other shrubs in your garden appear to
have been damaged by the cold, again we suggest that you wait and see.
Some plants, particularly those native to areas where wildfire is part
of the natural cycle, can be destroyed right down to the root ball and
grow right back again. On the other hand, frozen succulents will
turn to mush so you might as well clean up the mess now. |
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