Okanagan desert-palms: Bigger Jubs next spring
Posted: Fri Aug 28, 2009 10:33 am
Hello John
I read news that Port Alberni hit temps above 40C so I wonder if you got 45 or 47C as max highs in July. My place hit 36C again (away from water) after a few years which did surprise me. I expect 32 or 33C max in summer. How are your palms & yuccas doing? A variety of yuccas (large ones too) are in the works for Victoria. Yucca alofoilia has grown quite a bit this year. It's not slow like Y. recurvifolia. Y. rostrata is slow so I'll wait for a tall specimen. I need cacti & yuccas because summers are so dry between Victoria and Nanaimo. Visitors wonder why Victoria is so dry while being by the sea.
I've been away for months sailing around the Pacific Rim. It gave me the chance to explore Australia and see old Jubaeas. As big as ones I saw in Chile. I'm in the works to have a Jub larger than 15 gal ordered to the island. All palms are ok after this winter. Brahea edulis and Trith. acanthocoma are nice. Jubs of course did well. Even the Jub that had been moved. A new palm that has done well is T. manipur. So another has been added. Trachycarpus nova seems hardy. Last Dec tested exotics that had not been tested in well over a decade. So the trip up-island showed me how T. fortunei can be a workhorse. T. wagnerianus is a favorite in my garden. Visitors favour that palm. It performs better here that T. fortunei with its rigid, deep green leaves in full exposure of winter weather. As you can imagine the garden is turning into something like Jeff's. Please stop by on your next visit to Victoria.
I noticed Callistemon citrinus in Australia. It reminded me of the specimen growing on Salt Sping Island.
Cheers
I read news that Port Alberni hit temps above 40C so I wonder if you got 45 or 47C as max highs in July. My place hit 36C again (away from water) after a few years which did surprise me. I expect 32 or 33C max in summer. How are your palms & yuccas doing? A variety of yuccas (large ones too) are in the works for Victoria. Yucca alofoilia has grown quite a bit this year. It's not slow like Y. recurvifolia. Y. rostrata is slow so I'll wait for a tall specimen. I need cacti & yuccas because summers are so dry between Victoria and Nanaimo. Visitors wonder why Victoria is so dry while being by the sea.
I've been away for months sailing around the Pacific Rim. It gave me the chance to explore Australia and see old Jubaeas. As big as ones I saw in Chile. I'm in the works to have a Jub larger than 15 gal ordered to the island. All palms are ok after this winter. Brahea edulis and Trith. acanthocoma are nice. Jubs of course did well. Even the Jub that had been moved. A new palm that has done well is T. manipur. So another has been added. Trachycarpus nova seems hardy. Last Dec tested exotics that had not been tested in well over a decade. So the trip up-island showed me how T. fortunei can be a workhorse. T. wagnerianus is a favorite in my garden. Visitors favour that palm. It performs better here that T. fortunei with its rigid, deep green leaves in full exposure of winter weather. As you can imagine the garden is turning into something like Jeff's. Please stop by on your next visit to Victoria.
I noticed Callistemon citrinus in Australia. It reminded me of the specimen growing on Salt Sping Island.
Cheers