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Pinanga thread


realarch

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This genus from tropical Asia has many nice garden palms if your climate allows. Species can be small and dainty, tall and robust, understory or canopy, and everything in between. Most exhibit mottled leaves and many have colorful crown shafts. 

Please feel free to add to this thread.

First is P. densiflora. Smallish palm, lots of mottling, and understory.

Tim

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Tim

Hilo, Hawaii

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Pinanga ‘Thai mottled’, is the name that’s been attached to this small palm. Never out of control with colorful leaves, seeds, and stems. Similar to the one above, but more of an upright habit.

Tim

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Tim

Hilo, Hawaii

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Pinanga caesia. Kind of a medium sized palm height wise. Nice orange crown shaft. 

Tim

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Tim

Hilo, Hawaii

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Pinanga coronata, ‘blunt leaf’. A perfect palm for a privacy hedge, but can be pruned to suit the look you want. 

Tim

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Tim

Hilo, Hawaii

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Pinanga maculata, and Pinanga insignis. P. maculata is a beautiful solitary palm with nice habit and scale. 

P. insignis is the giant of the genus and is tall and robust. Heavy, thick leaf sheaths.

Tim

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Tim

Hilo, Hawaii

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The last one is Pinanga speciosa. Not a tall palm, but robust and a beautiful purple crown shaft. One of my favorites. 

Tim

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Tim

Hilo, Hawaii

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Tim,

Very nice selection of Pinanga’s! I just planted my dbl speciosa yesterday. Didn’t take any pic’s yet. I really like the P. densiflora, have not seen that one yet, love the colors on it.

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This is the P coronata,  does well here for me.

 

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Port Macquarie NSW Australia

Warm temperate to subtropical

Record low of -2C at airport 2006

Pushing the limit of palm survivabilities

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Pinanga caesia that have been living in pots with me here in Florida for a year. I think these are the favorites of my collection right now.

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These are great Tim, I think I have all but 2 of the ones shown and more will be coming one of these days, thanks for sharing!

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Barry, P. speciosa is a great choice, even small they are beautiful with that purple crown shaft.

Looks good Mike, this is a versatile palm.

Scott, that puppy you don’t see often. Good luck with it.

Dean, some P. caesia have intense mottling and others not so much. Yours looks healthy.

Brad, thanks man. Your garden must be really coming along.

 

Tim

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Tim

Hilo, Hawaii

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I love pinangas, and speciosa, maculata, and caesia are some of the real stars of the genus. but don't forget the ankle biters!IMG_5425.thumb.JPG.46cc4acfbb7c73f92fae48fad13fd7c1.JPG

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7 hours ago, Kaname-kun said:

I love pinangas, and speciosa, maculata, and caesia are some of the real stars of the genus. but don't forget the ankle biters!IMG_5425.thumb.JPG.46cc4acfbb7c73f92fae48fad13fd7c1.JPG

I should have identified them as Pinanga disticha, with two surprises tucked in. I have several in the ground behind this about 2 feet high, including a few highly colored "stained glass" individuals. These are a bullpen waiting to go under some tree ferns in a few months . . . . 

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I'm quite fond of the Pinanga I have around 20 so far with 8 types I think, I just missed photo'ing the electric red/pink/mauve of this Coronata flower that was there a day earlier - was much more impressive but still decent color here, also recently picked up this Thai Mottled form.

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On 4/14/2022 at 3:46 PM, John hovancsek said:

Aristata javana and speciosa and distisha 

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Is that Licuala cordata on the left?! :36_14_15[1]::drool:

-Michael

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1 hour ago, palmsOrl said:

Is that Licuala cordata on the left?! :36_14_15[1]::drool:

-Michael

Yes

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Here are a couple entries in this thread, one that I have found to be of great interest. Full palm pics have a hat for scale.

First up is Pinanga "blue seed" or "blue fruit". First, the plant, then, a pic of the blue fruit that it produced. I sowed 18 of those "blue seeds" and got 10 sprouts, now seedlings ready for potting up.

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Next up is Pinanga philippinensis, with its distinctive narrow leaflets and brown on the crownshaft. these are still fairly young.

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Mike Merritt

Big Island of Hawaii, windward, rainy side, 740 feet (225 meters) elevation

165 inches (4,200 mm) of rain per year, 66 to 83 deg F (20 to 28 deg C) in summer, 62 to 80 deg F (16.7 to 26.7 Deg C) in winter.

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Noticed the leaf sheath had come off this P. insignis, colorful. The leaf and sheath are massive and would crush whatever it lands on. 

Tim

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Tim

Hilo, Hawaii

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