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Saw palmettos in my front yard provide a
bold tropical statement.
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Palmettos in the Landscape
by Ginny Stibolt
There's nothing like a palm or palmetto to add a bold, tropical
touch to your landscape. We are lucky that the previous owners
left several saw palmetto (Serenoa
repens) thickets when they cleared out the lot.
Once or twice a year we trim away the yellow and brown fronds to tidy these native
plants, but no other care is needed. These dramatic accent plants are
exceptionally easy to care for.
Several times, I've tried to transplant small offshoots from these plants
with no success. I'll keep trying, though, because there are some
areas where I'd like to start new batches at the edges of our meadows to
provide better cover and more privacy. Several lots near us that used to be
wooded have now been cleared, so our palmettos and other native shrubs on
our property offer a much-needed haven for birds.
The Sturdy Saw Palmetto
The hard, recurved teeth on the stems (petioles) of the fronds give the
saw palmetto its common name. When trimming away the old fronds, we
wear leather work gloves and are careful where we walk because those teeth
can gouge your skin. Palmettos make an excellent impenetrable border.
Despite their low survival rate when transplanted from the wild,
palmettos are difficult
to get rid of if you don't want them. The roots run deep and are extensive,
so digging up a palmetto stand is a lot like work. It burns readily, but
burning it will not kill it. Palmettos are fire tolerant
and will sprout new growth within a week or two of burning. If you are
in a high fire risk neighborhood, you should remove all palmettos within
thirty feet of any buildings and keep them separated into bunches elsewhere
so they don't offer a continuous source of fuel. Our neighborhood is
not a high-risk area, but our palmettos are away from the house.
My blue palmettos
A friend gave me three blue palmettos (Sabal
minor) a couple of years ago. They have survived and
are now growing slowly--oh so slowly. I've planted two of
them near the front pond and the third is in a low spot near some
sweetbay magnolias (Magnolia
virginiana), but it will be a long time before they will
make a "statement" in the landscape. Patience.
Palmettos are true palms, not like the sagos (Cycas
revoluta), which I wrote about earlier.
Sagos are cycads and not palms, no matter what people call them.
Palm Background
The blue palmetto is more closely related to the cabbage palm (Sabal
palmetto), our state tree, than the saw palmetto, which
belongs to a different genus. The scientific species name
of the cabbage palm, "palmetto" confuses the issue
of palm vs. palmetto. Generally, a palmetto is a shrubby plant.
The trunk of a mature palmetto isn't usually vertical for more than
few feet. The fibrous trunk grows either underground or it
lies on top of the soil. While palms are not true trees, they
do eventually develop vertical trunks. For the first five
to ten years, a palm will look much like a palmetto while it develops
a trunk. Once the trunk is established, the palm will grow
vertically, but the girth of its trunk does not usually increase.
Palms and palmettos are monocots and do not produce wood like true trees, which
produce new layers of wood each year--their annual
rings. Palm trunks are more like a grass with bundles of woody
tissue throughout. This means that palms do not have bark and
cannot heal wounds like true trees. It's unfortunate that many
palms in Florida are located in the middle of lawns and are injured at each mowing by
lawnmowers and string trimmers. The gouges in the trunk will not
heal and become entry points for insects and fungi. These wounds
also weaken the trunk, so while palms usually survive hurricanes, injured
palms may break off at the soil line. To save your palms, replace
about 18 inches of lawn around the trunks with mulch, but don't pile
it against the trunks. This also makes it easier to mow.
When cabbage palms are transplanted from the wild, they will generate
a whole new root system. Hundreds of unbranched roots grow
directly from the bottom of the trunk and only after the new roots
have been generated will there be any growth of the fronds. This
is why almost all of the fronds are trimmed off when they are prepared
for planting and they are often staked for a few months to keep them
upright. At no other time should green fronds be trimmed from a
palm. Almost all of the cabbage palms used for landscape
plantings are transplants from the wild because they take so long to
get started.
There are two major classifications of palms and palmettos based on
leaf (frond) shape: the fan palms and the feather palms. Our
palmettos and the cabbage palms are fan palms where the stem (petiole)
is bare and the frond is palmate or arranged so that each section of
the frond is arranged like spokes in a wheel. A feather palm has
pinnate fronds with the sections arranged along a center stem
like (guess what?) a feather.
Using Palms
Over the years, palms and palmettos have been
employed in many ways:
· The Seminoles used palm fronds in building their
chickees and today thatched roofs made of palm fronds are still used as tropical shelters for restaurants, resorts, and campgrounds.
· Seminoles and others have used the palm fronds for weaving baskets
and hats. The fronds also are a source for long, strong fibers that are used
for rope and for other weaving.
· Herbalists have used saw
palmetto berries for prostate problems, but studies
have not shown this to be more effective than a placebo. (Our berries are used only by wildlife.)
· Florida's
DOT encourages palm plantings along highways and in median strips
for
shade and traffic calming. Palms break up the long view and are
thought to slow
drivers down. Since they will not
branch out, good visibility is preserved. Roots of palms don't
increase in girth, so road and sidewalk surfaces last longer.
· Palm
trunks were used in construction and you can see palms used as columns in a
few of the older buildings at Flagler College in St. Augustine.
· Palm hearts are eaten and
the cabbage palm got its common name because people thought the heart tasted
like cabbage. Occasionally you
can find whole palm hearts for sale, but mostly they are chopped up and
canned. Since the heart is the only growing portion of a palm,
you kill the whole plant when the heart is removed.
· Each spring thousands of palms are trimmed to satisfy the market
for fronds on Palm Sunday. One of these days I'd like to plant a few cabbage palms
on our lot, but until then I'll continue to enjoy our
palmettos.
Resources:
· For more information on saw palmettos: http://edis.ifas.ufl.edu/UW110
· Care and feeding of palms: www.coj.net/Departments/Recreation+and+Community+Services/County
+Extension+Office/Agricultural+Programs/Article+Care+of+Palms.htm
· Bulletin with guidelines for landscapers on transplanting palms: http://edis.ifas.ufl.edu/EP001
· USDA bulletin on germinating palmetto seeds: www.nsl.fs.fed.us/wpsm/Serenoa.pdf
· I first learned about chickees when I read "Light a Distant
Fire" by Lucia
St. Clair Robson.
Ginny Stibolt would like to hear from readers who have suggestions
and questions. After all, there are more than a few transplanted
gardeners here in northeast Florida trying to figure out what works
and what doesn’t in planting zone 8/9. She's in the process of writing
a book, "Sustainable Gardening for Florida," to be published
by University Press of Florida. You may contact her or read extra
details on her articles and other information posted on her website:
www.transplantedgardener.com.
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