23F low at my place at 55°N enough to finish off the smaller CIDPs. The larger one survived unprotected. They're a short/medium term palm at my location. Sorry to see your old place looking so battered from the cold
On the one with the green near the bottom. Do you just cut off the brown fronds down to the green ? I have the same situation after this winter with some of them and I have cut the brown fronds down to the green and will look for the fungicide you mentioned.
What are these "webs" at the foot of the palm trees. This is not ideal for a Phoenix canariensis as it can promote rot due to winter humidity. He doesn't like to have his feet in the water and reserve more natural mulch for him. By cleaning and removing everything that has frozen, there is a slight hope of seeing it come back, saturating it with antifungal like Bordeaux mixture. I salvaged one this way that someone had left in their crummy jar like yours after a harsh winter.
Really hope yours recover, keep us posted!
RIP phoenix. Gotta love those sabals though, tough palms!
Tragic man! Too bad.
23F low at my place at 55°N enough to finish off the smaller CIDPs. The larger one survived unprotected. They're a short/medium term palm at my location. Sorry to see your old place looking so battered from the cold
That's so tragic your phoenixes were so healthy and green and they were getting mad big last summer and now it's gone :(
If you love them, there’s one by checkers in by independence road, close to downtown
On the one with the green near the bottom. Do you just cut off the brown fronds down to the green ? I have the same situation after this winter with some of them and I have cut the brown fronds down to the green and will look for the fungicide you mentioned.
yeah just cut everything that's dead
Hope most recover. Would be cool with an update soon
What are these "webs" at the foot of the palm trees. This is not ideal for a Phoenix canariensis as it can promote rot due to winter humidity. He doesn't like to have his feet in the water and reserve more natural mulch for him. By cleaning and removing everything that has frozen, there is a slight hope of seeing it come back, saturating it with antifungal like Bordeaux mixture. I salvaged one this way that someone had left in their crummy jar like yours after a harsh winter.
Give an update! I’m sure it’ll make it
How much cold it was?
13 degrees fahrenheit 🥶
@@palmsrkool9476 It is not surprising that the Pheonixs died, perhaps at such a temperature Butia would have survived.
Not the phoenix canariensis! I’m willmington, they have a few!
Too bad you got spear pull. 😢
I hate to see a down brother