2 minute read
Perfect palms
If you’re after a tropical look for your garden, then palms are a must and their long arching and graceful foliage adds a vertical dimension to garden designs or creates a tall leafy backdrop or dappled shade for smaller plants growing underneath. There is a wide variety of palms to choose from, whether you have a large sunny garden or a small shady spot that needs some tropical pizzazz.
Sugar cane palm (Dypsis baronii) Bangalow palm ( Archonontophoenix cunninghamiana )
Chinese fan palm ( Livistona chinensis)
Palms for shaded gardens include:
Lady palm (Rhapis excelsa) Cascade palm ( Chamaedorea cataractarum) Kentia palm ( Howea forsteriana)
Here are the key steps to help keep your palms lush and healthy:
Plant into well drained soil or a pot with good drainage holes filled with a good quality potting mix like Yates ® Premium Potting Mix. When planting a new palm into the garden, enrich the soil first by mixing in some Yates Thrive ® Natural Blood & Bone. Palms don’t like having their roots disturbed, so when planting, don’t be tempted to tease out the root ball, even if it looks compacted. During the warmer months keep the soil or potting mix moist and feed outdoor palms each fortnight with Yates Thrive Fish Blood & Bone. Yellowing palm leaves can be a sign of magnesium deficiency. Applied as a foliar spray, Yates Leaf Greener Magnesium Chelate is a fast acting source of magnesium to help green up palm foliage. Regularly remove any brown palm fronds, to keep the plant looking tidy.
Indoor
parlour palms
Parlour palms (Chamaedorea elegans) make fantastic indoor plants. Young plants don’t take up too much space and a potted parlour palm is a lovely leafy addition to a work space or humid bathroom. Multiple plants are often grown together in the one pot and their small fronds are lined with lots of green leaflets, creating a lush miniature rainforest effect. Parlour palms prefer a moderately to well-lit spot indoors that is protected from direct sunlight. They can grow up to 1.5m tall, though grow slowly and will take several years to reach this height.
Parlour palm growing tips:
Choose a pot with good drainage holes and use a good quality potting mix like Yates ® Indoor Plants Potting Mix. Don’t disturb the palm’s root system when planting it into a new container.
Parlour palms like the potting mix to be kept only slightly moist. They don’t like wet feet! You can check the moisture level in the potting mix by gently digging around in the top few centimetres with your finger. To promote lush healthy foliage growth, from spring to autumn feed every two months month with Yates Thrive ® Plant Food Spikes Plants & Ferns. It’s as simple as pushing a spike into the potting mix towards the edge of the pot. The spike is out of sight and there’s no mixing, measuring required. During hot dry weather, to help create a more humid environment the parlour palm foliage can be misted with water. Monitor for signs of sap feeding scale, which can infest palm stems and leaves and look like small raised white, grey, brown or black bumps. Control by spraying the scale with Yates Nature’s Way ® Organic Citrus, Vegie & Ornamental Spray. Remove any dead fronds to keep the palm looking tidy and gently wipe the leaves regularly to remove any dust.