| Min. price: | 1 lb price: | Cust1 price: | Cust2 price: | Max. price: |
| Min. quant.: | 1 lb quant: | Cust1 quant: | Cust2 quant: | Max.quant: |
Detailed Listing For:
Botanical Name:
Washingtonia Robusta
Family:
PALMAE
Genus:
Washingtonia
Species:
robusta
Common Name:
Mexican Fan Palm
Lot#:
090473
Quantity:
0.28 lb
Avg Count Packet:
44
Average Seeds Per Pound:
4086
Germination:
98%
Germination Test Type:
Purity:
99%
Height:
75 feet
Collection Locale:
California
Minimum Hardiness Zone:
1 pkt
$
4.95
1 lb
$
32.45
Characteristics
Drought Tolerant
Edible Fruit/Nuts
Evergreen
Heat Tolerant
Palm
Specimen Tree
Street Tree
Wildlife food
Winter Interest
Growing Info
Scarification
let stand in water for 12 hours
Stratification
cold stratify for 90 days
Germination
sow seed 1/4" to 1/2" deep., keep moist, mulch the seed bed
Description
Wikipedia states: It is a palm native to northwestern Mexico. It grows to 25 m tall, rarely up to 30 m. The leaves have a petiole up to 1 m long, and a palmate fan of leaflets up to 1 m long. The inflorescence is up to 3 m long, with numerous small pale orange-pink flowers. The fruit is a spherical, blue-black drupe, 6-8 mm diameter; it is edible, though thin-fleshed.
Cultivation and uses:
Like the closely related Washingtonia filifera (California Fan Palm), it is grown as an ornamental tree. Although very similar, the Mexican Washingtonia has a narrower trunk (which is typically somewhat wider at the base), and grows slightly faster and taller; it is also somewhat less cold hardy than the California Washingtonia, hardy to about −10 °C (14°F). Unlike the Washingtonia filifera, which has been cultivated as far north as Oklahoma and Southwestern Utah, the Mexican fan palm can be grown mainly around areas of the southwestern United States, such as California and the extreme south coast of Oregon(up to Gold Beach), Arizona, southern Nevada, and southern New Mexico. It may also be seen along the Gulf Coast from Texas and Louisiana to Florida, though specimens in that region will not be as tall as those along the West Coast due to a more common occurrence of deep freezes and also uprooting caused by tropical storms and hurricanes.
Comments
Fan-shaped many-segmented leaves atop a stout trunk, which is bare and rough, often covered with the remains of old leaf stalks; a street tree in southern California; native to Mexico 



