Sago palm centers look different? It's because some are male and some are female. Dan Gill explains.
I’ve been trying to find some information on sago palms. We have several in Metairie that form a large bulbous center of fronds, but the ones we have in Alabama form a long 18-inch tubular center.
A. You can't until a plant produces a cone. The sago, Cycas revoluta, is not really a palm but a member of the genus Cycad. Cycads have been around for more than 200 million years, and sagos, like ...
Question for Dan Gill: Is this sago palm this still alive? Did it survive the deep freeze in Slidell earlier this year? I have four other sago palms in pots, and they all put out an impressive amount ...
Question: The sago palm seems to be highly prized by many home gardeners and professional landscapers. What are the reasons for its attraction? Does it have special cultivation requirements that make ...
Q. My two sago palms are several years old. Originally they were in whiskey barrels, but eventually I transplanted them into the ground. Last year they looked great. Now they are almost totally brown.
The sago palm looked like it was pregnant. It was growing a large velvety golden globe as large as a basketball right in the “belly” of the plant. Each of the homes where I have lived came with ...
Sago palm (Cycas revoluta) is a distinctive evergreen plant that likes full sun to light shade and grows to a height of about 10 feet. Its feather-looking leaves have the appearance of a palm, but ...
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