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Central Florida Palm & Cycad Society
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Recent Pictures
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Rare Palms In Central Florida
Tour Date: Spring 2001

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The exquisite Livistona inermis growing in Cocoa Beach. Unfortunately, this palm died shortly after the photo was taken). A crowd gathers to pay homage to one of the most silver colored palms in existence, Hyphaene coriacea ??? growing at Dr. Young's in Tampa.
Latania loddigesii planted circa 1930's, growing in Vero Beach. A tropical setting in downtown Orlando no less. The tallest palm to the left is a near flowering size Foxtail palm, Wodyetia bifurcata. Just below it's crown is a new red-emergent frond of Chambeyronia macrocarpa. The tall palm to the right is Ptychosperma elegans, the Solitaire palm.
Joe Michael standing beside one of his "juvenile" Corypha umbraculifera growing in coastal Indian River county. One of the most heat & drought (but not moisture ???) resistant palms, Trithrinax campestris growing in Cocoa Beach. Note the terminal fibers forming spines just below the main crown.
The seed of the Double Coconut (Lodoicea maldivica), the largest seed of any plant in the world. This seed came from a palm growing at Dr. Young's in Tampa.
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