PALMS OUT
BY JANE BERGER
There?s a palm for just about any place you?re planting.
FROM THE JULY 2018 ISSUE OF LANDSCAPE ARCHITECTURE MAGAZINE.
You can?t always get what you want?unless, that is, you?re into palms. Lisa Gimmy, ASLA, of Lisa Gimmy Landscape Architecture in Los Angeles, finds palms uniquely suited to small gardens, given small root balls that leave ?a very tiny footprint on the ground.? One that Gimmy likes to use is the blue hesper or Mexican blue palm (Brahea armata), native to Baja California, Mexico, with stunning, silvery-blue, fan-shaped fronds and creamy white flower clusters that cascade down from the leaves. Gimmy selects palms for spatial characteristics first, then for texture, leaf color, and the character of the trunk. ?They are like poems,? she says. ?With the head up in the air, there?s really nothing else like it.? Gimmy also likes palms because they provide ?instant gratification, and that?s very important in Southern California.? Ray Hernandez, the president of the International Palm Society, told me a story about a friend who drives from Long Island, New York, to Florida every year to pick up specimens that will last for just the summer season. ?The folks that live out in the Hamptons and have 10 zeros behind their bank account can afford to haul up a coconut palm or something hardier and plant it in their landscape, and they do it on a yearly basis,? he said. ?It?s that whole mentality of bringing the tropics home with you.?
Although some palms will...
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http://landscapearchitecturemagazine.org/
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