PALMS
Since I moved to the Valley of the Sun, I've discovered the many, many kinds of palm trees and palm shrubs that live in this desert. I'm baffled that I have lived this long and not known this. I truly thought that there were maybe 3 kinds of palms, but NO... There are Royal palms, Queen palms, Christmas palms, Lady palms, Palmettos (but not in AZ, I think), Pygmy palms, Date palms, Coconut palms, and a whole lot more, I'm sure.
Although I usually couldn't pick out most of these varieties, my favorites are the Royal, the Christmas, and the one I call the Dr. Seuss palm. I still don't know the Dr. Seuss palm's actual name for sure, but you'd recognize it. It is very, very tall; has a proportionately skinny trunk and a little bunch of fronds at the top, like a shaggy head of hair. It doesn't actually grow straight up, but sort of curves to one side and then tries to head up again. Dr. Seuss (a native of California) drew them in almost every one of his books. They added perfectly to the atmosphere of fantasy and silliness that he was trying to create because these palms look silly.
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| Dr. Seuss palms - probably actually called Mexican Fan Palms |
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| Selection of palms outside my apt - Royal Palm, Mexican Fan Palm, Queen Palm... ? |
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| Short, stumpy palms - are they babies? I don't know |
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| This could be the Christmas Palm. The photos I've seen show them low to the ground, looks like no more than 6 feet high, and clumped like this. They flower around Christmas with red blossoms, hence the name. |
If you look closely at this Royal Palm, you can see the seed pods that have started to form. Eventually, they will be hanging down, all brown and dry ready for the seeds to fly away in the wind as they wave. All that has to be trimmed toward the end of summer so they look their best for the tourists, I think.
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| Of course, there is also the Fake Palm, a recent arrival to this area. |
CACTI
I've discovered that the desert seems to bring out my Dr. Seuss silly side, especially with the local flora. There is one cactus that I've posted photos of before. My husband and I call it the Psycho cactus. It has spiny arms reaching out with these globs of spines at the ends that look eerily like claws. They have a threatening look that I find creepy. Apparently, this cactus is some sort of Cholla, but we can think of it only as Psycho. It's not pretty in the classic sense, but it does have a sort of "fatal attraction".
There are more cacti in the Valley of the Sun than one can count; thousands of different cacti. So many that I don't plan to present them all because... well, these (below) are the only cacti that I actually like and frankly I only like them a little. Sorry cacti.
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| Giant Sahuaro cactus (in flower) |
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| Close-up of the white flowers with yellow centers |
This is one form of Prickly Pear cactus [We saw these all over Spain and Malta. They would grow more than 6 feet high. The Maltese use them as hedges between farms and they eat the pears as a delicacy.]
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| Red Prickly Pear, my favorite |
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| This is some sort of Agave (with my handsome husband sitting in front for perspective). Some of these Agaves grow really HUGE. |
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| And some Agaves stay small. But, all of them seem to have impressive shoots that come out when they flower. |
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| Barrel Cactus? This one is dressed for Christmas in someone's front yard. See the little red ball Christmas ornaments? |
Don't worry there will be no more posts about the desert palms and cacti, unless there is something spectacular at the Desert Botanical Gardens when I go again in the Fall or Winter. My curiosity is leading me elsewhere. In fact, I think the Heard Museum of Native American arts is calling. Until next time...
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