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South Florida Landscape Plants

Canary Island Date Palm

Phoenix canariensis
Massive and magnificent, the Canary Island date palm rules the landscape with its
aristocratic size and beauty.

Canary Island date palm
The palm's huge crown of stiff leaves over a thick trunk is best suited for more formal
and spacious landscapes.

This palm sets off a larger, elegant home - especially nice accenting one with
Mediterranean-style architecture.

Young palm in pot showing large base
People often call this palm tree "Pineapple Palm."

The base has a fat, pineapple-like shape and a crusty leaf scar pattern, more
noticeable while the palm is young.

Ferns often germinate in the "pineapple" part as the trunk forms, adding to the
ornamental look.

Plant specs

This is a slow grower to 40 feet. Give it plenty of room since the wide-spreading
fronds stay low to the ground for many years as the trunk slowly forms.

Mature palm in landscape
In spite of its tropical look, a Canary Island date is one of the best cold hardy palms -
fine anywhere in Zone 9 and southward.

This palm is moderately salt-tolerant and needs a full sun location. It produces
ornamental fruits resembling dates in spring and early summer (they're edible but not
very tasty).

The dreaded palm weevil

Canary Island date palms can be susceptible to palm weevils that invade the heart of
the palm and kill it.

BUT - this only happens to stressed palms.

Palm weevils are beetles that lay larva (eggs) on decaying matter...they don't attack
healthy trees. So if your palm is attacked, it was already sick.

Plant care

Add top soil or organic peat to the hole when you plant.

Fertilize in spring, summer and fall with a granular palm fertilizer with micronutrients.

This palm can be prone to potassium deficiency - which causes yellowed fronds - but
you can apply a fertilizer that's high in potassium to keep it green.

This palm is not self-cleaning, so you'll need to remove browned fronds. But with its
slow rate of growth this won't be a regular chore.

Avoid removing horizontal fronds or those above.

Though this palm is drought tolerant once established, make sure it gets watered
during dry spells.

Plant spacing

This is one VERY BIG palm...you must plan for the palm's eventual massive size. Best
to plant well away from the house (at least 10 feet).

If planting more than one, space 10 to 15 feet apart.

Canary's are too big for containers.

Landscape uses for Canary Island date palm
anchor for a large bed
single yard specimen
flanking a large formal gate and/or driveway entrance
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