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South Florida Landscape Plants
Lady Palm
Rhapis excelsa
Lady palm has a layered, almost Oriental look - different from most other South
Florida palms.

Lady palm surrounded by other palm trees
A graceful palm for garden areas that allow it room to spread out, this palm grows
multiple thin trunks topped with fronds like little green umbrellas.

The fronds above are slightly offset from lower ones, so many are visible at the same
time to create a lush, layered look.

Even though lady palms are clustering, they grow so slowly they're easily controlled
and won't get away from you. Their rounded shape gives an appealing formal yet
tropical appearance.

You can clean up the base if you like the tall, Oriental umbrella look, or leave the palm
full to the ground.

Plant specs

The lady grows slowly to an ultimate height of about 8 to 10 feet. Sun or shade is fine,
though in a shady spot, the fronds keep their best deep green color.

Lady palms are moderately cold tolerant - best when grown in Zone 10 or in Zone 9B
in a protected area. If your palm suffers any winter damage on existing trunks, new
ones will usually appear to replace them (although it takes a while).

These palms are moderately salt-tolerant as well.

Sun OR shade?

When you buy one of these palms, ask at the plant nursery in which light - sun or shade
- the palm was grown.

Most are grown in partial to full shade, so if you take it home and plant it in full sun, it
may suffer leaf burn and possibly heat wilt as it adapts. Better to buy one grown in the
same light where you'll be planting it.

For ways to help a sun-or-shade plant adjust to a new light condition, see the page on
Plant Light Requirements in the Gardening How-To section.

Plant care

Plant with organic peat moss or top soil added to the hole. Water regularly...this palm
can suffer damage from going too dry over long periods, though it doesn't like "wet
feet."

Fertilize during the warmer months of spring, summer and fall, at least once per
season.

In a sunnier location, you'll need to fertilize and water more frequently to keep the palm
fronds a healthy green and the plant full.

Trimming is usually only necessary occasionally, most often to clean up any cold
damage. In this case, you can cut off browned fronds, and remove dead trunks at
ground level...new ones forming will grow up to fill in any gaps left.

Palm with cleaned up trunks
Plant spacing

If you're planting several, they can go as close together as you like.

And this is one palm that can go right up against a house, fence or tree, since it will
spread outward from wherever it's planted.

When you're placing in a garden area, you can closely surround a lady palm tree with
small plants that can be removed later (perennials are a good choice for this) as the
palm fills out.

As long as you provide regular watering, containers or planter boxes are perfect
homes for these palms since they grow so slowly.

Landscape uses for lady palm
as a screen or hedge against walls, fences or along the property line
backdrop plant for smaller plants
at the entry
in beds with a definitive stopping point for the palm - between the house and a
walkway, for example
under or between trees
as a base filler among taller palms
in containers
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