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South Florida Landscape Plants
Windmill Palm

Trachycarpus fortunei
The beauty of the windmill palm is not only its layered, Oriental-garden look but also
that it's one of the most cold-hardy palms grown in Florida.

Windmill palm
The palm's fronds form tiers of fan-shaped leaves growing in alternate positions that
create attractive layers.

These are wonderful entryway palms, especially pretty with uplighting at night.

This is one palm that can handle freezes and even snow...and actually does better and
lives longer in cooler regions of South Florida. It works very well as a small accent
palm in areas subject to cold where more tropical palms would take a beating.

Plant specs

Slow-growing windmills generally reach heights of 10 to 12 feet in our locale. Their
cold tolerance extends as far north as Zone 8 and they won't show any winter damage
whatsoever here in South Florida.

Windmill fan palms, as they're sometimes called, are considered moderately
drought-tolerant once they're established, and can take full sun to partial shade or
even all day light shade.

The trunk of the windmill is covered by a fibrous mat of "hair" that falls off slowly as the
palm matures. The frond stems, called petioles, have "teeth" but they're small and
easily avoided.

Plant care

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

Fertilize with a granular palm fertilizer at least three times a year, in spring, summer
and fall.

Even though they're considered fairly tolerant of drought, windmills prefer a regular
watering twice a week in summer, and once a week in winter to keep the leaf tips from
browning.

Prune fronds as they brown by cutting them as close to the trunk as possible to
maintain a clean look.

Plant spacing

Place this palm about 5 feet away from the house or other structure to give the fronds
room to fan out. Normally fronds can grow to about 4 feet in length, and you want to
avoid damage to them from scraping against a surface.

If you're growing these palms in a row, plant them 5 or 6 feet apart.

Windmills make excellent container palms and work well in pool cages as well since
their growth rate is slow.

Landscape uses for windmill palm
accent plant for entry, alcove or small courtyard
small garden specimen
lining a walkway
container or poolcage planter palm
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