Archive image from page 35 of Descriptive and illustrated catalogue and. Descriptive and illustrated catalogue and manual of Royal Palm Nurseries . descriptiveillus1894roya Year: 1894 Phcenix Leonensis. OREODOXA, continued. column of polished malachite or marble up to its high summit, where its green, feather-like fronds, radiating outward, drooped gracefully over, like a circlet of reflexed ostrich plumes. The 'noble mountain cabbage' of Jamaica, the kingly Oreodoxa.'—Mayne Reid. The Royal Palm stands light frosts unharmed, but the freeze of January, '86, was fatal to good-sized plants in th
Archive image from page 35 of Descriptive and illustrated catalogue and. Descriptive and illustrated catalogue and manual of Royal Palm Nurseries . descriptiveillus1894roya Year: 1894 Phcenix Leonensis. OREODOXA, continued. column of polished malachite or marble up to its high summit, where its green, feather-like fronds, radiating outward, drooped gracefully over, like a circlet of reflexed ostrich plumes. The 'noble mountain cabbage' of Jamaica, the kingly Oreodoxa.'—Mayne Reid. The Royal Palm stands light frosts unharmed, but the freeze of January, '86, was fatal to good-sized plants in this latitude. Native in several locali- ties of extreme South Florida. Three trees once stood on Cape Sable, visible eighteen miles out at sea, but were destroyed by the gale of 1872. The Royal Palms of Cape Roman reach a height of 150 feet. Valuable as a decorative Palm. 25 cents each, $ per dozen; 3t04feet, 50 cents each, $5 per dozen. ~Our nurseries were named from some fine specimens of this Palm—and royal indeed it is—which were growing here luxuriantly before the great freeze of 1886. This killed them completely, and in the place of the best one we now have another sturdy plant. The il- lustration on first page of cover is a Royal Palm. 0. sp. from Demerara (British Guiana). This comes from the Royal Botanic Gardens, and as }'et is unnamed. $1 each. Phcenix PH(ENIX. The Date Palms. We unhesitatingly recommend the genus Phoenix for the most extensive cultivation in the open air in the lower South, and for the conservatory and greenhouse North. All are of exceedingly rapid growth comparatively, are strong, healthy and beautiful Palms, bearing several degrees of frost in most cases, and standing a great deal of neglect. Photographs taken of some of our plants are here shown in engravings. P. acaulus, The Stemless Date Palm. $i each. rP. Canariensis. One ofthe finest and most hardy. Native of the Canary Islands. This Palm is perfectly at home, and matur
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