Just Here For The Foliage
Just Here For The Foliage
  • Видео 397
  • Просмотров 150 219
Which USA State is the most Southern?
Filmed 07/29/2024
Southern Living Magazine
Просмотров: 39

Видео

Gorgeous tall Crepe Myrtle
Просмотров 17114 дней назад
Filmed 07/15/2024
Tropical themed restaurant in the Midwest
Просмотров 5814 дней назад
Filmed 07/11/2024
Hurricane Beryl plows through the Midwest
Просмотров 6614 дней назад
Filmed 07/10/2024
Crazy find in the woods!
Просмотров 38521 день назад
Filmed 07/02/2024
Musa basjoo banana PSA!
Просмотров 33128 дней назад
Filmed 07/02/2024
Are we sure about River Birch?
Просмотров 50Месяц назад
Filmed 06/25/2024
Gorgeous tall, blooming Crepe Myrtle in Cincinnati
Просмотров 80Месяц назад
Filmed 06/27/2024
Huge Bigleaf Magnolia in Cincinnati
Просмотров 59Месяц назад
Filmed 06/18/2024
Florida heat comes to Cincinnati! Lowest temp all week 71°, highest 98°! LFG!
Просмотров 65Месяц назад
Filmed 06/17/2024
Tropical plant garden update 06/12/2024
Просмотров 588Месяц назад
Filmed 06/12/2024
Tropical plant garden update 06/10/2024
Просмотров 320Месяц назад
Filmed 06/10/2024
Here gator, gator, gator…. 🐊🐊🐊
Просмотров 624Месяц назад
Filmed 06/07/2024
Taking a hike through SW FL native hammock
Просмотров 47Месяц назад
Filmed 06/07/2024
Talkin’ Tropicals: Episode 5
Просмотров 59Месяц назад
Talkin’ Tropicals: Episode 5
FL native Armadillo scurrying around
Просмотров 27Месяц назад
FL native Armadillo scurrying around
Sandhill Cranes try to enter 7-Eleven LOL!
Просмотров 23Месяц назад
Sandhill Cranes try to enter 7-Eleven LOL!
ZooTampa has amazing tropical foliage
Просмотров 38Месяц назад
ZooTampa has amazing tropical foliage
Gulf = GOAT
Просмотров 68Месяц назад
Gulf = GOAT
Take a tropical plant nighttime walk with me
Просмотров 462 месяца назад
Take a tropical plant nighttime walk with me
Dolphins put on a show in Little Sarasota Bay
Просмотров 152 месяца назад
Dolphins put on a show in Little Sarasota Bay
That tropical look 🌴☀️🏖️
Просмотров 3412 месяца назад
That tropical look 🌴☀️🏖️
What is wrong with these Royals?
Просмотров 382 месяца назад
What is wrong with these Royals?
On the Suncoast in SW FL!
Просмотров 1172 месяца назад
On the Suncoast in SW FL!
Sunset over Little Sarasota Bay
Просмотров 152 месяца назад
Sunset over Little Sarasota Bay
Beautiful Bougainvillea!
Просмотров 772 месяца назад
Beautiful Bougainvillea!
Rhododendron’s showing out!
Просмотров 872 месяца назад
Rhododendron’s showing out!
Tropicals are outside! PSA on acclimating!
Просмотров 5043 месяца назад
Tropicals are outside! PSA on acclimating!
Did my Musa Basjoo bananas die? WTF?!?!
Просмотров 2253 месяца назад
Did my Musa Basjoo bananas die? WTF?!?!

Комментарии

  • @russshaber8071
    @russshaber8071 3 часа назад

    The "South" is traditionally the states that joined the Confederacy and fought to maintain slavery.

    • @justhereforthefoliage
      @justhereforthefoliage 3 часа назад

      Yes, that is a very solid way to look at it, but I don't think it's 100% that simple, though that is a part of it for sure!

  • @edstringer1138
    @edstringer1138 12 часов назад

    Florida man for the win

  • @sexysanta
    @sexysanta 2 дня назад

    Great stuff man, also growing basjoo in cincinnati for my first year

  • @elainegrant2091
    @elainegrant2091 4 дня назад

    HELLO, DO YOU THINK YOU WILL EVER GROW AND SELL THEM TO THE USA

    • @justhereforthefoliage
      @justhereforthefoliage 4 дня назад

      @@elainegrant2091 Nope, don’t have too much interest in growing anything to sell! Thanks!

  • @MiguelMatadotcom
    @MiguelMatadotcom 4 дня назад

    Thanks for the info! There's a few of those growing in my neighborhood here in Los Angeles and I always wondered what they were.

    • @justhereforthefoliage
      @justhereforthefoliage 4 дня назад

      @@MiguelMatadotcom Oh nice! I bet they are so pretty out there! Thanks!

    • @MiguelMatadotcom
      @MiguelMatadotcom 4 дня назад

      @@justhereforthefoliage I see people checking them out all the time . I never knew what they were named. Thanks for that.

    • @justhereforthefoliage
      @justhereforthefoliage 4 дня назад

      @@MiguelMatadotcom You’re welcome! Have a great weekend!

  • @DonPablo91
    @DonPablo91 5 дней назад

    I'm in zone 7b/7a (kinda hard to tell) and my Trachycarpus Palms never even struggled. How the F did those Trachys die in Texas o.O

    • @justhereforthefoliage
      @justhereforthefoliage 5 дней назад

      @@DonPablo91 Which town are you in? I’d like to look at official NWS data to see how cold you’ve gotten. When did you install your Trachy’s and I assume you have never protected them? I’d have to imagine you’ve gotten colder than -2 at some point as well, so it’s an interesting use case.

    • @DonPablo91
      @DonPablo91 4 дня назад

      @@justhereforthefoliage Hey, I'm close to Nuremberg, Germany. My Trachys have been installed for 5 years. Two of them I installed when they were fairly small (they have quadrupled their size since then) and my biggest Trachy I bought from a nursery which stands at about 4.5 meters tall now. So not only mature Trachys do extremely well here in central Franconia. I never even experienced a spear pull yet and was baffled by the amount of videos out there showing spear pulls. We also have a ton of Olive trees in Nuremberg which are not protected and I've also seen some Brahea Armata Palms which are not protected at all.

    • @DonPablo91
      @DonPablo91 4 дня назад

      @@justhereforthefoliage I forgot answering your question, yes, it regularly gets fairly cold here, although winters have gotten way milder lately. -5 degrees centigrade are not uncommon. Temperatures can even drop lower, however not for too long. I remember temperatures dropping to -9 degrees centigrade last winter.

    • @justhereforthefoliage
      @justhereforthefoliage 4 дня назад

      @@DonPablo91 Oh wow! I had no idea you were in central Germany and my mind is blown that it apparently doesn’t get too cold there! Wild! You are at 49°N and I am at 39°N, but I can’t grow any of that stuff there. Problem with the USA is that all the polar air comes straight down on the land from northern Canada and the Arctic and there’s nothing to stop it until it hits the Gulf of Mexico. No mountains, no oceans, nothing. You’re lucky because there is an ocean to the north of you that stops all the cold Arctic air from making its way to you. Weather patterns are fascinating! And frustrating as if I lived in my same latitude pretty much anywhere else in the world I could grow palm trees lol! Thanks!

  • @bigtomatoplantslover6205
    @bigtomatoplantslover6205 7 дней назад

    Gorgeous flowers 💐 Like 2 My friend thank you for good sharing. Have a good relationship

  • @nativeandunusualplants3582
    @nativeandunusualplants3582 10 дней назад

    Amazing!

  • @TheLordbal
    @TheLordbal 11 дней назад

    Psa, musa basjoo are not good for fruit, but you can eat the stem and flowers 😚

    • @justhereforthefoliage
      @justhereforthefoliage 10 дней назад

      @@TheLordbal I’ve heard that about the stems, but they don’t look too appetizing to me lol! We don’t have a long enough growing season for them to even flower and fruit, at least mine never have.

  • @rulyhernandez1528
    @rulyhernandez1528 11 дней назад

    El serenoa repens en México es el palmito

  • @subtropicalohioplants267
    @subtropicalohioplants267 11 дней назад

    Wow! That's tall for growing in Cincinnati! Around CLE, they grow as small shrubs to 4ft high.

    • @justhereforthefoliage
      @justhereforthefoliage 11 дней назад

      @@subtropicalohioplants267 Yeah, makes sense! This is one of the taller ones I’ve seen. My analysis says they usually top out at about 15 feet. This person could trim the trunks of these to give it a more tree like look.

  • @stratoleft
    @stratoleft 14 дней назад

    I'm going to give you and everybody else a lesson on Crepe Myrtle, dude. You're braggin' about how tall this one is, when that concept is gonna backfire on you. I can tell right now, the root system is being strained. This one in your video is well past the point of pruning requirements. Plus, the fact of where you are, your Septembers don't have the 80-85° heat there is here. Furthermore, if those inside branches coming up start clashing, you, or whoever is supposed to maintain this, have failed. I see people make this blunder CONSTANTLY. If you don't get out there with fertilizer, water, and keep this ground broke up, Crepe Myrtle will fail to bloom. It will look weak. Same principle with ANY rose bush. This one needs to be pruned back from top, sides, and all the way around to be shaped. I oughta charge for these lessons.

    • @justhereforthefoliage
      @justhereforthefoliage 14 дней назад

      @@stratoleft No one asked you for a lesson, dude. This homeowner clearly knows how to take care of these particular Crepe’s at this location. Google Maps Street View show these plants being installed prior to at least May 2012. Seems like if what you’re saying is true, wouldn’t they be long dead and gone by now?

  • @cincytropics
    @cincytropics 15 дней назад

    Crape myrtle and southern magnolia have only been planted en masse in the suburbs in the last 15 years. It'll be interesting to see in another 15 yrs how big crape myrtles locally will be.

    • @justhereforthefoliage
      @justhereforthefoliage 14 дней назад

      Yup, you’re right. Unfortunately, there aren’t a ton of Crepe’s in the city, mostly just in the suburbs, but obviously a ton of Southern Magnolias have been planted in the city since its inception. I can’t wait to see what future warming temps will do for our zone pushed plants!

  • @stratoleft
    @stratoleft 15 дней назад

    Crepe Myrtle is easy for me to grow and propagate because I'm on the gulf coast. Crepe Myrtle enjoys hot weather and all day full sun. I'm surprised they even bloom at all as far north as where you are.

  • @okpalms1
    @okpalms1 15 дней назад

    we were actually in surfside beach tx (where it hit) staying in our rv for vaca.. decided to head out the day before landfall...it was wild

    • @justhereforthefoliage
      @justhereforthefoliage 15 дней назад

      @@okpalms1 Wow, so glad you decided to leave and miss it! Terrifying event down there!

  • @arnaudlottari2404
    @arnaudlottari2404 17 дней назад

    Hello there, Maybe a Beccariophoenix 🌴

  • @cincytropics
    @cincytropics 19 дней назад

    Not too far from my house!

  • @zekeharley
    @zekeharley 20 дней назад

    I think I was the only one view , watching the wind blow. not surprising i guess.

  • @ghewins
    @ghewins 24 дня назад

    Google Street View 3624 Dahlia Ave Datona Beach Shores Florida

    • @justhereforthefoliage
      @justhereforthefoliage 24 дня назад

      @@ghewins Holy cow! How is that even possible? How long have they been there and are they protected in winter?

    • @ghewins
      @ghewins 20 дней назад

      @@justhereforthefoliage (All addresses Lake Placid, Florida) 102 Royal Palm St, 165 E Interlake Blvd, 155 E Interlake Blvd, 149 Lake Pearl Dr, 132 Williams Ave

  • @tobik.8135
    @tobik.8135 24 дня назад

    That looks like a spindle palm for me and not a bottle palm. The leafs are darker on a bottle palm.

  • @Thomas-xy4sh
    @Thomas-xy4sh 25 дней назад

    Not spindle chamadorea radicales.

  • @ghewins
    @ghewins 26 дней назад

    On the West Coast, windmill palms can be found as far north as Vancouver, BC.

    • @justhereforthefoliage
      @justhereforthefoliage 26 дней назад

      @@ghewins Oh yeah, they go way up there and it’s well documented. I could have sworn I was looking at the cold hardiness zone maps and even saw some zone 7 or even 8 in Alaska right on the water.

  • @ghewins
    @ghewins 26 дней назад

    Look for the blossoms in 4 - 6 weeks. They smell like imitation grape soda. Apparently not the only member of the pea family with this trait.

  • @JustMakinDoFarms
    @JustMakinDoFarms 26 дней назад

    I have a few not sure what kind they are but mine look like the ones you have. I just transplanted them. Thanks for the video.

    • @justhereforthefoliage
      @justhereforthefoliage 26 дней назад

      @@JustMakinDoFarms Great, for transplanting in the height of the summer, be sure to water them like crazy to get started. I don’t even water mine anymore at this point even during prolonged dry spells and they still do great. Thanks!

  • @blastoff577
    @blastoff577 28 дней назад

    Those one palms on the left Is a Christmas palm on the right is called solitaire Palm

  • @subtropicalohioplants267
    @subtropicalohioplants267 Месяц назад

    River birch trees are definitely better suited for growing along river valleys and streams, where they thrive within their native range. They are also resistant to the (native) bronze birch borer, which devastates heat and drought-stressed white-barked birch in Europe and Asia. Whereas the river birch are losing some leaves in these conditions, the non-native species would be completely wiped out.

    • @justhereforthefoliage
      @justhereforthefoliage Месяц назад

      Funny, a tree with river in its name that should live near a river. Yet we plant them upriver in dried out areas lol!

  • @subtropicalohioplants267
    @subtropicalohioplants267 Месяц назад

    Wow! That's blooming pretty early!

  • @cincytropics
    @cincytropics Месяц назад

    I've always said that! Also Japanese crabapple ALWAYS look burned up in July and August but landscapers continue to plant them

  • @mariacolon7518
    @mariacolon7518 Месяц назад

    Im glad they came back.

    • @justhereforthefoliage
      @justhereforthefoliage Месяц назад

      Yes, me too! Doing great now! Thanks! Do you have any planted? If so, did they come back for you?

  • @nativeandunusualplants3582
    @nativeandunusualplants3582 Месяц назад

    Sweet! Nice to see one so tall and blooming so early! I bought a 4ft Natchez this spring and am going to try to protect the wood in winter. fingers crossed.

    • @justhereforthefoliage
      @justhereforthefoliage Месяц назад

      Awesome! Wishing you good luck! I looked on Google Maps and these have been here since at least 2012. Might come back in January to see if they are protected. Thanks!

  • @GrowTropicalMK
    @GrowTropicalMK Месяц назад

    Thanks for sharing those are some very green looking palms !

  • @cincytropics
    @cincytropics Месяц назад

    You should see my friend Frankie's crape myrtles! He has two over 20 ft tall!

    • @justhereforthefoliage
      @justhereforthefoliage Месяц назад

      Can I see them from the street? I’ll try and do a drive by to check them out!

    • @cincytropics
      @cincytropics Месяц назад

      @@justhereforthefoliage one of them you can as it's right against the house

    • @justhereforthefoliage
      @justhereforthefoliage Месяц назад

      @@cincytropics Okay, cool!

  • @cincytropics
    @cincytropics Месяц назад

    I drove by and saw this today

    • @justhereforthefoliage
      @justhereforthefoliage Месяц назад

      Pretty wild isn’t it??

    • @cincytropics
      @cincytropics Месяц назад

      @@justhereforthefoliage it is indeed

    • @justhereforthefoliage
      @justhereforthefoliage Месяц назад

      @@cincytropics Know any other large pockets of it?

    • @cincytropics
      @cincytropics Месяц назад

      I've heard that there is some along Columbia parkway

    • @cincytropics
      @cincytropics Месяц назад

      @@justhereforthefoliage also I heard of some near sunken airport somewhere

  • @subtropicalohioplants267
    @subtropicalohioplants267 Месяц назад

    We're seeing multiple days of low 90s in CLE, with some areas near Lake Erie not exceeding the upper 80s!

  • @subtropicalohioplants267
    @subtropicalohioplants267 Месяц назад

    What a cool find! There are a few at The Holden Arboretum but nowhere near as massive as this one!

  • @karenarnett5167
    @karenarnett5167 Месяц назад

    nutritious- we'd better start eating it!

  • @debraparker1550
    @debraparker1550 Месяц назад

    Where is here ? I watch all these how to videos yet they always fail to tell you their location. I'm in Arizona growing Dwarf Cavindish banana for the first time.

  • @nativeandunusualplants3582
    @nativeandunusualplants3582 Месяц назад

    Awesome! That's the widest one I've ever seen! Great tree, but you're right, they're so slow growing (at least to start as young plant). I have 3 on my property that are very slow. Very cold hardy though, even in zone 5b. In your state they grow wild and overlap territory with the other large leaved magnolia, the umbrella magnolia (Magnolia tripetala). The other large leaved mags native to eastern US is the fraser magnolia (Magnolia fraseri) and there's a sub species of the big leaf called Ashe's Magnolia (Magnolia macrophylla ssp. ashei) that grows a little closer to the eastern gulf states. Nice find!

  • @GardeningandMyDailyLife
    @GardeningandMyDailyLife Месяц назад

    Cây này cành uốn rất đẹp ,cảm ơn bạn đã chia với mọi người ❤️🤝.

  • @nolanholmberg311
    @nolanholmberg311 Месяц назад

    I would say it really depends on where you live. Cause I live in North Carolina and I have a MASSIVE patch of Yucca Filamentosa behind my house on a ridge in woods. Theyre just wild-ecotypes so theyre not the color gaurd variety but theyre in a bunch of shade all summer long but during the winter they get the full sun they want when the leaves drop. I didn't plant them. I assume they came up naturally. Cause this land im on was never farmland so I'm i'll say if you live in a hotter climate than Ohio then they tolerate more shade.

  • @ronr3656
    @ronr3656 Месяц назад

    Check out Beechtop Lane in Linwood/Mt. Lookout. Several acres of it there.

    • @justhereforthefoliage
      @justhereforthefoliage Месяц назад

      Oh wow, I can see its potential on Google Maps, so I will go check it out at some point. Thanks for sharing!

  • @Spiederia
    @Spiederia Месяц назад

    Play baby alligator sounds on a bluetooth speaker and they come from everywhere

    • @justhereforthefoliage
      @justhereforthefoliage Месяц назад

      Yeah I have seen guys online that just make little sounds with their mouths and call the gators out to them. Wild!

  • @mauricechatigny1066
    @mauricechatigny1066 Месяц назад

    Dans quelle zone de rusticité vous êtes situés, thank you if you can answer.

    • @justhereforthefoliage
      @justhereforthefoliage Месяц назад

      Sorry! Can you please ask in English?

    • @mauricechatigny1066
      @mauricechatigny1066 Месяц назад

      @@justhereforthefoliage are you in zone 6 to grow Musa basjoo,

    • @justhereforthefoliage
      @justhereforthefoliage Месяц назад

      @@mauricechatigny1066 Yes, mostly 6B/7A. Usually get down to about 0°F. Duration of cold matters though too, along with amount of heat, dew points, sun angle, soil type, precipitation, etc.

    • @mauricechatigny1066
      @mauricechatigny1066 Месяц назад

      @@justhereforthefoliage thank you for your informations, I know somebody in Montreal who has success in zone 5 b I will try zone 4b with big protection.

    • @justhereforthefoliage
      @justhereforthefoliage Месяц назад

      @@mauricechatigny1066 Yes, give it a try, but make sure to provide plenty of winter protection.

  • @nativeandunusualplants3582
    @nativeandunusualplants3582 Месяц назад

    Interesting, I've never heard of the vine. After watching I thought to myself I hope it doesn't reach Ontario. Looked it up in Wiki and he's a cut and paste,,, A small patch of kudzu was discovered in 2009 in Leamington, Ontario, the second-warmest growing region of Canada after south coastal British Columbia. Great :(

  • @cincytropics
    @cincytropics Месяц назад

    I've thought that I've seen kudzu here before. Where is this colony?

    • @justhereforthefoliage
      @justhereforthefoliage Месяц назад

      I’ve only seen it in very small patches, not like this. 71 and MLK.

  • @maryreynolds8568
    @maryreynolds8568 Месяц назад

    How can bananas survive in that very cold climate? I'm amazed.

    • @justhereforthefoliage
      @justhereforthefoliage Месяц назад

      This species is from way up in the mountains in China, so they are acclimated to cold temps. Mine struggled to come back this year but eventually did.

    • @maryreynolds8568
      @maryreynolds8568 Месяц назад

      @@justhereforthefoliage I'm going to put Musa Basjoo on my list of future additions.

    • @justhereforthefoliage
      @justhereforthefoliage Месяц назад

      @@maryreynolds8568 Yes, absolutely!

    • @daniellapain1576
      @daniellapain1576 24 дня назад

      Zone 6, Dwarf Cavendish Bananas. Tarp and pegs evenly on four corners up to just below the leaves and stuff it with straw. Preferably a straw that isn’t prone to mold or you just chop and drop and cover them with an entire hay bales worth broken up and placed in a chicken wire fence surround over it and cover with a frost blanket in both methods. It’s once a year so it’s not hard to do. Remove after any chance of frost or if it stays around 10 degrees or more.

    • @justhereforthefoliage
      @justhereforthefoliage 24 дня назад

      @@daniellapain1576 Great insight! Thank you!

  • @kay67
    @kay67 Месяц назад

    Nice one..new sub here

  • @cincytropics
    @cincytropics Месяц назад

    Those palms are looking good!🌴

  • @tntropics
    @tntropics Месяц назад

    Stay cool ❄

  • @JoseRamos-jn6ij
    @JoseRamos-jn6ij Месяц назад

    Beautiful selection of tropicals, impressive Alocasia, wanted to share this today, I'm in central NJ 🌴Jose's Tropical Garden 🌴 ruclips.net/video/q0QnqLSxwEQ/видео.htmlsi=XIQ7NL22rbv7Gj4k