Unusual palm trees can get you thinking - How odd!
Have you ever heard of any unusual, odd, scary or weird palm trees? We've got some for you!
So settle down with your Support Animal, Stuffed Animal or Support Blankie. OR whatever you use to get through unusual times!
It won't really be all that bad!! You'll probably think, wow - that's crazy! I never knew that.
Or if you had heard about some unusual palms, we still had to go & bring it up! Because you may not know these stories!
Let's begin:
Or is it a Palm Being Devoured?
St. Augustine Florida has a balmy, humid climate.
An oak tree began growing. Later, a palm seed made its way aside the young oak. That palm tree also took root and began to grow.
While First Growing, palm trunks reach a maximal steady-state width.
As its trunk grew wider, this oak began "enveloping" areas of the palm's trunk! Incorporating that Part of the Palm into it's own trunk body.
It seems it may be a love story on Cordova Street, off of Orange.
In fact, its reputation is famous as the "Love Tree of St. Augustine." Because the plants help each other out.
Just like a loving couple!
Legend has it that if you visit the entwined love trees, with your own beloved - just walk underneath.
Endemic to islands in the Seychelles, this Palm Tree Grows Fruit that's generated oral traditions through the years!
Several legends are attached to this largest of palm tree fruits. That's factual - Coco de Mer palm fruit is the biggest seed in the entire plant kingdom!
Also called the Love Nut & Sea Coconut. It's officially Lodoicea maldivica.
As an island palm, the Coco de Mer often grew near the coast. Gathering together in multiple Palm Tree Groves.
That helped generate sailors' old, unusual & kinda crazy legend. It began when boatmen saw this palm's fruit floating on the sea.
Word spread among sailors about this fruit. The story was there must be an undersea Palm Grove! Going from ship to ship, the story became legend!
Coco de Mer nuts rolling into the waves got carried away by currents. Because of their heavy weight, they'd sink.
After awhile they rotted from the inside. Creating deterioration gasses. Along with losing heft/weight, as the thick flesh became mushy.
Resulting in the Coco de Mer fruit rising and popping up to the sea surface. Leading to that strange legendary belief! Of an undersea Coconut Grove.
The claim arose that the genus Lodicea honored French King Louis XV.
Seems more likely it was named for Laodice, the legendary & lovely princess of Troy. We'll tell you why.
Coco de Mer has separate male & female trees.
The male flowers must get pollen transferred to female flowers on a nearby Coco de Mer. Generated by wind pollination & likely assisted by snails & geckos. Animals who enjoy Coco de Mer flowers.
Below is a look at the male inflorescence. Then remember the look of the fruit produced. Both imitating human body parts.
You'll perhaps figure out other legends for this palm!
Okay, so we'll tell you the ultimate legend of the Coco de Mer Palm Tree.
If you didn't think of it. You'll soon figure out how this legend naturally arose. Tradition has it that
Hmmm!?
Imagine walking leisurely through a nice trail
Up ahead you see crowns of palm fronds. Thinking you'll be heading through a nice palmy grove at the edge of the rainforest!
BUT WAIT!
As you get closer, it gets scary. Yikes, Astrocaryum mexicanum has a million spikes!!
Spiny trunk, spiny petioles & spiny rachis.
Even the flower spathe is covered in spines. The flowers that grow then produces egg-shaped brown fruit - all covered with black spines. Wow!
Don't get too close as you pass by! Pay attention - cuz you could get attacked by this armed palm!
Zombies have been a thing lately.
Lots of shows & flicks with zombies attacking & scaring the life out of everybody. Have you seen any? We've watched a few.
Well, here's another to compare:
The genus word "Zombia" actually comes from the Haitian Creole language for this palm.
In that Official Language of Haiti, the people call it latanier zombi. Which means Ghost Palm. Something else that makes it unusually scarier still!
But maybe only because it produces what's described as a "ghostly" white fruit?
Is it oddly weird that the epithet, antillarum, means "of the Antilles"?
The Antilles of the Caribbean, which includes 50 islands. One of them is Hispaniola.
But throughout legend has it that the spines are used for voodoo dolls!
We hope it all wasn't too unusual, weird, or scary!
Probably not. Palm trees aren't really known to put the outright petrifying fear into people. Right! But hope you enjoyed reading about these strange palms.
We have other Strange Palms to Read About, too - if you'd like!