Living in Tucson Arizona, we know many who have palm trees planted as part of their home landscapes. A friend of ours recently told me the story of a palm tree in her East Side Tucson yard that has had its struggles to survive.
But Survive It Did!
TUCSON HOME PURCHASE
Pam has lived in Tucson a long while. She and her husband bought their home back in 1964. (It's still the family home today!) They were both employed at the local university. We met Pam because her daughter is our daughter-in-law.
Pam told me how there already was a very young palm tree planted in the front yard of their new home. Way back then. She was happy to see it there!
It was barely 5 feet tall, when the winter of 1964 into 1965 brought in a few rare Tucson snowstorms. In January, the snow fell so thickly and wet, that the fronds slumped down under the snow's weight.
SO HEAVY FOR THE FRONDS...
But like most other palm trees Tucson has around town, it survived as well. And kept growing. Pam remembers that it was about another ten years that it got to 12 feet tall.
During the July 4th Holiday of 1975, the family took a trip to Estes Park Colorado. Which is the main access to Rocky Mountain National Park.
ON NO! WHAT HAPPENED?
While they were away, the growing palm tree was attacked! Some roaming vandals in town decided it would be a good idea to set fire to this wonderful palm tree.
Why Oh Why Does This Happen to Innocent Plants??
The family returned home. Shocked to find what remained was only a burned out char of a stump!
Pam talked to some neighbors about the incident. Their opinion was to dig out the burnt trunk debris. The family mulled over this thought.
For a few months Pam and her husband thought maybe they should dig it out. As it pretty much looked unsightly in their front yard. But she says they tend to procrastinate about getting some things done. That was the case here.
Their tarrying inaction was a good thing. As this Tucson palm tree wasn't finished.
LEADING TO RENEWAL!
Its palmy growth intent wasn't damaged. Their digging out deferral lasted for a few months. They suddenly noticed this seemingly ruined stump was coming alive! New shoots, freshly green, were coming out from the trunk's rubble.
FIRE & ICE COULDN'T STOP IT!
It was a happy day! This palm, despite fire & ice was determined to survive.
By 2006 it was still showing remnants of that fiery attack. Like a scar of war survival! But it overcame and continued on. Growing and providing for others.
As it grew further, birds began appreciating this Tucson palm tree's offerings. Local woodpeckers found it was a good home to begin their families. Other birds sometimes used the openings they created. Others also loved it, and the crown of fronds. Like sparrows, finches, humming birds and hooded orioles.
Pam's family has always left the fronds alone. Rather than taking away that natural look. They knew palm leaves provided homes for other wildlife. They noted it was a home for bees and also a place for nesting birds through the years.
Pam said another incident happened one year. A springtime wind storm came through. A sparrow nest was swept from the palm. Only one egg was intact. Pam's husband Roland found a small nest-size basket. Imitating a natural nest, he made a plushy lining with cotton.
He took their tallest ladder, propping it onto the trunk. Carefully he attached this recreated nest. They were amazed to see the sparrow parents discovered it, recognized their egg, and nurtured it. And the hatchling arrived!
Today this Washingtonia filifera palm (California Fan) has about nearly reached its maximum height. Despite early trials & tribulations!
What else it's had to contend with is drought. Over the years Pam says it's done well without irrigation. Just sourced needs from local groundwater. Plus summer monsoons & winter storms.
But more recently, with the serious Western Drought, Pam's been concerned. She prefers xeriscape planting style. This palm aligns with that, and so has done well. It's still going strong!
Pam says "Over the past fifty years, we've become very fond of it."
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