Photo of the northwest corner entrance to Chicago's Portage Park showing palm trees brought in for the summer

While jogging around Portage Park this afternoon, I encountered something truly bizarre: palm trees. At the northwest and southwest entrances to the park there are giant planters with huge tropical palms.

I'm a big fan of palm trees. These plants are beautiful, graceful and elegant. Palms define California and the tropical and semitropical parts of the United States, and are a wonderful relief from winter when kept inside.

Tall Mexican fan palms reach into the sky next to Los Angeles Union StationThe skyscraping Mexican fan palms at Los Angeles Union Station really helped make my recent vacation special. Nothing tells you you're in California like a block of gently swaying palms.

But outside in Illinois?

Turns out that tropical plants make seasonal appearances all over Chicago. Down along North Michigan Avenue, the city plants palms, bird of paradise and lord knows what else. The effect is nice, but it's not Chicago and it's not the Midwest.

So why can't Chicago embrace native plants instead? In the fall, the Boul Mich planters are turned over to ornamental cabbage and kale -- which look really, really nice, a gentle reminder that cool weather is on its way.

But palms outside? On my jog back from Portage Park, I even saw a small Washingtonia filifera planted next to a bungalow. This palm, also known as the California fan palm, is among the few palms native to the United States. It still grows wild in parts of California and the Desert Southwest.

But unless this one's taken inside come winter, it'll die.

After doing a little research online, however, I'm amazed at just how hardy some palms are. Sabal minor palms can actually survive winters and snows as far north as Oklahoma City and Tulsa. Check out the info from Alligator Alley, which declares, "Our most recent endeavor is to bring the tropics to Oklahoma."

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Direct download: palmtrees.mp3
Category:Chicago -- posted at: 2:50 AM
Comments[1]

    Last year I did some digging into the palm tree planting for a future blog post on the subject. It seems that the park district use to use palms from the Garfield Park Conservatory but no longer does.

    There was a business man who I think had a hand in popularizing the planting of palm trees. He would sell palm trees to local businesses a few years ago.

    About five years ago I came across this guy online who had a palm tree in backyard that he successfully overwintered for a few years. He would protect it by wrapping in bubble wrap and mulching really high. He moved away a few years back and unfortunately his personal website, where he documented his experiment shut down not long after.

    While I like natives, they just aren\'t many that could replace palm trees and cannas and offer that summer spectacle that many gardeners and casual plant-lovers come to expect this time of year.

    posted by: Mr Brown Thumb on 2010-06-01 01:20:00

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I'm Leigh Hanlon, a writer and photographer in Chicago. Before moving to the Windy City, I worked at daily and weekly newspapers in Arizona, Colorado and Wyoming. (Photo by Marty Larkin)



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