Botanical Name: Washingtonia Filifera
Common Names: California Fan Palm
Alternate Botanical Names: Brahea Filifera and numerous othersVisual Characteristics: Elegance eminates from this queen of the desert. Mature specimins are often tall trees with gray green leaves or fronds, known to botany as Palmate. Their trunks are thick and resemble a column, which is an especially helpful diagnostic indicator when compared to Washingtonia Robusta, a close relative which becomes more slender toward the top. California Fan Palm trunks are also often surrounded by dead leaves, which remain in Marcescent manner, completely obscuring the bark beneath. These withered fronds can protect the plant in the event of fire, but in its absence, become inhabited by birds and invertibrates. The trees often occur naturally in oases throughout the desert regions, relicts of a more abundant past.
Native To 29 Palms: Yes
Native To Adjacent Regions: Yes
Native To Adjacent Regions: Yes
Occurance In Neighborhoods: Common
Occurance In Rural Areas: Common
Use by Indigenous Cultures: Tales abound wherein infructescences of small but sweet dates were harvested, processed, and stored for later use. They were also eaten fresh, or cooked. The leaves were dried and worked into materials for housing, storage, small tools and utincils. There are also accounts of cultivation within its endemic and adjacent ranges.
Use by Indigenous Cultures: Tales abound wherein infructescences of small but sweet dates were harvested, processed, and stored for later use. They were also eaten fresh, or cooked. The leaves were dried and worked into materials for housing, storage, small tools and utincils. There are also accounts of cultivation within its endemic and adjacent ranges.
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