March 2024 Newsletter

My Favorite Island Edition (or) Only a Dodo Wouldn’t Like Mauritius! This month’s issue features a trip to Mauritius Island, located in the Indian Ocean, where we find the world’s rarest palm, the only living individual of Hyophorbe amaricaulis. This issue also includes an article about the Black River Gorges National Park, International Palm Day […]

February 2024 Newsletter

Changes in Latitude Edition This month’s issue features part two of the Fairchild Tropical Botanic Garden, where our editor stumbled upon – and got lost in(!) – the South Florida Palm Society (SFPS) plant sale. Also included in this issue are a Save the Species update, upcoming travel with the IPS, and a highlight of […]

January 2024 Newsletter

Goin’ Back to Miami Edition This month’s issue features the Fairchild Tropical Botanical Garden. Soon to turn ninety, the FTBG is revered by the IPS, having hosted four of our first five biennials. Also included in this issue is an introduction to the Brazilian Palm Society – Sociedade Brasileira de Palmeiras (SBP), which was founded […]

December 2023 Newsletter

Have a Holly Palmy Christmas Edition In this month’s issue, you’ll find our annual look back at favorite palm pictures from the past year. Also included is an important update from Dr. Bill Baker about the 2023 Save the Species project. Learn what he has uncovered from his two-week reconnaissance mission to the Comoro Islands. […]

November 2023 Newsletter

Alms for Palms Edition Save the Species 2023 The historic Palm House at the Royal Botanical Gardens, Kew, a World Heritage Site, is regarded as the most significant surviving glasshouse from the 19th Century. It currently houses and displays several im-perilled palm species, including Ravenea moorei, which originates from the Comoro Islands. This elegant species is […]

[webinar recording] ‘The Glory of the Gardens’: Palms and the Making of Kew

Watch it again! The nineteenth-century fascination with palms finds its ultimate expression in the Palm House at Kew. Kate Teltscher explores the Victorian notion that palms were the noblest of all plants, far surpassing European vegetation in beauty, scale, abundance, and utility. Supplying every necessity of life and endless trading opportunities, palms signified a range […]

October 2023 Newsletter

Bermuda Shorts Edition Bermuda is a 35 million-year-old speck of volcanically created, coral-capped land out in the near middle of the Atlantic Ocean. Due to its small size, Bermuda’s ecosystem is potentially very fragile. There are strict measures in place to keep further plant material off the island. With that in mind, it was very […]

September 2023 Newsletter

Back-to-School Edition It’s back-to-school time at the newsletter desk, and here is your first quiz. This year’s guest invigilator is IPS Director Andrew Street, Curator of Palms at the Montgomery Botanical Center (MBC). REGISTER FOR NEW CALEDONIA Registration is now open for the International Palm Society’s 33rd Biennial in New Caledonia September 22-30, 2024. Enjoy […]

August 2023 Newsletter

London Calling Edition For the first time since 1997, the International Palm Society made an official visit to the historic Palm House on a glorious day at the Royal Botanic Gardens Kew (a UNESCO World Heritage Site). Our itinerary also included the Chelsea Flower Show, a visit to Martin Gibbons’ Palm Centre in Richmond, and […]