Jey Tim , she is a gorgeous specimen, your property as well as being spacious is stunning, im slowly running out of apace to plant things, the good thing about the rain is the lush greeness that comes with it🤗🙏🌴🇺🇸♥️many Blessings looking forward to this season, Jose' 🌴 Jose's Tropical Garden 🌴🇺🇸♥️
If you want one with multiple trunks before it flowers, then check out the Yucca elata…. They are nearly the same as YR in appearance, and also cold hardy, I believe.
It will branch after it blooms to two trunks, and then when both trunks bloom, it will branch to four trunks. At least that has been my experience. One thing you might consider now is driving a 2-3” pipe about 1-2’ into the ground right beside the trunk and putting a cap on the pipe for now. As the plant gets taller and branches, it gets very too heavy - especially if you don’t trim off the old skirt. At some point in the future, you can remove the cap and insert a smaller metal pole or pipe to use as support for the tree. Mine made it to about 18’ OA height with four flower spikes before a hurricane brought it down about 12 years ago in Virginia. Definitely my favorite yucca , although here in the PNW, it is very much slower
Great looking Yuccas. I saw some here in Kentucky outside Churchill Downs in Louisville and decided to get one. I am growing one from seed and it's in it's second year and still super small. I just planted in the ground this Spring. How big were yours when you got them. I know it might take a few years for them to start looking like yours with a small trunk.
I bought a small one that was probably 4 or 5 years old when I bought it. That was probably about 8-10 years ago. It’s finally now starting to get a trunk. In New Jersey. So if I were to guess. Tim’s larger one is probably 25 years old or so. They are extremely slow growers, especially in colder climates
Nice landscape there
@@gggggggggg-ms8lm thank you. If only it would look like that year round.
Those yuccas are stunning. I wish I could find one here in Canada for my zone 6 Niagara Falls garden. I’ve never seen one for sale here.
I've only seen them for sale on Long Island. No where else. I do love them
Jey Tim , she is a gorgeous specimen, your property as well as being spacious is stunning, im slowly running out of apace to plant things, the good thing about the rain is the lush greeness that comes with it🤗🙏🌴🇺🇸♥️many Blessings looking forward to this season, Jose'
🌴 Jose's Tropical Garden 🌴🇺🇸♥️
I always feel like I am running out of space!!!! More rain tomorrow
Awesome, fantastic looking trunk on that
It's getting bigger...
If you want one with multiple trunks before it flowers, then check out the Yucca elata…. They are nearly the same as YR in appearance, and also cold hardy, I believe.
Thank you! I will look that one up and see if I can find one
It’s tall! Great video. What a view.
Thank you Paulo
It will branch after it blooms to two trunks, and then when both trunks bloom, it will branch to four trunks. At least that has been my experience. One thing you might consider now is driving a 2-3” pipe about 1-2’ into the ground right beside the trunk and putting a cap on the pipe for now. As the plant gets taller and branches, it gets very too heavy - especially if you don’t trim off the old skirt. At some point in the future, you can remove the cap and insert a smaller metal pole or pipe to use as support for the tree. Mine made it to about 18’ OA height with four flower spikes before a hurricane brought it down about 12 years ago in Virginia. Definitely my favorite yucca , although here in the PNW, it is very much slower
Thank you. That is great advice. And I'm sorry about losing it to the hurricaine. It's usually not the cold that does damage here, it's the wind.
Great looking Yuccas. I saw some here in Kentucky outside Churchill Downs in Louisville and decided to get one. I am growing one from seed and it's in it's second year and still super small. I just planted in the ground this Spring. How big were yours when you got them. I know it might take a few years for them to start looking like yours with a small trunk.
I bought a small one that was probably 4 or 5 years old when I bought it. That was probably about 8-10 years ago. It’s finally now starting to get a trunk. In New Jersey. So if I were to guess. Tim’s larger one is probably 25 years old or so. They are extremely slow growers, especially in colder climates
I think both were about 3 or 4 feet. They now seem to be growing really fast but it took a year or two
@@normanwilbert3848where in NJ did you get yours?