SKU: 41469765537
queen palm plant

queen palm plant Buy Queen Palm Phoenix, AZ | Syagrus romanzoffiana

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Description

queen palm plant Buy Queen Palm Phoenix, AZ | Syagrus romanzoffianaElegant Tropical Shade for Phoenix Yards Queen Palm The Queen Palm (Syagrus romanzoffiana) is one of the most graceful and fast growing palms available for Phoenix area landscapes. With long, feathery fronds that arch elegantly from a smooth gray trunk, Queen Palms deliver instant tropical curb appeal to any property. They grow quickly to 3040 feet tall, creating welcome filtered shade in the hottest months. Whether you're framing a Scottsdale

Elegant Tropical Shade for Phoenix Yards — Queen Palm

The Queen Palm (Syagrus romanzoffiana) is one of the most graceful and fast-growing palms available for Phoenix-area landscapes. With long, feathery fronds that arch elegantly from a smooth gray trunk, Queen Palms deliver instant tropical curb appeal to any property. They grow quickly to 30–40 feet tall, creating welcome filtered shade in the hottest months. Whether you're framing a Scottsdale driveway, lining a Chandler pool deck, or adding vertical drama to a Gilbert backyard — the Queen Palm is one of the most popular choices for Valley homeowners and landscape designers alike.

Queen Palm Plant Details

Attribute Detail
Scientific Name Syagrus romanzoffiana
Common Names Queen Palm, Cocos Palm
Mature Height 30–40 feet
Mature Width 15–20 feet (canopy spread)
Growth Rate Fast — 3–6 feet per year in Phoenix
Sun Full sun (6+ hrs). Handles reflected heat from walls and pavement.
Water Moderate. More water than most desert palms, but manageable on drip.
USDA Zones 9b–11 (Phoenix is Zone 9b–10a)
Soil Well-draining preferred. Adapts to Arizona caliche soils with proper planting.
Foliage Evergreen — lush feathery fronds year-round
Fruit Produces small orange date-like clusters in summer

Queen Palm Uses in Phoenix Landscapes

Driveway & Entry Framing

Queen Palms are a top pick for framing driveways and front entries across Scottsdale, Mesa, and Tempe. Their tall, slender trunks and arching canopies create a stately, resort-style welcome. Plant a pair flanking the driveway entrance or line both sides at 12–15 foot intervals for a dramatic allée effect.

Pool & Patio Shade

The Queen Palm's high canopy provides dappled shade without blocking airflow — ideal for poolside comfort in Chandler and Gilbert yards. Fronds are large but don't create excessive litter compared to many broadleaf trees. Pair with low-growing Desert Spoon or Yellow Bells at the base for a layered tropical look.

Streetscape & HOA-Friendly Plantings

Many Phoenix-area HOAs approve Queen Palms for front yards because of their clean, upright form and tropical aesthetic. They work beautifully in median strips, along property lines, and in shared community spaces throughout Peoria, Glendale, and Surprise.

Best Time to Plant Queen Palm in Phoenix

Fall (October–November) is the ideal planting window for Queen Palms in Phoenix. Warm soil promotes fast root establishment while cooler air temperatures reduce transplant stress. The palm gets 6–8 months of root growth before its first full Phoenix summer. Spring (February–April) is the second-best window. Avoid planting in June–August if possible — extreme heat puts extra stress on newly transplanted palms.

How to Plant Queen Palm

  1. Dig wide, not deep — excavate a hole 2–3x the width of the root ball, same depth. Queen Palms don't like being planted too deep.
  2. Check for caliche — break through any hardpan layer to ensure good drainage. Standing water around the root ball will cause root rot.
  3. Backfill with native soil — a light 20% organic amendment is fine, but avoid heavy compost mixes.
  4. Spacing — plant 12–15 feet apart for a grouped planting; 20+ feet for individual specimens.
  5. Water basin — build a 3–4 inch soil ring around the root zone to direct water where it's needed.
  6. Mulch — apply 2–3 inches of bark or gravel mulch to retain moisture and regulate soil temperature.

Watering Queen Palm in Phoenix

First Year Watering Schedule

Queen Palms need consistent moisture during their first year. Water deeply:

  • Weeks 1–2: Every 1–2 days, deep and slow (30–45 min drip cycle)
  • Months 1–2: Every 3–4 days
  • Months 3–6: Every 5–7 days (every 3–4 days during peak summer heat)
  • After Year 1: Every 7–10 days in summer; every 2–3 weeks in winter

Drip Irrigation

Place 2–3 emitters (2 GPH each) in a ring 18–24 inches from the trunk. As the palm matures, move emitters outward to the drip line. Established Queen Palms are moderate water users — not as drought-tolerant as Mexican Fan Palms, but very manageable on a standard drip system.

How fast does Queen Palm grow in Phoenix?
Queen Palms are one of the fastest-growing palms for the Phoenix Valley, adding 3–6 feet of height per year with regular watering. Most homeowners see their palm reach 20+ feet within 4–5 years of planting a 15-gallon size.

Is Queen Palm drought tolerant?
Queen Palms are moderately drought tolerant once established — more water-dependent than Mexican Fan Palms or Mediterranean Fan Palms, but far less thirsty than most tropical trees. On a well-designed drip system, they perform beautifully in the Phoenix climate.

What's the difference between Queen Palm and Pygmy Date Palm?
Queen Palms grow to 30–40 feet and serve as full-size landscape trees, while Pygmy Date Palms max out at 8–10 feet and work best as patio or accent plants. Both are feather palms with an elegant look, but Queen Palms provide much more shade and vertical impact.

Do Queen Palms survive Phoenix summers?
Yes. Queen Palms handle Phoenix summers well as long as they receive regular deep watering. They tolerate reflected heat from walls and pavement and rarely show heat stress when properly irrigated.

Do Queen Palms drop fruit?
Yes — Queen Palms produce small orange fruit clusters in summer. The fruit is not harmful but can create litter on patios and pool decks. Regular cleanup or planting away from high-traffic hardscapes keeps this manageable.

You May Also Like

  • Pygmy Date Palm — a compact feather palm for patios and small spaces, growing just 8–10 feet tall.
  • Mexican Fan Palm — a towering, drought-tough fan palm that reaches 50–70 feet with minimal water.
  • Mediterranean Fan Palm — a slow-growing multi-trunk palm with distinctive fan-shaped fronds, perfect for desert modern landscapes.
  • Pineapple Palm — a showstopper with a unique crown shaft that resembles a pineapple, excellent for entryways.

How Many Queen Palms Do I Need?

Queen Palm is a tall feather palm with a 15 to 20 foot canopy, so it is placed as a specimen, grove, or allee rather than a hedge. Use these layouts:

  • Single specimen: one palm as vertical drama in a lawn or bed, set 20 feet or more from the house and other big trees so the crown spreads freely.
  • Symmetrical pair: flank a driveway or entry with two palms roughly 12 to 15 feet apart.
  • Allee or grove: line a drive or property edge 12 to 15 feet on center for a resort colonnade, staggering heights in informal groves of 3 to 5.

Keep the trunk 8 to 10 feet off pool decks and patios so the summer fruit clusters and frond drop land on planting beds, not paving.

Queen Palm Season-by-Season in Phoenix

  • Spring (Feb–Apr): a strong flush of new fronds and rapid height gain begin as soil warms; a good second planting window.
  • Summer (May–Sep): the fastest growth of the year, with good heat and reflected-heat tolerance as long as deep water is steady. Orange fruit clusters ripen, and monsoon rain is a bonus. This palm wants more water than desert natives through the heat.
  • Fall (Oct–Nov): the prime low-desert planting season; maximizes root growth before summer while the lush crown holds.
  • Winter (Dec–Jan): evergreen but frost-tender, with frond burn possible below about 25 to 28°F. Most Valley winters are fine, but cover young palms on hard-freeze nights and expect established palms to push out fresh fronds in spring after a cold snap.

At a Glance

✔ Heat-Loving (Reflected-Heat Tolerant)   ✔ Evergreen   ✔ Shade-Providing   ✔ Low-Maintenance

Plant It With

  • Mexican Fan Palm: a taller, more drought-tough palm for a layered skyline behind the Queen.
  • Pygmy Date Palm: a compact feather palm that echoes the form at ground level.
  • Mediterranean Fan Palm: a low multi-trunk fan palm that contrasts the single smooth trunk.
  • Desert Spoon: a silver, low-water understory accent for the base of the palm.

Is Queen Palm Right for Your Yard?

Queen Palm thrives in full Phoenix sun and reflected heat, grows fast for quick tropical height, and stays manageable on a standard drip system. It is not a fit if you want a low-water, plant-and-forget palm or a hard-freeze-proof one: it wants more water than desert-native palms, drops fruit that litters poolside paving, and can show frond burn in a hard Valley freeze.

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4.8 ★★★★★
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Tyler Backus
Natrona Heights, US
★★★★★ 1
Out of date and just plain not good instruction
Format: Kindle
This has problems that I have seen from many non-educators when they write an instructional book (so I hope she is not an actual educator). The book makes leaps of faith of knowledge and has a belief that they have shown you well enough to do one thing (which it doesn't) and that you can extrapulate from that knowledge to do something completely different. They makes these leaps of faith in the first couple hours, when people are just getting used to coding in this language. This book also fails to even tell you what different parts of the code are doing, so that you can make those leaps of knowledge. I also find this happens a lot when people write coding books. They know how to code, so they figure if they just show you parts of a code you will figure out why it did what it did, instead of explaining to you what different parts of code actually do when you put them together. I made it almost through hour two before I gave up trying to decipher all the nonsense that was written in this book. In hour two they have you make a sphere, but never actually show you how to make the sphere, but then start telling you how to create dialog for the sphere. Apparently in hour 1, even though it was never explained, I was supposed to understand how to make a lava field with objects.
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Reviewed in the United States on May 11, 2024
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Josh D
Phoenix, US
★★★★★ 5
Must-read book for everyone (not just Ai proponents)
Format: Paperback
I realize I say this about every AI book I read, but this one really is the best (so far), and most important in my view."Atlas of AI" by Kate Crawford is a well-researched work that should appeal to AI enthusiasts and opponents alike; not because it flatters either side, but because it challenges both to think beyond the usual narratives. Whether you see Ai as a revolutionary tool for progress or a dystopian force of unchecked power, there’s no denying that it it is shaped by real-world systems of labor, industry, and politics.This book makes it clear: Ai is not just about algorithms and efficiency. It is about power: who wields it, who profits from it, and who is left to bear its costs. For those who celebrate Ai’s potential (like me), Atlas of AI offers a sobering look at the material and ethical realities behind the inertia and hype.For those who critique AI as a damaging or dystopian force, the book provides a well-researched (eye-opening) foundation for those concerns.What makes it especially compelling is that it doesn’t fall into the trap of alarmism OR blind optimism. Instead, Crawford takes us on a deep, methodical journey through the infrastructures that sustain artificial intelligence, revealing the hidden costs (labor, environmental, political) that come with EVERY so-called innovation.**Deconstructing the Myths of AI**One of the book’s greatest strengths is its ability to cut through the persistent myths surrounding artificial intelligence. Crawford systematically dismantles the notion that AI is a purely immaterial, frictionless technology. She examines the vast mining operations necessary to produce hardware, the exploitative labor practices behind data annotation, and the enormous energy demands of AI training model. Ai, in her analysis, is not an autonomous or inevitable force—it is an industrial system deeply intertwined with capitalism, surveillance, and environmental degradation (much of her research applies to Big Tech, and not just Ai). This perspective is crucial in an era where Ai is often presented as a revolutionary technology that exists outside of history and politics.Crawford makes it clear that Ai is not “just math” but a political tool wielded by those in power, often reinforcing existing inequalities. The Ethics of Extraction and Control: One of Crawford's most compelling arguments is the framing of AI as an extractive industry: one that harvests resources, labor, and data in much the same way as colonial enterprises have in the past.The book traces how Ai development is dependent on resource-intensive practices, from lithium mining for hardware to the invisible armies of low-wage workers tasked with cleaning and labeling data. Crawford argues Ai is a system built on the extraction of value from the most vulnerable populations, whether they be gig workers, Amazon's "Mechanical Turk" laborers, or the communities living in the shadow of server farms that consume enormous amounts of water and energy.Crawfors cites numerous examples of how corporations like Google and Amazon, and even the government, skirt the system to save on taxes, while promising better futures to the resource-rich communities they exploit. The theme of extraction extends beyond the physical to the digital realm.Crawford shows how personal data is commodified under the guise of “training AI,” reinforcing the asymmetrical relationship between those who generate data and those who profit from it.The book’s critique aligns with broader concerns about surveillance capitalism, demonstrating how Ai is often wielded as a means of control rather than liberation. (I learned some sad truths about local community policing and Ai) AI and the Politics of Classification Crawford explores how classification systems, often presented as objective/neutral, are deeply embedded with biases. Ai systems are trained on datasets shaped by human prejudices, yet are frequently deployed as infallible arbiters of truth. Crawford examines how facial recognition, predictive policing, and automated hiring systems encode and reinforce racial, gendered, and socioeconomic biases, often amplifying systemic discrimination. This analysis is particularly relevant in today’s discussions on AI ethics. Crawford’s work underscores that Ai bias is not simply a technical glitch to be fixed, but rather a feature of the broader political and economic structures that Ai is designed to serve. A Necessary and Timely Intervention For those who have followed debates on Ai ethics, surveillance capitalism, and data justice, Atlas of AI provides a well-researched and compelling synthesis of these concerns, free from the noise we commonly hear on social media outlets. It is particularly valuable in challenging the mainstream, corporate-driven narratives that portray Ai as an inevitable and benign technological force. Crawford’s writing is insightful, well-documented, and accessible, making complex ideas understandable without sacrificing depth. While the book is critical in tone, it does not merely scold Ai developers; rather, it offers a crucial intervention in ongoing discussions about how Ai is developed, deployed, and governed.The book had a surprisingly anti-capitalist/anti-technocratic tone, that inspired me to continue learning/aligning under the anti-fascist flag so many of us wield. For artists, researchers, and technologists (especially those working at the intersection of Ai and creative expression) Atlas of Ai serves as a stark and vital reminder that technology is never neutral. It invites us to think critically about the systems we engage with and the ethical implications of our participation in Ai-driven ecosystems (and really, all major technologies). Atlas of AI is an essential read for anyone interested in understanding the broader implications of artificial intelligence beyond the hype. It moves beyond discussions of algorithms and model accuracy to examine the power structures that shape Ai’s impact on society. By reframing AI as a material and political phenomenon rather than a disembodied technological marvel, Crawford provides a necessary course-correction to the dominant narratives surrounding Ai. This book is not just for AI skeptics but for anyone who wants to engage in a deeper, more nuanced conversation about the technology shaping our present and future. If we are to meaningfully confront the challenges AI presents, we need more books that challenge us to think critically, demand accountability, and advocate for more just and equitable technological futures. For those of us who engage with AI,whether as artists, researchers, developers, or critics, Atlas of AI should serve as a wake-up call. Too often, Ai artists defend the technology out of pride or personal investment, dismissing valid ethical concerns as fear-mongering. On the other side, anti-AI voices often resist engagement with nuance, preferring to frame Ai as an existential threat rather than a tool shaped by human systems of power. Both of these stances miss the point. Crawford makes it clear that the real battle isn’t Ai vs. artists or progress vs. tradition, it’s about who controls the technology, who benefits from it, and who is left to suffer the consequences. If we are serious about the future of art, technology, and creative autonomy, we must move beyond our egos and engage critically with the systems that shape Ai. This book gives us all a foundation to unify under, not in opposition to Ai itself, but in opposition to the unchecked power structures that exploit it and us.
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Reviewed in the United States on February 6, 2025
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Jeff Jenner
Fort Morgan, US
★★★★★ 5
I wish Americans could read Kate Crawford’s book
Format: Kindle
It is a sad bit of irony that the “information revolution” has created a society in which the vast majority of Americans don’t know where their food or water come from. “I don’t get all this talk about drought. You just turn on the faucet and get all the water you want.” It’s no wonder that we’ve created an entire generation of Americans who have no idea where their computing resources come from. “I don’t get all this ‘cost of AI’ talk. ChatGPT is free. Just open your iphone and it will answer any question you have.” While Crawford’s Atlas of AI is a bit sesquipedalian, it is a comprehensive, well-organized, impeccably researched story of where all our miraculous computing power actually comes from. For all the Doomer talk of AI someday making humans extinct, Crawford shows that the way the most powerful American corporations are implementing AI is ALREADY causing vast harm to humans globally, and it will only continue to get worse. Not from some mythical science fiction robot suddenly becoming smarter than people, but from mass ignorance of the slow but steady human-driven global natural resource depletion and exploitation of the most vulnerable people. It’s doubly sad that our polarized culture war politics prevents most Americans from asking the critical questions that Crawford explores in her journey through the landscape of AI creation and production. This book is neither Marxist nor anti-capitalist. It simply argues that, just like there are better ways of managing our water and food resources, there is a better way to manage our computing resources—the first step being a common understanding that there is a natural resource and human cost to every floating point operation that a computer performs. I wish that Americans were able to read, understand, and appreciate such an important analysis of the biggest problem that will confront humans in the next few decades.
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Reviewed in the United States on December 3, 2025
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Thomas
Grantham, US
★★★★★ 4
Removing data from databases or datasets.
Format: Kindle
If the share a video or photo option was working I would share the screenshot. However, I'll quote it. "Most of the adults on the list had never been charged, but once they were included, ther was no way to have their name removed." This needs more clarification as you can delete data from a database. Especially if web based, there should be CRUD principles added. If that was not the case there's still ways to delete the data or even change it's classification. I will give benefit of the doubt that there's an underlying reason it was said there was no way to remove or that I even misunderstood the context around it. Just seems a little like reaching by this point. Also, I do like this book and a fresh perspective on data collection even though at times it seems to read a little emotional for what I was expecting of an Atlas. Regardless looking past the verbiage of emotions, this is a great book that does point out a lot of history with AI. Thank you for creating this book! Also giving more data to the internet to be used for.... AI... lol
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Reviewed in the United States on November 27, 2024
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Verified Purchase
Ckalba22
Waukegan, US
★★★★★ 5
A must read for ALL world citizens A must read again!!
Format: Paperback
Fabulous book. Wide ranging, every page full of information that ALL modern citizens should already know or should learn as we go to green technologies and even more dependence on AI and computers. These techs look 'all clean' and 'socially fair' when in fact at every stage (she takes us from design, to engineering to mining, to sales to production of techs) in this 'atlas' of AI we see pollution, inequality, power relationships hidden just beneath the surface. The tip of the AI/computer/green tech iceberg looks all white and clean........the rest (the filth, pollution and inequaity) are all hidden away. Just a tremendous book and not too hard to read. This book should be required reading for all college students, whatever their field!
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Reviewed in the United States on August 16, 2023

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