Yes.
These certain palm trees grow successfully in Seattle
1. Windmill Palm
2. the related "Waggie" or Miniature Chusan Palm
3. Mediterranean palm (both green and blue varieties)
4. Needle Palm
5. Chilean Wine Palm
6. the Pindo or "Jelly" palm
Seattle is in growing zone 8 (Maximum winter lows between 10°F and 20°F). The last time Seattle saw a single-digit Fahrenheit temperature was 9°F in the winter of 1990-91. The all-time record low is 0° in downtown Seattle on January 31, 1950, and even then near the water it was still 4° warmer.
Marginal palms grown with success in Seattle:
The summer in Seattle is perfect palm weather, because May through September is the dry season, with summer highs between 67° and 85°F.
Typically only one to five days in the 90s, and the all-time high is 103°F.
However, Sabal Palms in particular do not prefer the cool, dry, semi-arid summers and do better in much warmer temperatures.
Yes. heres a list that does grow in Portland, OR : 1. California Fan Palm 2. Mexican Fan Palm 3. sabal palm 4. windmill palm 5. european fan palm 6. queen palm 7. Washingtonia Filibusta
Yes, if you keep it inside :-)
If you plant them.
In this case, they really DO grow on trees. The pomegranate grows on a small shrub like tree.
technically its a bush but it really looks like a treeyes pomegranates grow on trees
Pomegranate trees are available at many shops that sell plants. It's easier to buy a small Pomegranate tree and transplant it but seeds are available in brick and mortar shops and on the internet. They only grow in hot climates and are drought resistant.
First of all NO trees have a gender making pomegranate trees the same.
does a pomegranate grow on a tree
Yes
anywhere with trees mostly found in mexico
The thorns are a deterrent to foragers, even me.
in a big furry bush lol
They grow on a deciduous shrub
from the end of summer beginning of fall
paper doesn't grow! the trees grow and we make the trees into paper! paper doesn't grow! the trees grow and we make the trees into paper!