A shade loving, compact palm that has glossy green foliage and a cascading form. Ideal as a pot plant for indoors or shaded areas of the house or garden. Location – Grows best in fertile soil in full to part shaded areas of the garden. Can tolerate morning sun but avoid direct, late summer sun.The Cascade Palms are ideal for growing in containers and shady outdoor positions. Grow indoors in filtered bright light or outdoors in a partly shaded position in moist well drained soil, Keep soil moist.Excellent as an understory plant in tropical to sub tropical gardens where it will recieve filtered light. The root system does not seem to be invasive or extensive.The reason for a dying indoor palm tree is usually because of low humidity, dry soil and high temperatures which cause the leaves to turn brown with a drooping, dying appearance.You can't make most palm trees shorter, but you can slow an indoor palm plant's growth by creating conditions that crowd its roots. Instead of transplanting your palm into a larger container as it grows, leave it in the smaller container. If the roots don't have room to grow, the palm's growth will slow.Some thrive in full, direct sun, but others need shady garden spots for beauty and health. Too much harsh sun leaves palm fronds sunburned, much like human skin, but fronds typically don't recover. If you're overwatering it, the fronds often turn yellow. If you're not giving it enough water, the fronds tend to turn brown. If you notice the tips of the leaves look burnt, switch to filtered or distilled water, as the salt and chemicals in tap water, especially fluoride, can damage the cascade palm.
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