Like all date palms, their smallest representative, the dwarf date palm, produces fruit. However, the palm tree, which is not very easy to care for, needs ideal conditions that cannot be created indoors. The fruits of the dwarf date palm would only be ornamental anyway, since they are not edible.

The fruits of the dwarf date palm are not edible

This is what the fruits of the dwarf date palm look like

In its homeland in Southeast Asia, the flowers of the dwarf date palm develop small fruits that are significantly smaller than those of other date palm species.

They are initially green and later turn purple-brown. The fruits are up to 18 millimeters long and up to 7 millimeters thick.

Therefore the fruits are not edible

The fruit of the dwarf date palm is not edible. The taste is so tart that it is not a pleasure.

When kept in the room or in the garden in European regions, the only partially hardy dwarf date palm hardly ever bears fruit anyway, simply because the conditions here are not ideal.

If you manage to get a dwarf date palm to bloom, with a bit of luck you can harvest fruit later. They contain seeds that you can use to propagate the dwarf date palm.

How to get the fruit of the dwarf date palm

If you want to get a dwarf date palm to flower and later bear fruit, you need to create the natural environmental conditions:

  • lots of light, likes sunny
  • additional plant lights in winter
  • enough heat
  • high humidity

Dwarf date palms need high temperatures in summer and lots of light in winter. If you have a conservatory that you can heat and equip with plant lights, you may be able to get the palm tree to flower and later bear fruit. In addition, you must significantly increase the humidity by regularly misting the dwarf date palm with water.

However, you have to do the pollination yourself. For this you need a brush and, if possible, several flowering dwarf date palms. The flowers are painted several times with the brush.

tips

The best way to propagate the dwarf date palm is through saplings that sprout directly from the trunk. They are removed with a sharp knife. They root in potting soil that is made up of a mixture of compost soil and sand.

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