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Off-Ramp

LA's love-hate relationship with the palm tree

About the Show

Over 11 years and 570 episodes, John Rabe and Team Off-Ramp scoured SoCal for the people, places, and ideas whose stories needed to be told, and the show became a love-letter to Los Angeles. Now, John is sharing selections from the Off-Ramp vault to help you explore this imperfect paradise.

Funding provided by:

Corporation for Public Broadcasting

Listen 10:19
LA's love-hate relationship with the palm tree


The palm
Is the bomb.
-- Frank McDonough, LA County Arboretum



LA's fine, the sun shines most the time,
And the feeling is laid back.
Palm trees grow, and rents are low,
But you know I keep thinkin' about
Making my way back.
-- Neil Diamond, "I Am ... I Said."

Recently, Kevin Roderick of LA Observed posted:



"This native Angeleno has finally seen one too many palm trees. Granted, it has been awhile since I have lived elsewhere. Maybe I'm overdue. But some palm trees are just out of place, and for those we're starting a photo series here I'll call Ridiculous Palm Trees."

Like this one, about which he writes, "The parking lots at Dodger Stadium have more ridiculous palm trees per square mile than just about anywhere in Los Angeles. They only stick out more when the lots are empty."

(Credit: Kevin Roderick)

And I have to grant Kevin's point that this tree isn't doing much for the parking lot. Maybe, as he told me, he's reached this palm tree tipping point because the drought is making not just the palms but the whole city look dried out.

Frank McDonough, a botanical information consultant and blogger at the LA County Arboretum & Botanic Garden, wasn't surprised by Kevin's change of heart. "I've never seen a plant about which people have been so ambivalent. People love 'em or hate 'em."

Palms are surprisingly perfect for Los Angeles. Most of them are immigrants, McDonough says, that came with the mission padres and the botanists who arrived with the orange boom, and they're photogenic. He says a palm tree is "very symmetrical, it has a column, I mean, it's just like Greek architecture."

Listen to my interview with McDonough and Roderick (who really does love many palms) for much more about the tree that, for better or worse, has become the emblem of Los Angeles.