Description
Sabal minor is a highly resilient, deeply cold-hardy fan palm that typically remains acaulescent, keeping its subterranean trunk safely buried below the soil line. The canopy consists of large, stiff, costapalmate leaves that are deeply divided into narrow segments, displaying a deep green to slightly glaucous blue-green coloration. Unlike many other palms, its petioles are completely smooth and devoid of any spines, teeth, or armor. As a monoecious species, it produces long, erect, heavily branched inflorescences that uniquely extend well above the foliage, yielding thousands of small, spherical fruits that ripen to a dark black.
Native to the southeastern United States, ranging from the coastal plains of Florida up to North Carolina and west into Texas and Oklahoma, this species naturally inhabits swamps, floodplains, and moist bottomland forests. Despite its affinity for wet native environments, it is remarkably adaptable in cultivation. It thrives in both full sun and deep shade, and easily tolerates a wide variety of soil types, including heavy, waterlogged clay. Landscapers heavily rely on it as a bulletproof, low-growing structural evergreen for temperate and subtropical gardens, especially in regions that experience severe winter freezes.

