In flowersofindia.in its different. 

Palmyra palm is a native of tropical Africa but cultivated and naturalized 
throughout India. The palmyra palm is a large tree up to 30m high and the 
trunk may have a circumference of 1.7m at the base. There may be 25-40 
fresh leaves. Leaves are leathery, gray green, fan-shaped, 1-3 m wide, 
folded along the midrib; are divided to the center into 60-80 linear- 
lanceolate, 0.6-1.2 m long, marginally spiny segments. Their strong, 
stalks, 1-1.2 m long, are edged with hard spines. In India, it is planted 
as a windbreak on the plains. It is also used as a natural shelter by 
birds, bats and wild animals. The flowers are produced in big clusters of 
long, white string-like inflorences. The coconut-like fruits are 
three-sided when young, becoming rounded or more or less oval, 12-15 cm 
wide, and capped at the base with overlapping sepals. When the fruit is 
very young, this kernel is hollow, soft as jelly, and translucent like ice, 
and is accompanied by a watery liquid, sweetish and potable. The chief 
product of the palmyra is the sweet sap (toddy) obtained by tapping the tip 
of the inflorescence, as is done with the other sugar palms and, to a 
lesser extent, with the coconut. The toddy ferments naturally within a few 
hours after sunrise and is locally popular as a beverage. Rubbing the 
inside of the toddy-collecting receptacle with lime paste prevents 
fermentation, and thereafter the sap is referred to as sweet toddy, which 
yields concentrated or crude sugar (gur in India; jaggery in Ceylon); 
molasses, palm candy, and vinegar. Palmyra palm jaggery (gur) is much more 
nutritious than crude cane sugar. Traditionally, the Indian 'Nadar' 
community are the people who make their living from this tree using its 
wood, fruits, sap, stems, petioles and leaves to process a variety of food 
products, beverages, furniture, building materials, and handicrafts.

Raman

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