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View Full Version : Hello from Oregon


tattwo
03-26-2013, 11:05 AM
Hi all

Im new to the forum and look forward to getting started growing some bananas...plants anyway, fruit would be a bonus :nanadrink:

designshark
03-26-2013, 11:19 AM
I hear ya! Best of luck.

Abnshrek
03-26-2013, 04:03 PM
Hello, Welcome & Good Luck.. :^)

Illia
03-26-2013, 10:02 PM
Welcome! I live just north of you, it's nice to see more semi-local banana lovers around. Do you plan to or are you growing just ornamental hardy species, or are you one of the nutters like me out there who push the boundaries to grow edibles too? If you're just starting out, there's a lot of us online here that are quite helpful and educational on the many methods you can successfully get fruit up north, whether it be indoors or outdoors, and whether it be with this variety or that variety.

tattwo
03-26-2013, 10:11 PM
Welcome! I live just north of you, it's nice to see more semi-local banana lovers around. Do you plan to or are you growing just ornamental hardy species, or are you one of the nutters like me out there who push the boundaries to grow edibles too? If you're just starting out, there's a lot of us online here that are quite helpful and educational on the many methods you can successfully get fruit up north, whether it be indoors or outdoors, and whether it be with this variety or that variety.

I would like to try growing both. Edibles would be great. I'm prepping my beds now.

Thanks for your reply.

Illia
03-26-2013, 10:17 PM
I don't know how much research you've been doing, but I can already attest to Namwah being a pretty tough variety out here. (it was sold to me as an Ice Cream, but I'm pretty sure it is a tall Namwah based on others "Ice Cream" experiences) I had it in an unheated greenhouse, it froze more than a little heater could deal with, so I thought the whole thing was dead, gave up on it, through the winter it was frozen over and over in the 20's and I never did anything, then in the spring I dug it up, found out the corm was still alive, put it back in the ground, watered it daily, and what do ya know - It came back healthy as could be. If I'd only realized the stem alone survives the winters pretty well and with protection could come back to fruit the next year or the year after, I would've had fruit by now. (by protection I mean just simply wrapping the P-stem and keeping it out of the mid to low 20's)

Other cold hardy edibles are Orinoco, Rajapuri, and California Gold. The latter is rare and much more expensive, but, I'm going to try it out with great excitement this year. Some others are Praying Hands, Mysore, FHIA-1 (Goldfinger) FHIA-3, and others. They're all ones it takes more than a year to get fruit from though, except Cali Gold if well taken care of. Fruiters in less than a year are varieties like Veinte Cohol, but they require a little more heat for fruit in time and are not cold hardy.

Good ornamentals as you may know are the common Basjoo species and supposedly the new Mekong Giant. I've yet to try it but plan to.

Westwood
03-27-2013, 08:26 PM
Hi all

Im new to the forum and look forward to getting started growing some bananas...plants anyway, fruit would be a bonus :nanadrink:

Howdy Neighbor i have been doing edible bananas for 6 yrs now

If you need any help Let me know Tammy

Kelso
04-09-2013, 12:28 PM
I bought California Gold from this man last year and I still have one inside that is growing(the one outside is suspect).
He had a few other kinds too Basjoo, etc. He is located in Oregon City. Very nice man.
BANANA PLANTS (http://portland.craigslist.org/clc/grd/3723392970.html)



:woohoonaner: