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View Full Version : Tall banana, any ideas what it is? (pictures)


meizzwang
10-19-2016, 04:12 PM
I frequently drive by this person's house and have been admiring their banana plant for a few years now. It finally bloomed and I had the guts to park in front of their house and snap a few pictures. Yes, most people would think I'm a robber, a weirdo, trying to collect on an insurance claim or something like that....what is the likelihood that I'm there just to admire their plant?

Last winter, most of the leaves on this plant got fried and turned brown when it hit 30F (unlike my american goldfinger, hehe). Now, why would I want to know what variety this is? Simple answer that many a musaphiles either have experienced or would do as well:I'm trying to determine whether or not to knock on their door with a pup of a different, proven variety in hand to work out a trade :)

Photos taken 10/18/16, looks a lot like the real Ice Cream, but that's really a wild guess. Unfortunately, these are the best pics I could get:
https://c3.staticflickr.com/6/5804/29804440754_086b458b8c_c.jpg

https://c6.staticflickr.com/6/5823/30349041021_695e26d453_c.jpg

This thing probably has 15' of p-stem on it:
https://c4.staticflickr.com/6/5685/30349038451_2c2d61a2fe_c.jpg

sputinc7
10-19-2016, 06:44 PM
It is tall...

edwmax
10-19-2016, 08:37 PM
That stalk is huge. My guess is that is a regular basjoo. Stop, introduce yourself and ask about the plant and getting a plup. .... There should be several at the base now it the mother is flowering/fruiting.

edwmax
10-19-2016, 08:38 PM
That stalk is huge. My guess is that is a regular basjoo. Stop, introduce yourself and ask about the plant and getting a plup. .... There should be several at the base now if the mother is flowering/fruiting.

sputinc7
10-19-2016, 11:42 PM
Basjoo, really? In zone 9b? I doubt that. There are so many edible varieties they could grow, why would they grow Basjoo?

Tytaylor77
10-20-2016, 12:45 AM
Flower is wrong for a basjoo. Looks like short fruits. Namwa maybe. I have no clue it's hard to tell from the pic. Nice looking plant. Man it sure is close to that house lol.

venturabananas
10-20-2016, 01:21 AM
If I was forced to guess, I'd say Musa balbisiana. Not edible.

Don't ask me why you'd grow a seeded variety in 9B, but plenty of people in So Cal do.

edwmax
10-20-2016, 07:10 AM
Meizzwand did say the leaves turn brown at 30 deg F. I don't think a basjoo would have done that. ... From the pic, those garage doors are about 8ft high. I say the pstem is close to 18 or 20 ft. Those leaves look to be 8 to 10 ft long. That plant is 25 to 30 ft tall. This is one huge banana or plantation.

meizzwang
11-07-2016, 06:52 PM
Okay, slightly different topic but same idea: there's another banana plant in bloom right now at a Thai Restaurant that we frequent, but this time I'd like to arrive at the restaurant with a potted, known variety in hand, order a full meal, give a nice tip, and then (provided this turns out to be a variety I don't already have) try to convince the owner to trade a pup. A year ago, this plant fruited, but someone stole the bananas before they could taste it because it fruits at a very low p-stem height. What a bummer! I'd give them a pup from my real ice cream so nobody can just reach up and grab the bunch....

Photos taken 11/5/16, can anyone ID it? Sorry, these are some crappy phone pics, it seems to be fruiting at 4-5' of p-stem, but there is another established plant (not shown) that's about 6' of p-stem:
https://c3.staticflickr.com/6/5547/30547627170_6846e3efd3_z.jpg

https://c3.staticflickr.com/6/5725/30732038402_eb9ece9547.jpg

https://c7.staticflickr.com/6/5574/30216551294_a06c00dec9.jpg

https://c1.staticflickr.com/6/5537/30732038192_d526501cde.jpg

https://c7.staticflickr.com/6/5795/30732038142_ccfde7a275.jpg

https://c7.staticflickr.com/6/5513/30216550814_909446cb14_z.jpg

venturabananas
11-07-2016, 08:09 PM
Meizzwand did say the leaves turn brown at 30 deg F. I don't think a basjoo would have done that. ...

Basjoo does that in Southern California. If frost forms on the leaves, they're toast.

venturabananas
11-07-2016, 08:11 PM
Photos taken 11/5/16, can anyone ID it?

Looks like an ABB variety (based on what appears to be closed petiole canals in the photos). The flower has a "Namwah" look to it. But it is very slender for a Dwarf Namwah and very short for any the taller varieties, but might just be a plant that isn't all that happy.

Tytaylor77
11-08-2016, 12:07 AM
Purple flowers female flowers and all green no red on bottom of the pstem or wine spots. It looks like a tall Orinoco in a not so great location. Could also be namwa. Picture of under the fingers next time your there could confirm. There would be purple where they connect.

edwmax
11-08-2016, 07:56 AM
Basjoo does that in Southern California. If frost forms on the leaves, they're toast.

It hadn't been long since I read that Basjoo could take frost down to 28 - 29 degrees and the leaves not burn. But I haven't been able to find any other collaboration of that fact. ... There is much miss information about banana plants on the internet. Anyway, I'm trying to work thought the info BS.

Thanks for the info.

meizzwang
11-08-2016, 02:00 PM
thanks guys, next time I go there I'll snap a better pic of the petiole canals to verify if they're open or closed and see if there's any red where the bananas attach to the stem. that would be a dead giveaway....

Does the red color persist even as the hands mature, or does it fade away like in the american goldfinger? In any case, I'll probably visit in a week or so, so stay tuned!

meizzwang
12-08-2016, 01:47 PM
Okay, finally got a chance to snap some more photos of this shorter bananas variety at the thai restaurant near my house. Petiole canals are as closed as can be. Is there a way to get a for sure positive ID yet? Photos taken 12/6/16:


Here's a shot of the petiole canals:
https://c3.staticflickr.com/1/288/31474390866_059d7e8160_c.jpg


It sorta has that red "namwah" coloration where the bananas are connected to the stem, but it's not well colored in like all the pictures I've seen online. nevertheless, I know environment plays a huge role on anthocyanin production, so whether the red color is well pronounced or not doesn't necessarily mean anything:
https://c3.staticflickr.com/1/602/31474391026_7caeb4dc5a_c.jpg

No idea what I was thinking when I took this shot:
https://c3.staticflickr.com/1/45/30671286034_1d02d7b298_c.jpg


One last picture of the fruits and inflorescence:
https://c1.staticflickr.com/1/418/30671285904_8481be7822_c.jpg

meizzwang
05-18-2017, 03:46 PM
So any verdict as to what type of banana this is? So far, we have either orinoco,really stunted regular namwah, or something namwah-like. There's another bunch fruiting at about 10' tall that's not pictured.

Okay, so crazy story, my wife and I went back to this thai restaurant last weekend and ordered a meal. I pre-empted her asking if she would be embarrassed if she saw me digging up one of the banana plants while everyone watched, and she didn't think I was serious (only you guys truly understand how serious we are about these sort of things). At the end of the meal, I went up to the owner (wife) and asked her if she would be interested in trading one of their bananas for an American Goldfinger. She at first said no, but I thought this one through way in advance and prepared for such rejection: my immediate response was, "well, I have this extra plant in my trunk, can I just give it to you?" Keep in mind, she has a business to run, who has time for this crazy customer with such a strange request?

She told me to hold on and went into the back of the kitchen, and out came the main chef (the husband). He asked me to take a look at the pup I brought him, and after he saw it as well as photos of the plant with fruit on it, he told me he'd love to trade! Turns out, the husband was the one growing the bananas! He then asked me how I was going to dig up a pup, they're difficult to get out. Well, I had brought a shovel and some potting soil...I even offered to plant the american goldfinger in place of the plant I was going to dig up, but the owner told me the restaurant is sadly going to turn into a condo pretty soon. He said he's going to move all the plants and plant them in their restaurants down south.

I tried to dig up one of their small plants, but the corm was planted so deep, I severed the p-stem and for the life of me couldn't find the corm! The chef dude told me I was making his wife nervous, but he then let me try to dig up a pup from the main plant. The soil was ROCK hard, no organic matter, and bone dry! I wasn't able to get any roots because of how rock hard the soil was, but got the corm fully in tact! In the end, the chef dude was happy and so was I, we chit chatted for a while and shook hands before parting.

On the drive home, I told my wife this was literally a dream come true, as I had been thinking about this ever since I made this post and had several dreams of successfully acquiring a corm....big mistake, LOL "So you dream about digging up bananas from a restaurant, but don't dream about how we got married?" Ouch....ummmm. so it was a sunny day today......

Here's me digging up the pup successfully, can anyone ID this plant now with that male flower?
https://c1.staticflickr.com/5/4184/33932415343_0e9dea15b7_c.jpg

My daughter helping fill up the hole with soil:
https://c1.staticflickr.com/5/4223/33932415113_e9fa3d9f40_c.jpg

https://c1.staticflickr.com/5/4171/34701282316_72ff64b100_c.jpg

venturabananas
05-19-2017, 09:27 AM
Well, with the clean rachis, it's not Dwarf Namwah. The appearance of the fruit makes me think it's a regular Namwah that has been poorly cared for and so is fruiting short and making small bunches.

sputinc7
05-19-2017, 01:54 PM
The only problem with that is that Namwah plants characteristically have a distinctive pink midrib, especially when young. (Mauve is more accurate, but most people don't know what that is.) Anyway, those leaves have a light green midrib so it is doubtful it is Namwah unless it is really sad.

Iowa
05-20-2017, 09:25 AM
Looks like Musa "Orinoco" to me. That's all I grow and that looks like my plants look. Being in zone 5 mine don't get that tall, but my brother in Arkansas had Orinoco's that tall.

venturabananas
05-20-2017, 09:31 AM
Looks like Musa "Orinoco" to me.

Fruit shape and color are wrong for Orinoco.

meizzwang
05-22-2017, 11:41 AM
The only problem with that is that Namwah plants characteristically have a distinctive pink midrib, especially when young. (Mauve is more accurate, but most people don't know what that is.) Anyway, those leaves have a light green midrib so it is doubtful it is Namwah unless it is really sad.

It seems that due to phenotypic variance within a clone, it's hard to use the production of anthocyanins or pigments to make a proper ID. For example, I have an Aeae that started heavily variegated when it was potted but after I put it in the ground, every new leaf got less and less variegated to the point where it was producing pure green leaves. I think this happened when the soil pH shot up because I fed the plant nothing but P and K to increase the solutes in the cells and therefore increase cold tolerance. It's also on a gravel bed that probably is slightly basic. However, after placing a top layer of acidic soil for rhododendrons on the root zone this spring, the first leaf to emerge from the Aeae is showing signs of variegation again.

meizzwang
08-08-2017, 01:15 PM
Okay, quick update on that "thai restaurant, most likely namwah" banana plant from the previous page of this thread. To recap, I traded an FHIA-1 American goldfinger for what is likely a namwah, and it was a dream come true. The corm I dug up had zero roots because the soil was rock hard, but with a lot of babying and weeks of warm weather, it's fully established! It was put into the ground this past weekend and it'll probably take off pretty soon.

Here's the plant before going into the ground. It had just started to get root bound and some roots had crept out of the pot and into the ground:
https://farm5.staticflickr.com/4422/36311193981_25f691efe0_c.jpg

After digging a hole, mixing in a lot of decomposed organic matter, topsoil and chicken manure, the plant has been put into its new permanent home. This site gets blazing sun from about 10am until sunset, pic taken 8/6/17:
https://farm5.staticflickr.com/4367/35613268524_c31c168f3f_c.jpg

kaczercat
03-31-2018, 10:17 PM
Is there an update on the dwarf namwah you planted? It looks like a sstrong healthy pup.

meizzwang
06-12-2018, 03:05 PM
Sorry for the late reply kaczercat, didn't see your request until yesterday. Took a shot of it, photo taken 6/11/18. This pic was taken after maybe 4-5 pretty big pups were taken out, and it definitely looks like a regular namwah, not dwarf:
https://farm1.staticflickr.com/883/27891838927_f4cf493d21_c.jpg