View Full Version : Patupi question
epfcg
08-02-2019, 02:36 PM
Does anyone have a taste/texture description of this banana?
Would it do well in zone 9b near San Francisco?
Akula
08-02-2019, 08:42 PM
I do not believe Patupi will do very well in your area. Not enough warm days between 75-90. I have a Patupi and he struggled until overnight temps were above 70F. Its my understanding that San Francisco's average highs during the summer are not over 70F not to mention the average lows.
You will need a heated greenhouse in San Franciso area in my opinion to grow a Patupi.
epfcg
08-02-2019, 11:12 PM
It gets hotter where I live since i'm near SF but not quite. Summer to fall days are 80-90 for the most part, low 70s at night. Probably still not hot enough though.
cincinnana
08-05-2019, 06:37 PM
Does anyone have a taste/texture description of this banana?
Would it do well in zone 9b near San Francisco?
Here is the fast answer to the question to a new members fishing about this plant..
Everyone whom has purchased this plant is disappointed.
This plant grows best in zones 12 on up.
The people who purchased this plant were ripped off by the seller....fruit what fruit..LOL
Save your money ...this plant needs heat and 12 months of tropical weather to to hit the money.
Other members will chime in who grow plants in a similar zone as yours that fruit in a few years after planting.
Skip the plant for now..
I tried the plant for 2 seasons....great looking foliage and pups but no indication of moving forward.
Just my musa op.
bananimal
08-05-2019, 07:35 PM
I once had a Patupi mat. After a couple of years it up and went patooee!!!.. Here in Port St Lucie I'm not tropical enough. However with global warming I might try to grow it out again!? lol
PR-Giants
08-06-2019, 08:22 PM
We've been growing them for four years in North Florida 9a/8b and they die back every winter and pop back up when the weather warms. They grow well and usually start to flower in July and start harvesting in August. Patupi is a nice banana but there are better tasting bananas with even shorter cycle times.
Save your money ...Skip the plant for now..
PR-Giants
08-11-2019, 12:34 PM
The real advantage of growing short cycles for some hobbyist is that they can be planted in the spring and harvested a few months later if you start with a larger plant instead of using a starter plant. For zones 4 & 5 it's much easier to ship in plants of the proper size than putting them through the stress of over wintering. I mail short cycles to family and friends that are properly sized for the same cost as shipping smaller plants. There are also nurseries that have the proper size available for retail customers. Growing short cycles is really a matter of understanding what they can do and how to use it.
Harvesting bananas up in the snow belt is cool.:08::waving:
Short Cycles bananas have a short fruiting phase, typically between 3 to 7 weeks in proper growing conditions.
Variegated Florida – 3 Weeks
Patupi – 5 weeks
Veinte Cohol – 6 weeks
For single season Plant & Harvest in zones 4 & 5 the plant size should be similar to the photos below.
Variegated Florida
http://www.bananas.org/gallery/watermark.php?file=57131 (http://www.bananas.org/gallery/showphoto.php?photo=57131)
Veinte Cohol
http://www.bananas.org/gallery/watermark.php?file=53189 (http://www.bananas.org/gallery/showphoto.php?photo=53189)
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