New Member Says Hello
Last fall, I helped a friend remove banana plants from his backyard "plantation", and in return he gave me 3 of them to plant in my own yard. Each one was about 4.5 ft tall and he had already trimmed the leaves off. I took them home and put them in the biggest pots I had.
Unfortunately, we had damaged one while removing it, but we got a puppy a couple of months later, and that was the one she targeted. My girlfriend and I were surprised when the other two began growing new leaves. We had put them in regular potting soil, watered them every 2-3 days, kept them in the front room with the big south facing window, and had a space heater in there during the really cold winter months. We were even more thrilled when they both started growing little "sprouts". Eventually, the puppy got bored being home alone and began eating the new plants that had appeared. But they kept growing back! We tried our best to keep the puppy out of them, but she got bigger and circumvented our efforts a couple more times. But they kept growing back!!! Until the day before I was going to put them in the ground, she got a hold of them again and only one grew back. I planted them in the front yard for all the neighbors to enjoy. I just dug a couple of holes, put the plants and potting soil right into them and watered them once a day. The one with the pup that made it didn't grow as much as the other one. About a month ago, the other one finally produced 5 pups. Yesterday I removed the biggest pup from both plants and replanted in the front yard for the last push before bringing them in for the winter. I found this site, and read through the info before I attempted this on my own for the first time. I'm glad I found it, there seems to be a lot of info for me to look at this winter. I don't know what kind of banana trees they are, but my friend has been growing them for years in his back yard here in St. Louis, and we've eaten the bananas they have produced. They were small and had a "string" down the middle, but they were good! |
Re: New Member Says Hello
After reading through this site, I think the pup that survived was a water sucker. May be why that plant didn't grow as much. It's the one I replanted on the right.
|
Re: New Member Says Hello
Hello, Welcome, and Happy Growing.. :^)
|
Re: New Member Says Hello
Very nice plants, and welcome!
|
Re: New Member Says Hello
Lookin good, welcome.
|
Re: New Member Says Hello
I hear puppies can be turned into really good fertilizer...:nanadrink:
;) |
Re: New Member Says Hello
hello,i am 63 miles east of you,,dont u wish we had weather like the tropical zones? :)
the bananas just start flowering ,then we get winter,,blah!!! youll learn alot,,these are really smart folks.., see ya dee |
Re: New Member Says Hello
Hi d-lilly, nice to meet others from around the area.
I noticed on the map there were a few more on here from the city, and I hope to get a chance to meet them as well. I'm sure I'll have some questions in the future, and learning from those around the same region may be quite helpful. I'm interested in what kind of plants and growing technics you all use. I've been looking around the site, doing my homework, and keeping my fingers crossed for some more good weather. Hope to hear from you again soon. |
Re: New Member Says Hello
Quote:
Cheers from Aus.:bananas_b |
Re: New Member Says Hello
Welcome to the forums,where lots of people know lots of stuff!!!
I'll take an ice cold Fitz's please...... :nanadrink: |
Re: New Member Says Hello
Quote:
Fitz eh? You can have the Fitz, I'll drink the Budweiser. :nanadrink: |
Re: New Member Says Hello
Welcome, your bananas look 100% better than mine!! I live in Perth Western Australia and one of my banana plants has lost two of its leaves and has only one left! the other is still around 35cm tall. I am hoping they will grow during summer, although I may have to shade them. again Welcome and love your pics
|
All times are GMT -5. The time now is 11:56 PM. |
Powered by vBulletin Version 3.6.8,
Copyright ©2000 - 2024, Jelsoft Enterprises Limited.
All content © Bananas.org & the respective author.