Bananas.org

Welcome to the Bananas.org forums.

You're currently viewing our message boards as a guest which gives you limited access to participate in discussions and access our other features such as our wiki and photo gallery. By joining our community, you'll have access to post topics, communicate privately with other members (PM), respond to polls, upload photos, and access many other special features. Registration is fast and simple, so please join our community today!

If you have any problems with the registration process or your account login, please contact us.

Go Back   Bananas.org > Banana Forum > Cold Hardy Bananas
Register Photo Gallery Classifieds Wiki Chat Map Today's Posts

Cold Hardy Bananas This forum is dedicated to the discussion of bananas that are able to grow and thrive in cold areas. You'll find lots of tips and discussions about keeping your bananas over the winter.


Members currently in the chatroom: 0
The most chatters online in one day was 17, 09-06-2009.
No one is currently using the chat.

Reply   Email this Page Email this Page
 
LinkBack Thread Tools
Old 10-10-2012, 11:52 AM   #21 (permalink)
 
beachbum's Avatar
 
Join Date: Oct 2012
Posts: 1
BananaBucks : 298
Feedback: 0 / 0%
Said "Thanks" 0 Times
Was Thanked 0 Times in 0 Posts
Said "Welcome to Bananas" 0 Times
Default Re: Northern Growers - Bananas you can eat!

I'm about to winterize my banana plants for the first time and I'm wondering if anyone has ever used pipe insulation to wrap theirs? I was thinking of using that along with a cage filled with leaves and straw then covering it so rain doesn't soak it. Any feedback?
__________________
**Beachbum**
beachbum is offline   Reply With Quote Send A Private Message To beachbum
Old 11-30-2012, 02:00 AM   #22 (permalink)
 
Illia's Avatar
 
Location: Forks, WA
Zone: 8b
Name: Illia Chavez
Join Date: May 2011
Posts: 418
BananaBucks : 14,856
Feedback: 2 / 100%
Said "Thanks" 243 Times
Was Thanked 311 Times in 202 Posts
Said "Welcome to Bananas" 117 Times
Default Re: Northern Growers - Bananas you can eat!

Just throwing some helpful info out there to other northern growers, I'm way up here in Washington state, pretty darn far north, (not super cold, but we do freeze and we NEVER get hot in the summer) - And so far, my biggest endorsement goes to Namwah bananas. Now remember, if you're buying a "Blue Java" or "IceCream" banana from a Nursery there's a good chance it is actually a Namwah. I've got some that for their first year grew several feet tall, then winter hit down to the 20's and I honestly didn't protect them very well, but, their P-Stem still survives low 30's pretty well. The main root, though, survives the 20's without much protection, and after I thought my bananas died that winter, I watered them the following spring anyway, and what do ya know - I've got new nanners that popped up just this last summer. No fruit yet, but, to do that I'd have to protect the entire P-Stem and let it grow for more than 10 total months.

Also to note, this is my first year in trying Thousand Fingers and Raja Puri and both, although really small and young, survived a good freeze. Their leaves died back, but after potting them up and moving them indoors for the winter, they're starting to grow new leaves from the stem. Even my Double somehow survived the freeze, which really surprised me. It's stem is less than a foot tall, and amazingly has a new leaf coming up.
Illia is offline   Reply With Quote Send A Private Message To Illia
Said thanks:
Old 12-01-2012, 02:13 PM   #23 (permalink)
 
blownz281's Avatar
 
Location: Coastal NC
Zone: 8b coastal
Join Date: Dec 2008
Posts: 1,373
BananaBucks : 350,222
Feedback: 6 / 100%
Said "Thanks" 440 Times
Was Thanked 756 Times in 534 Posts
Said "Welcome to Bananas" 14 Times
Default Re: Northern Growers - Bananas you can eat!

I'm in NC zone coastal 8b and this is my first time wintering Namwah outside. I put a chicken wire cage design around it. Mulched several feet deep around it. Then I plan to wrap it with plastic. The leaves didn't fry till we got are first lowest time this year yet 28*. Its five foot tall and 12" or more thick. I have seen a dozen or more Orinoco throwing fruit here in the past years since I got into Bananas.
blownz281 is offline   Reply With Quote Send A Private Message To blownz281
Old 12-13-2012, 03:03 PM   #24 (permalink)
Junior Member
 
Join Date: Jan 2007
Posts: 6
BananaBucks : 3,659
Feedback: 0 / 0%
Said "Thanks" 5 Times
Was Thanked 0 Times in 0 Posts
Said "Welcome to Bananas" 0 Times
Default Re: Northern Growers - Bananas you can eat!

If you cut the Saba before frost and place the stalk indoors in a bucket of water won't the fruit continue to ripen that way. I read this for another variety on a growers page.
ChineseBanana is offline   Reply With Quote Send A Private Message To ChineseBanana
Old 12-13-2012, 03:10 PM   #25 (permalink)
Moderator

 
Gabe15's Avatar
 
Location: Oahu, Hawaii
Zone: 12
Name: Gabe
Join Date: Jul 2005
Posts: 3,892
BananaBucks : 13,339,785
Feedback: 5 / 100%
Said "Thanks" 1 Times
Was Thanked 8,237 Times in 2,200 Posts
Said "Welcome to Bananas" 8 Times
Default Re: Northern Growers - Bananas you can eat!

Quote:
Originally Posted by ChineseBanana View Post
If you cut the Saba before frost and place the stalk indoors in a bucket of water won't the fruit continue to ripen that way. I read this for another variety on a growers page.
The fruit would most likely ripen and turn out just fine, but I highly doubt leaving it attached and putting it in a bucket of water is really doing anything significant.

Banana fruit will ripen at almost any point of maturity when harvested, even if they are significantly underdeveloped. If harvested under-mature, they normally take longer to ripen, and sometimes may not have as much flavor, but they will ripen.
__________________
Growing bananas in Colorado, Washington, Hawaii since 2004. Commercial banana farmer, 200+ varieties.
Gabe15 is offline   Reply With Quote Send A Private Message To Gabe15
Reply   Email this Page Email this Page






Currently Active Users Viewing This Thread: 1 (0 members and 1 guests)
 


Similar Threads
Thread Thread Starter Forum Replies Last Post
Northern Growers: How are you getting on this winter? 51st state Main Banana Discussion 29 12-16-2012 05:43 PM
Bananas for european growers guidoiltreno Main Banana Discussion 1 01-15-2010 09:28 AM
Eat the forrest Arbonaut Member Introductions 1 05-11-2009 03:31 PM
How do you eat your corn on the cob? momoese Tiki Hut 21 10-22-2007 09:19 PM
Bananas to see in northern Florida? gregsmith Member Introductions 2 07-14-2006 10:17 PM


All times are GMT -5. The time now is 05:31 PM.





All content © Bananas.org & the respective author.