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 (9) Thread Tools
Old 12-08-2012, 03:06 PM   #401 (permalink)
 
stevelau1911's Avatar
 
Join Date: Sep 2009
Posts: 456
BananaBucks : 144,718
Feedback: 1 / 100%
Said "Thanks" 51 Times
Was Thanked 558 Times in 256 Posts
Said "Welcome to Bananas" 24 Times
Default Re: Time to put the bananas to sleep for the Winter

If you add another layer of tarp, shrink wrap, bubble wrap, or whatever can trap the heat in, then I think that should work.
__________________
I'm in zone 6 upstate NY, specialize in growing temperate cold hardy bamboos(mainly phyllostachys) and starting to get into bananas.

my picture website is http://www.flickr.com/photos/31489820@N02/

http://stevespeonygarden.blogspot.com/
stevelau1911 is offline   Reply With Quote Send A Private Message To stevelau1911
Said thanks:
Old 12-10-2012, 09:47 PM   #402 (permalink)
Happy Growing
 
Abnshrek's Avatar
 
Location: Beaumont Texas
Zone: 8b, but 9b weather..
Name: Migael / Michael
Join Date: Aug 2009
Posts: 9,492
BananaBucks : 197,061
Feedback: 45 / 100%
Said "Thanks" 10,447 Times
Was Thanked 16,440 Times in 5,237 Posts
Said "Welcome to Bananas" 2,318 Times
Default Re: Time to put the bananas to sleep for the Winter

Quote:
Originally Posted by blownz281 View Post
hmm wouldn't think those mini lights would give off enough heat. Now I just need to figure out again how to post on here from photobucket.
I leave my lights on all the time and it creates enough heat for them to be growing like crazy compared to the weather. :^)
__________________
Click for Haughton, Louisiana Forecast

I'm a Nannerhead :^)
Abnshrek is offline   Reply With Quote Send A Private Message To Abnshrek
Said thanks:
Old 12-11-2012, 08:40 PM   #403 (permalink)
Happy Growing
 
Abnshrek's Avatar
 
Location: Beaumont Texas
Zone: 8b, but 9b weather..
Name: Migael / Michael
Join Date: Aug 2009
Posts: 9,492
BananaBucks : 197,061
Feedback: 45 / 100%
Said "Thanks" 10,447 Times
Was Thanked 16,440 Times in 5,237 Posts
Said "Welcome to Bananas" 2,318 Times
Default Re: Time to put the bananas to sleep for the Winter

Quote:
Originally Posted by stevelau1911 View Post
If you add another layer of tarp, shrink wrap, bubble wrap, or whatever can trap the heat in, then I think that should work.
Rgr that.. got a lil leaf burn w/ just the barrel last night on that one. :^)
__________________
Click for Haughton, Louisiana Forecast

I'm a Nannerhead :^)
Abnshrek is offline   Reply With Quote Send A Private Message To Abnshrek
Said thanks:
Old 12-11-2012, 11:43 PM   #404 (permalink)
 
Location: Anderson, Indiana
Zone: 5-6
Name: Tim
Join Date: Jul 2011
Posts: 223
BananaBucks : 21,346
Feedback: 0 / 0%
Said "Thanks" 66 Times
Was Thanked 148 Times in 94 Posts
Said "Welcome to Bananas" 154 Times
Default Re: Time to put the bananas to sleep for the Winter

To Abnshrek: I wouldn't have thought it would even get cold enough to frost down there.
designshark is offline   Reply With Quote Send A Private Message To designshark
Old 12-12-2012, 12:19 AM   #405 (permalink)
Happy Growing
 
Abnshrek's Avatar
 
Location: Beaumont Texas
Zone: 8b, but 9b weather..
Name: Migael / Michael
Join Date: Aug 2009
Posts: 9,492
BananaBucks : 197,061
Feedback: 45 / 100%
Said "Thanks" 10,447 Times
Was Thanked 16,440 Times in 5,237 Posts
Said "Welcome to Bananas" 2,318 Times
Default Re: Time to put the bananas to sleep for the Winter

Quote:
Originally Posted by designshark View Post
To Abnshrek: I wouldn't have thought it would even get cold enough to frost down there.
It wouldn't have if it had just been a frost, but got down to 25F so a lil leaf burn isn't bad.. it was touching the barrel.. :^)
__________________
Click for Haughton, Louisiana Forecast

I'm a Nannerhead :^)
Abnshrek is offline   Reply With Quote Send A Private Message To Abnshrek
Said thanks:
Old 12-18-2012, 02:22 PM   #406 (permalink)
Happy Growing
 
Abnshrek's Avatar
 
Location: Beaumont Texas
Zone: 8b, but 9b weather..
Name: Migael / Michael
Join Date: Aug 2009
Posts: 9,492
BananaBucks : 197,061
Feedback: 45 / 100%
Said "Thanks" 10,447 Times
Was Thanked 16,440 Times in 5,237 Posts
Said "Welcome to Bananas" 2,318 Times
Default Re: Time to put the bananas to sleep for the Winter

I added a 100 more min-lites and it got down to 32F last nite.. There was ice on the windshield but w/ the lites this Cali-Gold is unphased by it, and that was without the barrel over it. :^)

Of course I trimmed the leaf that burnt on the barrel when it got down to 26F. :^)
__________________
Click for Haughton, Louisiana Forecast

I'm a Nannerhead :^)
Abnshrek is offline   Reply With Quote Send A Private Message To Abnshrek
Said thanks:

Join Bananas.org Today!

Are you a banana plant enthusiast? Then we hope you will join the community. You will gain access to post, create threads, private message, upload images, join groups and more.

Bananas.org is owned and operated by fellow banana plant enthusiasts. We strive to offer a non-commercial community to learn and share information. Receive all three issues from Volume 1 of Bananas Magazine with your membership:
   

Join Bananas.org Today! - Click Here


Sponsors

Old 12-18-2012, 06:45 PM   #407 (permalink)
 
blownz281's Avatar
 
Location: Coastal NC
Zone: 8b coastal
Join Date: Dec 2008
Posts: 1,373
BananaBucks : 350,312
Feedback: 6 / 100%
Said "Thanks" 440 Times
Was Thanked 756 Times in 534 Posts
Said "Welcome to Bananas" 14 Times
Default Re: Time to put the bananas to sleep for the Winter

If the caligold is a Orinoco type then it can handle cold weather. I thought that's what people have said in the past.
blownz281 is offline   Reply With Quote Send A Private Message To blownz281
Old 12-18-2012, 08:10 PM   #408 (permalink)
Happy Growing
 
Abnshrek's Avatar
 
Location: Beaumont Texas
Zone: 8b, but 9b weather..
Name: Migael / Michael
Join Date: Aug 2009
Posts: 9,492
BananaBucks : 197,061
Feedback: 45 / 100%
Said "Thanks" 10,447 Times
Was Thanked 16,440 Times in 5,237 Posts
Said "Welcome to Bananas" 2,318 Times
Default Re: Time to put the bananas to sleep for the Winter

Quote:
Originally Posted by blownz281 View Post
If the caligold is a Orinoco type then it can handle cold weather. I thought that's what people have said in the past.
I think the more established the more it is better off. I have 4 orinoco's in different environments. The one w/ tree cover, and one next to a S. facing brick wall are doing the best enduring the elements. After it frosts all leaves are pretty much toast unless its some super hardy inetible variety.
Personally I think think Namwah is more hardy than orinoco based on my observations. :^)
__________________
Click for Haughton, Louisiana Forecast

I'm a Nannerhead :^)

Last edited by Abnshrek : 12-19-2012 at 12:45 AM.
Abnshrek is offline   Reply With Quote Send A Private Message To Abnshrek
Said thanks:
Old 12-18-2012, 09:52 PM   #409 (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: Time to put the bananas to sleep for the Winter

Quote:
Originally Posted by Abnshrek View Post
Personally I think think Namwah it more hardy than orinoco based on my observations. :^)
Agreed. Mine have also been more tolerant of heat and/or drought.
Illia is offline   Reply With Quote Send A Private Message To Illia
Old 04-14-2013, 11:09 PM   #410 (permalink)
 
Join Date: Apr 2013
Posts: 6
BananaBucks : 2,225
Feedback: 0 / 0%
Said "Thanks" 2 Times
Was Thanked 4 Times in 4 Posts
Said "Welcome to Bananas" 0 Times
Default Re: Time to put the bananas to sleep for the Winter

Ok I'm new to growing bananas and I have to ask. I'm in zone 6 in Washington and it gets pretty cold in the winter. So All I have to do is dig up the plant and store it somewhere warm, then re-plant when it gets warmer and it'll eventually start producing fruit?
brandynb988 is offline   Reply With Quote Send A Private Message To brandynb988
Sponsors

Old 04-14-2013, 11:18 PM   #411 (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: Time to put the bananas to sleep for the Winter

Yes, or get/build a greenhouse, more efficiently a passive-solar type, or container grow them and bring them in during the winter. Just remember that winter dormancy does indeed lengthen out the time to fruit and might even decrease fruit quality, but, you will get fruit. If you get warm enough winters or have a greenhouse, you can always try short fruiting varieties like Veinte Cohol though. They're not cold hardy but may fruit before winter.
Illia is offline   Reply With Quote Send A Private Message To Illia
Old 04-15-2013, 01:57 AM   #412 (permalink)
 
bananarama2's Avatar
 
Location: The drier, sunny East Coast of the West Coast, on Vancouver Island
Zone: 8a to 8b (?)
Name: Rik
Join Date: Jun 2009
Posts: 165
BananaBucks : 12,231
Feedback: 0 / 0%
Said "Thanks" 102 Times
Was Thanked 221 Times in 96 Posts
Said "Welcome to Bananas" 25 Times
Default Re: Time to put the bananas to sleep for the Winter

There is a wealth of information in old forum entries concerning the many techniques members use to over winter bananas. It's not quite as easy as just digging them up and putting them in a warm spot. The usual idea is to induce and maintain dormancy (minimal warmth, light and moisture) while keeping the corms and stems from rotting. There is a lot of variation to what works, depending on your local zone and temperature/moisture conditions. Do a little reading on the site and you'll find what works in areas similar to yours. Good luck in your efforts.
__________________
If you are not part of the solution, you are part of the problem.
bananarama2 is offline   Reply With Quote Send A Private Message To bananarama2
Said thanks:
Old 04-15-2013, 09:19 AM   #413 (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: Time to put the bananas to sleep for the Winter

Oh yeah, didn't fully catch the "warm" part. As many have stated before in this thread, which by the way is a great read, - It's best you keep it in a place under the high 50's and above the 30's. Air circulation and not too high humidity are some other important factors, too. I don't know about you but out here on the west side it's always humid.
Illia is offline   Reply With Quote Send A Private Message To Illia
Said thanks:
Old 04-15-2013, 04:46 PM   #414 (permalink)
Nanner Time!
 
LilRaverBoi's Avatar
 
Location: Cedar Rapids, IA
Zone: 5
Name: Bryan
Join Date: Mar 2009
Posts: 2,937
BananaBucks : 114,217
Feedback: 0 / 0%
Said "Thanks" 534 Times
Was Thanked 2,243 Times in 1,245 Posts
Said "Welcome to Bananas" 855 Times
Send a message via AIM to LilRaverBoi
Default Re: Time to put the bananas to sleep for the Winter

You can grow basjoo in zone 6 just fine (leave in ground and mulch heavily in the fall to protect overwinter) if you just want foliage (this produces seeded bananas and is 'ornamental').

Otherwise, if you want edible varieties (or virtually any other variety other than basjoo), you will need to dig up and do one of two of the following options for overwintering: 1) pot it up and put it in a sunny window, caring for it as a houseplant over winter being careful not to over-water......or 2) dig up, remove most of the soil, remove all leaves except top one and place plant in a dark room ~50 degrees without watering to store in a dormant state till next spring (not a good option for certain varieties).

And not to discourage you any, but coming from someone in zone 5 who has lived in zone 6......I wouldn't focus too heavily on fruit production or you may be disappointed. It is difficult to grow bananas to maturity and develop fruit with the length of the growing season in such a zone. Most plants, even once the flower comes out, require 4-6+ months with the fruit on the plant in order to fill them out and ripen. This simply is not possible unless you're extremely lucky and get a flower to pop out early in the spring (which you can't exactly 'plan' since they can flower any time of the year). My advice for people in lower zones is to focus on growing the plant, enjoying the foliage and if you can manage to get a bloom at all, be happy with that. Ripened fruit is highly unlikely unless you have a greenhouse you keep at tropical conditions during the winter. Again, not trying to discourage, just being realistic with expectations.
__________________
BANANA RAVE!
Feel the beat from start to stop, dancin' and movin' from bottom to top!
lilraverboi@genxglow.com
RIP Tog Tan. We love you and will always remember you!
I'm Bryan with a Y! There is no 'I' in BRYAN!

Last edited by LilRaverBoi : 04-15-2013 at 04:49 PM.
LilRaverBoi is offline   Reply With Quote Send A Private Message To LilRaverBoi
Old 04-15-2013, 09:49 PM   #415 (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: Time to put the bananas to sleep for the Winter

Which is certainly true, though honestly I think as long as you can keep your greenhouse at zone 8-9 conditions during the winter you're still quite decent off. Your season would be greatly extended, and some of the most hardy varieties wouldn't mind going through min temperatures of 22-32 degrees.

I think the best thing for northerners without the money for a greenhouse or related is getting into varieties with short ripening times. Rose, Goldfinger, Rajapuri, Veinte Cohol, Chundillikunnan, and if I'm not mistaken, Brazilian and Gran Nain are some shorter ripeners. They don't take too long to fruit but more importantly, ripening is less than 6 months. For some it is less than 4.
Illia is offline   Reply With Quote Send A Private Message To Illia
Old 04-16-2013, 01:48 AM   #416 (permalink)
 
bananarama2's Avatar
 
Location: The drier, sunny East Coast of the West Coast, on Vancouver Island
Zone: 8a to 8b (?)
Name: Rik
Join Date: Jun 2009
Posts: 165
BananaBucks : 12,231
Feedback: 0 / 0%
Said "Thanks" 102 Times
Was Thanked 221 Times in 96 Posts
Said "Welcome to Bananas" 25 Times
Default Re: Time to put the bananas to sleep for the Winter

As I said before, there are many possibilities, depending on your zone and climate variables. It would be nice to have a heated greenhouse, to be sure, but the cost to heat one in a northern Central Plains location for an entire winter would be prohibitive for most growers. Hence the many creative approaches to digging and over-wintering. Being soft tissued, mostly water by weight plants, bananas don't tolerate cold, humid conditions very well, making storage difficult, but not impossible. As noted by several others, it is all about creating suitable conditions to avoid the dreaded soft rot until warmer temperatures return. More than just a hobby, growing some of the tropicals in less than tropical areas is a major challenge, successfully achieved by a lot of hard working and creative growers who just won't accept the notion of "can't".
__________________
If you are not part of the solution, you are part of the problem.
bananarama2 is offline   Reply With Quote Send A Private Message To bananarama2
Said thanks:
Old 04-17-2013, 11:23 PM   #417 (permalink)
 
Join Date: Apr 2013
Posts: 6
BananaBucks : 2,225
Feedback: 0 / 0%
Said "Thanks" 2 Times
Was Thanked 4 Times in 4 Posts
Said "Welcome to Bananas" 0 Times
Default Re: Time to put the bananas to sleep for the Winter

Holy crap! Heat tape! Great idea =)
brandynb988 is offline   Reply With Quote Send A Private Message To brandynb988
Old 06-12-2013, 02:35 PM   #418 (permalink)
 
vitin6039's Avatar
 
Zone: 8A
Name: vitin6039
Join Date: Jun 2013
Posts: 87
BananaBucks : 15,853
Feedback: 0 / 0%
Said "Thanks" 66 Times
Was Thanked 135 Times in 45 Posts
Said "Welcome to Bananas" 26 Times
Default Re: Time to put the bananas to sleep for the Winter

All,
I know this sound like a newbie question but I have to asked. How long can the corms survive with out soil and litter water. I am in zone 8b and we have a winter season of about 4 to 5 months and that seem like a long time for the plant to sit in the garage and be healthy for the coming spring.
__________________
What is a weed? A plant whose virtues have never been discovered.
Click for Killeen, Texas Forecast
vitin6039 is offline   Reply With Quote Send A Private Message To vitin6039
Old 06-12-2013, 03:07 PM   #419 (permalink)
Happy Growing
 
Abnshrek's Avatar
 
Location: Beaumont Texas
Zone: 8b, but 9b weather..
Name: Migael / Michael
Join Date: Aug 2009
Posts: 9,492
BananaBucks : 197,061
Feedback: 45 / 100%
Said "Thanks" 10,447 Times
Was Thanked 16,440 Times in 5,237 Posts
Said "Welcome to Bananas" 2,318 Times
Default Re: Time to put the bananas to sleep for the Winter

Quote:
Originally Posted by vitin6039 View Post
All,
I know this sound like a newbie question but I have to asked. How long can the corms survive with out soil and litter water. I am in zone 8b and we have a winter season of about 4 to 5 months and that seem like a long time for the plant to sit in the garage and be healthy for the coming spring.
Depends on the type that determines if its can take cold storing well.. Orinoco type's can I don't know which others do this well.. :^)
__________________
Click for Haughton, Louisiana Forecast

I'm a Nannerhead :^)
Abnshrek is offline   Reply With Quote Send A Private Message To Abnshrek
Old 09-10-2013, 03:52 PM   #420 (permalink)
Laeti vescimur nos subact
 
Funkthulhu's Avatar
 
Location: Omaha, NE
Zone: 5b
Join Date: Jun 2013
Posts: 223
BananaBucks : 25,596
Feedback: 0 / 0%
Said "Thanks" 163 Times
Was Thanked 330 Times in 145 Posts
Said "Welcome to Bananas" 1 Times
Cold Re: Time to put the bananas to sleep for the Winter

A question of options,

Earlier this summer I had two bananas plants, a Blood-leaf Zebrina and what I thought was a Dwarf Cav. They were both in 10 gallon pots, I managed to keep them alive through last winter and repotted the DC into a 30G this spring (the Zebrina was still happy and small in the 10G). I learned through this site that this "Dwarf Cavendish" is most likely a Musa Basjoo instead. The plant went wild for a few months with a mother P-stem nearly 3 feet tall by June and at the time at least 13 pups of various sizes. Reading up on the Basjoo, I split the pot, split the corm into 4 groups and put them in the dirt to see how they'd fair in a Nebraska Summer. Now that they've been in the ground a couple months, I'm looking forward to the change of seasons. (Winter is coming....)

All 4 bunches have survived the shock and flourished, each producing additional pups after they were planted in the ground. The mother P-stem is now ~4 inches in diameter 6" above the base and the total height without leaves is approaching 5 feet. The others are all much smaller. The smallest group I was planning on digging up and potting up for the winter, maybe even giving away as a gift. One of the middle group I was planning to cut off and cover with mulch to see if it would survive the winter. (Zone 5b, inner city)

But what of Mama? Should I up-root and try to store her in my basement? (~60F degrees and dark in the utility room) Or should I try to pot it up as well and place it in my plant area with overhead fluorescent grow lights until Spring? And what of the 4th group of mid-sized P-stems (<3 feet)? Leave to the elements, store indoors, or pot up and put under lights? (My residence at this point will not allow space enough for plants in any room that gets much window sun.)

Just brainstorming and looking for some insight for my for my second banana winter. (The Zebrina is just going under the lights in the pot it is in.)
__________________
"Ph'nglui musaglw'nanna Funkthulhu R'Omahaea wgah'basjoo fhtagn"
"In his house at Omaha, dread Funkthulhu plants bananas."
Funkthulhu is offline   Reply With Quote Send A Private Message To Funkthulhu
Reply   Email this Page Email this Page





LinkBacks (?)
LinkBack to this Thread: http://www.bananas.org/f15/time-put-bananas-sleep-winter-310.html
Posted By For Type Date
My humble Canadian attempt - Tropicalesque Garden Forum - GardenWeb This thread Refback 02-06-2008 04:57 PM
Go Bananas! Growing Tropical Banana Trees in Maryland This thread Refback 02-04-2008 09:05 AM
Success rate of storing basjoo in basements - Banana Forum - GardenWeb This thread Refback 02-03-2008 10:38 PM
Torn up trees - Banana Forum - GardenWeb This thread Refback 02-03-2008 07:25 PM
Success rate of storing basjoo in basements - Banana Forum - GardenWeb This thread Refback 02-02-2008 09:36 AM
Go Bananas! Growing Tropical Banana Trees in Maryland This thread Refback 01-31-2008 11:52 AM
The Banana Tree Tropical Forum This thread Refback 01-31-2008 11:49 AM
The Banana Tree Tropical Forum This thread Refback 01-29-2008 03:05 PM
The Banana Tree Tropical Forum This thread Refback 01-28-2008 02:03 PM

Currently Active Users Viewing This Thread: 2 (0 members and 2 guests)
 


Similar Threads
Thread Thread Starter Forum Replies Last Post
Blooming at the right time. JoeReal Main Banana Discussion 17 09-11-2007 09:30 PM
Removed time limitation to edit thread title MediaHound Bananas.org Site News 0 05-15-2006 10:14 AM
Atlanta/Georgia folks... Is it time yet? Plinks Main Banana Discussion 1 03-02-2006 09:54 PM
Well it's that time GH is filling Up! Southern-Grower Main Banana Discussion 5 11-19-2005 01:18 PM
Watering potted bananas in winter, yes or no? vaindioux Main Banana Discussion 16 11-07-2005 07:27 PM


All times are GMT -5. The time now is 01:11 PM.





All content © Bananas.org & the respective author.