Haa Haa who is growing one?
Does anyone out there grow Haa Haa? If so what kind of temperatures can it take I live in zone 9b so I should be ok but I would love to know before I get one.
Also any pictures would be great, I can't seem to find that many of them. It sounds like a cool plant but there isn't that much information on it yet. That I can find anyway. |
Re: Haa Haa who is growing one?
I have one but don't know much about them.
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Re: Haa Haa who is growing one?
I never heard of Haa Haa!! Tony, could you post a pic of yours? Is it in the nana family?
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Re: Haa Haa who is growing one?
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Re: Haa Haa who is growing one?
Previously I've only of Ha Ha..not Haa Haa I know what you mean Patty.. lol A Dwarf White Iholena in fact. :^) A striking plant which bears medium bunches of delicious fruit with orange flesh. A rare form of the Iholena Family. The plant is very stout and vigorous in appearance with an unusual ivory hue to the trunk and petioles. A dwarf form of White lholena, very stout, with fruit similar to the others. Average hardiness. Fruit turns yellow long before ripe. Tends to fall over with fruit on it, so definitely needs bracing. This is a dwarf stout plant with a yellow skin and orange flesh. Striking plant producing medium bunches of delicious fruit.
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Re: Haa Haa who is growing one?
I had had one for quite a while. Does fairly well. Does choke sometimes. Struggles through the winter in San Diego, two nights at 38F and several in the lower 40's. Really needs warmer climate than I have, like most other Cavendish varieties. Haa Haa, Valery, Mahoi, and Zan Moreno seem a little more tolerant than Williams, Haa, Dwarf Cavendish, but almost not worth mentioning.
If you need shorter banana, Dwarf Namwah would be a better choice. |
Re: Haa Haa who is growing one?
The Iholenas don't seem to handle cool wet conditions.
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Re: Haa Haa who is growing one?
Well we don't live in a cool wet place but we do get lower than 38 degrees, about 6-7 degrees cooler on occasion. That is also only at night, the days are almost never in the 30's.
I don't need a short banana I am just looking for cool colored bananas. Yellow is fine but any other color is more interesting to me. If the flesh of the fruit is something other than white I am also interested. |
Re: Haa Haa who is growing one?
pretty funny name for a naner
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Re: Haa Haa who is growing one?
Gabe,
Drop me a note when you make it to Florida. Chris |
Re: Haa Haa who is growing one?
I started to mention that about the glottal stops but wasn't 100% sure so I held off. So it is pronounced Ha ah, Ha ah, correct?
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Re: Haa Haa who is growing one?
Iholenas are excellent bananas..
Anyone in Florida growing any of the Iholena species? Anyone have a "large" Red Iholena corm they are interested in trading for Dwarf Reds (or others)? I lost my matte of Red Iholenas this past winter... |
Re: Haa Haa who is growing one?
Rmplmnz, how is the taste of the Iholene type bananas?
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Re: Haa Haa who is growing one?
I love this species I tried getting one shipped from Hawaii but we tried getting a water sucker in stead of a sword sucker and did not mature all the way to be pulled so i lost it. but the real reason there so rare is because every time u get a sword it loses some color for some reason so you have to grow from seeds to keep it orange and true it kind of acts like a heirloom plant witch is extremely WEIRD for bananas so finding it wild would be amazing because that would mean nature did its course. if I could get seeds I wouldn't hesitate trying to grow one
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Re: Haa Haa who is growing one?
The one I ordered from Aloha Tropicals ended up being a Dwarf Orinoco..
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