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Main Banana Discussion This is where we discuss our banana collections; tips on growing bananas, tips on harvesting bananas, sharing our banana photos and stories. |
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#1 (permalink) |
Tropically Bonkers
Location: Devon, UK.
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![]() Hi,
A while ago I posted regarding being forced to try overwintering my ensete ventricosum maurelii outdoors in the UK this year. I was surprised to learn that it was supposed to be sensitive to damp as it had been very wet all summer with pools of water in it's leaf bases and had not suffered. Now it has been very wet all winter and is just starting to grow again.I have only lost 4 leaf bases all winter, which is about the normal turnover rate. The others are all still happily firm and still full of water. Are there perhaps different types of Ensete Ventricosum Maurelii with differing sensitivity to wet? Do they perhaps adapt to wet conditions if they have lived in wet conditions all their life - anyone got any ideas? Does it perhaps have to be above some fairly warm temperature to rot if wet perhaps?
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#2 (permalink) |
Bananaculturist
![]() Location: Houston, TX area
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![]() I would think that cold and wet would be a bigger problem for it (and most bananas) rather than warm and wet.
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#3 (permalink) |
Tropically Bonkers
Location: Devon, UK.
Zone: 9b, but UK so no sun, always raining and infested with slugs.
Join Date: Jun 2007
Posts: 120
BananaBucks
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![]() What I was thinking is perhaps the moulds/bacteria which rot them are not active at UK winter temperatures?
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There is no such thing as can't grow it - but the determination required may lose you your partner, family and friends - but does that matter?. |
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