![]() |
Super Dwarf Cavendish Fruit?
Anyone on this board ever fruited one of this? I think I'm about to give up on this plant. I've had some plants for almost 3 years now and I think I'm gonna just dig em up. I'm in a California zone 10 so it shouldn't be too difficult?!? Thanks.
|
Re: Super Dwarf Cavendish Fruit?
Quote:
|
Re: Super Dwarf Cavendish Fruit?
I have personally never grown them long enough to fruit, but to address the main question...yes, they fruit. What I have noticed is that they seem to hate changing conditions, they like long periods of optimal growing conditions with few and mild breaks in that, if any at all. They also seem to better in places like Southern Florida, rather than Southern California.
|
Re: Super Dwarf Cavendish Fruit?
For what it is worth, I have seen one fruiting inside a local nursery
overhere in holland this year. It was in a large pot and the fruit was more tiny than the fruit on gabes pix. It had 1 big sucker aswell. Ron |
Re: Super Dwarf Cavendish Fruit?
|
Re: Super Dwarf Cavendish Fruit?
Thanks for the pics everyone. I do expect it to fruit but by taking this long, it may not be worth the effort. Anyone knows how tall a dwarf Cavendish fruits at? The ones I seen shown as dwarf Cavendish fruited at what seems to 5 ft or so. I'm looking for a rather short growing fruiting banana as it will be planted next to some fruit trees that requires the full sun it gets.
|
Re: Super Dwarf Cavendish Fruit?
super dwarf is generally 2-3ft.
|
Re: Super Dwarf Cavendish Fruit?
Gabe, I was thinking I may have to try a dwarf Cavendish as its still pretty short and may fruit more consistently than the SDC.
|
Re: Super Dwarf Cavendish Fruit?
I bought a dwarf cav from one of the members in this forum. It is doing really well. I planted it in a whiskey barrel . I plan to protect it during the winter time. But what I want to know is what is the lowest tempt it can tolerate without losing it.
I had a super dwarf cav that grew so nice but did not make it last winter. |
Re: Super Dwarf Cavendish Fruit?
Quote:
if you keep it dry during the winter and put a breathable row cover over it, the pseudostem should survive. The SDC on the other hand will get reset every winter even if it survives, and so will endlessly leaf out and never bear fruit in our zone. Another very good dwarf banana that I found to be cold-hardy is the Mauritius. It is potted and forgot to bring it in during the Arctic Blast, and it is growing well now. The pseudostem survived. The Mauritius is slightly taller than the SDC by a foot and shorter than Dwarf Cavendish and have fruits slightly smaller than Dwarf Cavendish but bigger than SDC. So having passed that brutal in-the pot test, I will plant it in the ground later. So perhaps just 2 more years when it develops nice trunks while inground, it will bear fruit. There is hope. At least my own Mauritius is cold hardy even if the literature would say it is just as cold sensitive as most cavendishes are. If my Mauritius will surive this winter while inground, then I may have my own cold hardy sport. But that needs multi-year testing and will give you a pup Benny. Joe |
Re: Super Dwarf Cavendish Fruit?
Quote:
Benny |
Re: Super Dwarf Cavendish Fruit?
Quote:
http://cgi.ebay.com/Floating-Row-Cov...QQcmdZViewItem And I usually sew them together to cover entire canopies like so in the last arctic blast: ![]() |
Re: Super Dwarf Cavendish Fruit?
Thanks Joe.
I just ordered 4. Benny |
Re: Super Dwarf Cavendish Fruit?
It takes 5-6 years before this plant bears fruit as
This is when the tree is considered Mature so you have to wait a couple of years more. I bought my tree When it was only 6 inches tall and now she has 5 pups (very prolific pupper) and one of those pups had separated Itself from momma and I transplanted it into its own pot and doing very well. Good luck |
Re: Super Dwarf Cavendish Fruit?
Quote:
|
All times are GMT -5. The time now is 10:38 PM. |
Powered by vBulletin Version 3.6.8,
Copyright ©2000 - 2025, Jelsoft Enterprises Limited.
All content © Bananas.org & the respective author.