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chinese yellow bananna
can anyone give me some tips on the yellow bananna? can't seem to find much info on this thing. i planted two of them this spring and they have grown to about 5 foot tall and have about thirty small sprouts at the base of the plant . help please.
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Re: chinese yellow bananna
lol u dont need help...if its 5 feet and u got 30 pups :P
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Re: chinese yellow bananna
Ya, sounds like its doing great. What exactly do you need help with?
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Re: chinese yellow bananna
If you need help getting rid of some pups, I volunteer.. LOL
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Re: chinese yellow bananna
They are kind of a pain in the rear to divide though. But it sounds like you have the growing part dialed in pretty good!
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Re: chinese yellow bananna
Sandy, could you elaborate a little? Why are they a pain to divide, and how is it handled?
I assume we're talking about lasiocarpa. |
Re: chinese yellow bananna
I took a very sharp knife to mine and divided it into 3, 2 of about equal size and one very small one (possibly too small) they managed OK. The smallest is looking a bit thread bare, but it's still growing. I did feed them a lot, that may have helped.
I'm impressed by 5 feet! (but then who wouldn't be ;-) |
Re: chinese yellow bananna
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Re: chinese yellow bananna
If you get any little bit of corm, the pup will root and grow provided it is warm. Dividing them is hard because they grow in a tight clump and it's easy to damage the other plants/pups. I haven't lost any after dividing actually. I would recommend dividing in the spring.
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Re: chinese yellow bananna
wow they are jammed together :P i would take the whole clump out and cut them very carefully....that u will cut the plant plus some roots with it....then put some good draining soil and keep em warm and u should be great :D ....just my 2 cents :D thats how i would do it :P
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Re: chinese yellow bananna
I recently divided mine and got about 9 viable pups off of it. I had a fruiting mainstalk that the flower was about spent on, so I dug the whole thing up. After doing it by just trying to slice into it and hoping for the best with varying results before, I think digging it is definitely the way to go. By doing this you will be able to see all the points of attachment and, therefore, minimize loss by getting some corm for most of them. I've never seen any other banana pup so tightly. Good luck!
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Re: chinese yellow bananna
would it be best to seperate the pups now or wait untill spring? What do i need to do to them for the winter?
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Re: chinese yellow bananna
Go with Spring...
Southern Indiana? I know it's called 'Snow banana', but is Lasiocarpa that hardy? Are you mulching it, or leaving it out unprotected? |
Re: chinese yellow bananna
I thought the Snow banana was Ensete Glaucum. My Lasios go through the winter ok without a mulch and we get -8 here.
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Re: chinese yellow bananna
Yes, Ensete glaucum is known as the Snow Banana. I've never heard of Musella lasiocarpa being called that. It is normally referred to as the Chinese Yellow. That doesn't mean it's never been termed a "snow banana" as well, though. That's why I hate common names.
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Re: chinese yellow bananna
cover them well with straw and mulch. make sure they dont get too much water this winter or they will rot. i have a clump of them outsid and one pup with 4 pups inside for the winter....just in case.
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Re: chinese yellow bananna
as far as what im doing ,i don't have a clue. do i need to cut the leaves off and leave the stem? and what about the pups? how tall should leave the stem? this is the first teme i have seen a yellow banana, i thought they looked pretty neat and thought we should give them a try.having great sucess in growing but am stupid when it comes to caring for them.:bananas_b
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Re: chinese yellow bananna
Quote:
Personally, unless you have access to a greenhouse or plenty of space in your house, I'd wait until spring to divide the pups. They'll reestablish quicker then. |
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