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Re: My Mystery Busy Bee Banana
nope no idea, but it is a beautiful flower. my fav pic is the one with the honey bees. thats awesome!!!
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Re: My Mystery Busy Bee Banana
I told Pete I wanted to charge admission for the bee photo! lol
By the way, I've got about 72-75 fingers so far out of six hands. No male flowers yet! :) |
Re: My Mystery Busy Bee Banana
Water the plant every day. So the fruits can grow a little bit faster, while the temperature is not below 14 °C. When you have 7 or 8 hands cut the blossom. So the force goes into the fruit and not into the blossom. After the fruits have reached approx. average of 7.5 or 8 inch cut the whole bunch and cut the hand into clusters of 3 to 6 fruits. Wash them with clear water (Latex) and then put every 2 days a cluster into a plastic bag of a supermarket together with one or two apples. You will be surprise how fast they will be ripening. In tropical conditions (my ex office in Ecuador had 28 °C and 70 % rel. hum. it took 25 days to ripen a box with green bananas. 3 bananas in a plastic bag with 2 apples I could eat after 4 to 6 days.
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Re: My Mystery Busy Bee Banana
Don't know what it is, but it is a nice plant Harvey. The flowers look a bit different from my orinoco, but perhaps there are different strains.
Cassie |
Re: My Mystery Busy Bee Banana
Looks good Harvey! The shape of the fingers is different from the Orinocos I've seen and grown. And Chris is right, you'll be surprised to see how young the bananas can be and yet still ripen!
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Re: My Mystery Busy Bee Banana
Based upon your name for it, it must be "ABB" hahahaha.
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Re: My Mystery Busy Bee Banana
I do not know what the type is but i wanted to say what brillant pictures of the flower and fruit. You have captured the image well, love the bees in last one
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Re: My Mystery Busy Bee Banana
Thanks, everyone.
Chris, the plant gets water every day unless I'm just too busy which happens maybe once a week. They don't ever seem to be lacking moisture. Yesterday we were at about 101F (38C+) and we got down to about 72F (20C) lasts night. I did not water my plants yesterday as I was already busy with other farm work all day long (getting ready for chestnut harvest). Still, all of my bananas looked good by the end of the day. If it weren't for the pesky mosquitoes, I would have watered them last night when I was checking them out. I did see a huge moth on the flower with glowing amber eyes and a wingspan of about 4 inches. It almost seemed like a hummingbird the way it flew off but it came back. I grabbed my camera but, unfortunately, it was gone when I got back and I did not get a photo. Pitangadiego suggests leaving from 8 to 12 inches of the flower stalk on below the last hand to prevent dessication of the fruits, but I might just try wrapping the end of the stem with something to prevent this (our humidity typically gets down to 20% or so). I have two other plants with flowers and haven"t cut the male bud yet, though I've been meaning to get to it. Just waiting to see if my Dwarf Brazilian will touch the ground (about 6 inches away now) and I was going to photograph my other unknown, but I need to clear some weeds to have a less embarrassing shot! Randy turned down my offer for free weeds. ;) Thanks Chris and Mitchel for giving me some hope that I may get these things to mature enough. We should have another 6-9 weeks of decent weather. I was figuring I'd leave the fruit on until the leaves got fried by frost. I might get lucky like last year and not have a heavy frost. I'm wondering if an actual thinning of fruit would accelerate fruit maturation significantly. Some fingers are smaller as it is, so it could be like thinning out the runts, etc. I'd rather have 60 nice mature bananas than 90 that didn't quite make it. Anybody with any thoughts on this? Also, I've read at times about bunches being bagged. Is that something that can help speed up maturity? I'd be reluctant to do anything like that right now with the hot weather we're having but maybe it could be helpful later on when the weather cools down. Thanks again, Harvey |
Re: My Mystery Busy Bee Banana
Ripening of bananas doesn't depend of packaging. For long transports over distance (p.e. Ecuador to Europe, etc.) it is a must to pack the bananas in boxes you can see in supermarket. The transport is refrigerated at 14 °C and 85 % rel. hum in dark “rooms” (Reefer Container with +/- 1000 boxes (18,14 kg) or a whole vessel up to 300.000 boxes). With systems are transports up to 25 day possible having a loss of 2 % of the boxes. In the destination you can wait until ripening (In Arabia they do this. From Philippines they order 4 or 8 kg Boxes. This is the volume that they eat in a big family during a week). But USA, Europe receives the green bananas and put them into ripening centers. And ripening is controlled by temperature, rel. humidity and as accelerator ethylene. This gas accelerates the transforming of starch/amylum into sugar. Green bananas have content of 80 % starch / 20 % sugar and ripe bananas 20 % starch / 80 % sugar. And apples produce this gas. So never store green bananas beside apples!! ;)
I think that I should prepare a nice video explaining this with pictures, … |
Re: My Mystery Busy Bee Banana
Chris, I'm not sure if your last message pertains to my post or not. The ripening part I understand well enough. I'm just concerned about the banana fruits growing large enough and maturing before cold weather sets in. Sometimes weather in November can be fairly warm here but sometimes it can be pretty cool/cold.
Harvey |
Re: My Mystery Busy Bee Banana
Quote:
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Re: My Mystery Busy Bee Banana
Thanks, Chris. I've heard figures of 4-6 months for others here in California. Even 12 weeks would put me at the end of November when things will have already slowed down quite a bit here. Frost is even possible by then, though I don't remember every seeing frost that early here.
My Dwarf Brazilian bloomed about 8 weeks ago and still has quite a ways to go, it seems. Thanks, Harvey |
Re: My Mystery Busy Bee Banana
I went back out tonight and, sure enough, the giant moth was back feeding on my banana flower. The wingspan is a bit larger than is apparent in these two shots. I had to get these shots off fairly quickly before it flew off like last night.
Anybody have any I.D. information on this moth? Thanks for looking, Harvey |
Re: My Mystery Busy Bee Banana
Cool pictures Harvey. The moth looks llike a white-lined sphix moth.
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Re: My Mystery Busy Bee Banana
Thanks Cathy. I was thinking it was either some kind of sphinx or hawk moth. It's rare that I see them around here but fun to learn that it returned the next night for the banana nectar.
Harvey |
Re: My Mystery Busy Bee Banana
Way to go Harvey.
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Re: My Mystery Busy Bee Banana
Definitely not Orinocco. Looks more like Misi Luki, Belle or a Namwah. Tasting will confirm.
The fellows in Mooooodesto sometimes trim the puttom hands off, and leave 3-4, which supposedly accelerates ripening. Leave them on till you the first night you expect a frost, and then cut them off and bring them in side. Alternatively bag them on the tree and put a lightbulb or something inside to keep the bananas from freezing, and leave them on as long as possible. |
Re: My Mystery Busy Bee Banana
Cool shots of the moth Harvey!
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Re: My Mystery Busy Bee Banana
Thanks, Jon, for the thoughts. If I can get them to mature, I'll send you some to try out. If I remember!
Scot, thanks for the compliment! |
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