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Re: Water Soluble Banana Fuel Dosages
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I have run out of inventory of the 20-5-30 Fertilizer for Fruiting Bananas, aka "Banana Fuel". It will be awhile before I restock, since the factory only accepts pallet-size orders. Based on input from a number of growers in the subtropics (continental U.S. excepting south Florida), I am considering updating the formula to 20-10-30. Depending on your location in the U.S., you might be able to find this formula in stock at an agricultural supply store (not at garden centers). |
Re: Water Soluble Banana Fuel Dosages
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The 28-8-18 is a complete fertilizer. I don't recommend adding other nutrients with it. Maintenance dosages of hormones or soil conditioners would be ok. |
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My understanding is this: Plants need "macronutrients" (N, P, and K) and "micronutrients" (e.g., Cu, Ca, B) to build new tissues. In bananas at least, growth seems to be dictated most by the macronutrients, water, and temperature. If you pour on the water and NPK, they grow faster (if it is warm). But for proper tissue formation, the micronutrients need to be incorporated into the tissues, too. The problem is that some of them (e.g., Ca and B) are transported into the growing tissues at much slower rates than N, P, and K. If they can't be incorporated fast enough, you can end up with tangled, deformed, and chlorotic leaves. If you know which micronutrient you are missing, you can add it, either to the soil or via foliar feeding, and the symptoms will resolve by the next leaf or two. Nick pointed out that even when your soil appears to have adequate levels of some micronutrient (I think it was Ca in his case), soil conditions (temperature, wetness, pH) can make it difficult for the plant to take up that element. In the lack of information about which micronutrient is causing your problem, a broad spectrum micronutrient foliar spray may solve it. Don't haphazardly throw on individual micronutrients because that can exacerbate the problem. I learned that lesson. Regarding Banana Fuel (since that is what this thread is about), I think that if you had ideal soil pH and consistently used that fertilizer, you probably wouldn't have this problem. But your soil has a "history" prior to using it and so may have specific micronutrient or pH problems that keep the micronutrients in that product from being incorporated into the banana plant tissues fast enough to keep up with the growth forced by the addition of NPK. |
Re: Water Soluble Banana Fuel Dosages
I just fertilized again today. Each of my plants except the Mysore got a half cup, and Mysore got 1/3 of a cup. I looked at the ingredients of Banana Fuel and noticed that it does have trace amounts of these micronutrients. However, I don't know what my soil pH is. Maybe I should save up for a pH meter to test it. The leaf finally emerged, and it was shorter than the previous leaves and part of it was chlorotic while another part was very thin and tore off. Other than that, the leaf was normal. I'm going to see what happens with the next leaf and then determine whether I need to do anything else.
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The lawn near the plant must currently be growing like crazy! |
Re: Water Soluble Banana Fuel Dosages
Richard,
I received my banana fuel yesterday. I have some questions about the application rates/plant sizes. For us newbies, can you clarify some physical characteristics to look for to judge what size plant is being referred to in the rate table? For example, in the posts above where you refer to root space and base diameter, this kind of information is very helpful for me. How big would be a "Small or potted plant" be? I think my new baby plants fall into this category (12-14 inches tall overall), or would they still be considered TC plantlets? I also have 3 ice creams that are about 3ft tall overall (2-3 inch diameter base). Would they still be considered Small Plants? Or something in between? Should I stick with the small plant dosage until the base diameter is 6 inches? Thanks! |
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(Maximum) BANANA FUEL DOSAGES DURING ACTIVE GROWTH SEASONS:
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Re: Water Soluble Banana Fuel Dosages
Thanks Richard! That's exactly the info I was looking for! Glad I asked too, I would have overdosed my little ones!
Thanks again! |
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Richard- The instructions on the bag have faded almost completely now. Can you repeat the dosages for my bananas that I'm now planting for the season after inside wintering as dormant plants? Thanks. |
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That;s easy!
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I'm posting for the first time today, even though I've been avidly reading this site since December 2008. I realize this thread is about the Grow More formula and I am planning on ordering some of the Grow More fertilizer for fruiting bananas when available. In the meantime, I have some of the Stokes Tropicals Banana Fertilizer- Controlled released fertilizer (3-month Formula) Analysis: 6-2-12 with minors. I can figure the dosages, I think, for fruiting bananas, but there's one thing that makes me unsure. Theirs is a controlled release formula which would have to alter the situation somewhat. With the Grow More, it's released quickly, so I know, based on your post, what I would use and how often. How would this change for a formula that is released over three months. I'm just unsure how the controlled release changes things, if it does. I would appreciate any insight you, or anyone else, can offer. John |
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For smaller root volumes and pots, scale the dosage by volume. So for example, a fruiting banana in a 20 gallon pot would have the capacity for 1/10th that amount. |
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I am seriously considering getting a 1000w Metal Halide lighting system to allow me to still get some growth over the winter on these. That should reduce some of the need to taper off the fertilizer. I know this won't be nearly as bright as natural sunlight, but I should at least get some moderate growth over the winter and put me a leg up for possibly getting fruit next year when I move them back outdoors. At least that['s the plan anyway. :) Thanks again for the information. I appreciate it. |
Re: Water Soluble Banana Fuel Dosages
One more question (heh heh). Since for some of my plants I'm dosing a mat of 6 to 16 plants in various stages of development, what should I use? 1/4 cup seems much too low for the mat (basjoo). However, I don't want to burn the younguns.
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That makes sense. Thanks!
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