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microfarmer

winter dieback...

microfarmer
17 years ago

Hello all.

I've learned much already just reading your posts...

I had 5 red bananas (I think they were ornamentals) that I killed because I didn't give them the conditions they liked. I did everything wrong. Partial sun in summer, no fertilizer, clay soil, little sun and cold wet feet in winter.. etc...

My D.W. suggested we get some bananas for a spot that I am opening up on the south side of our garage, and at her suggestion, we've ordered 5 more plants (of different edible varieties).

I'm in zone 9, CA and not worried about losing the corm to ground frost, I mulch in wintertime and will put them in better soil, and in raised beds.

The temps that occasionally go down to 20 at night and 40's in the day for a week or two in the middle of February or March will pretty much kill a banana plant to the ground.

I realize that some varieties will take up to 2 years to fruit off the mother, but some will produce in about 12-15 months.

My question is...

When the bananas die back to the ground in winter and the mother plant hasn't produced a flower for the year, will the plant produce the flower the next spring from the corm?

I would protect any flower/hand that was developed, overwinter.

I guess what I'm getting at is...should I expect to see the flower in the second spring after a frost/freeze to the ground?

Will the plant need to recover (just leaves) the following year before fruiting the year after that (provided there was no freeze that year too)?

...and will I need to protect the stalk of the plant overwinter (sans leaves) to produce the fruit the next year even if there was no flower produced for this year?

Thanks in advance...

Jeff

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