Hardy Banana Spring Preparation

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  • Опубліковано 27 лис 2024

КОМЕНТАРІ • 66

  • @megahern8467
    @megahern8467 2 роки тому +1

    Thank you so much! This is exactly the info I needed, and I couldn't find it anywhere else. Thanks again!

    • @greatescapefarms
      @greatescapefarms  2 роки тому +1

      You are most welcome. Thanks for taking the time to comment.

  • @SkotColacicco
    @SkotColacicco 7 років тому +3

    Super mulching! That's kind of a brilliant way to extend your zone.
    Thanks for letting us get the satisfaction of your hard work without having to do anything. :)

  • @geoffhorvath3261
    @geoffhorvath3261 7 років тому +2

    I live in zone 6 and my musa basjoo banana plants are doing great. Protecting the roots with mulch greatly improves the chances and overall growth. I didnt mulch two plants that were barely established and they still came back. You'll be fine in zone 6.

    • @greatescapefarms
      @greatescapefarms  7 років тому +1

      That's awesome. Mine died over this past winter, but I'm thinking it was too much clay/rock and not enough organic material. I'm working on that issue as I regenerate the land.

    • @geoffhorvath3261
      @geoffhorvath3261 7 років тому

      Great Escape Farms
      I find that separating pups and refilling the void with good quality compost or garden soil gradually amends the soil and helps the clump grow healthier.
      Best of luck with yours.

    • @greatescapefarms
      @greatescapefarms  7 років тому

      That's awesome! Thanks!

    • @leticiaflowers2335
      @leticiaflowers2335 6 років тому

      Thanks zone 6 here going banana crazy this year well I only have one plant the musa and getting 3 seeds started the red tiger...Hey Experts if you read this can you tell me is it gonna grow fast from seed? I plan on mulching like this gent!

    • @maryamsabur5222
      @maryamsabur5222 5 років тому

      @@geoffhorvath3261 u

  • @backyardsounds
    @backyardsounds 4 роки тому +1

    Been growing these for decades and my way, if you dont mind the look, is so easy and in the summer you'll have monster banana plants. I cut them tall after first frost. I then just wrap a few layers of bubble wrap around them. My record height is over 14' by fall. I'm near Nashville TN and have bananas beginning to produce by October but frost always gets them. I know they're not edible but still neat. Pics to prove how tall mine are for anyone to see.

    • @greatescapefarms
      @greatescapefarms  4 роки тому

      Thank you for sharing!

    • @longboard7384
      @longboard7384 3 роки тому +1

      Hey Jack, How tall is cutting them tall? I'm in 8a and I'm honestly thinking of letting them stand all winter

  • @WEALRO
    @WEALRO 6 років тому +5

    Dude in florida we just use a Sharpe machete one whack , clean cut and my nana's come up 12 ft or more in few months

    • @merkabah8697
      @merkabah8697 5 років тому

      Minorca Home Solutions just curious do u whack them in winter..(lol if u have one in Florida) when do u do that? I’m in Texas and this past winter I did not “put them to sleep” I didn’t even cut them back. So now I have these tall trees with lots of dried leaves. Some trunks are sprouting new leaves, but gosh there is soo many dried stuff to cut back or off. Could I just “Whack” maybe about 2 feet off!? Thanx

    • @greatescapefarms
      @greatescapefarms  3 роки тому

      Must be nice :) I have 8" of snow on the ground right not with a forecast of 14-degrees F tomorrow. Weather like that will shrink 12 foot of growth overnight.

  • @HawaianLeo
    @HawaianLeo 2 роки тому +1

    Thank you for the detailed explanation amd lesson.

  • @jheiny1231
    @jheiny1231 Рік тому

    Keeping a tarp over them to keep rain and snow out will greatly reduce the rot over winter to uncovering in spring. Nicer winter days i pull the tarp off to let it breathe then retarp when colder weather comes back

  • @rebeltoharriganjr6158
    @rebeltoharriganjr6158 7 років тому +5

    use wood chips during the winter to keep the heat in.

    • @greatescapefarms
      @greatescapefarms  7 років тому

      Thanks Rebelto! I keep about a foot of wood chips around the base of the bananas year round, mainly to keep the weeds down. But that is a wonderful idea for people that don't want to go through all of the work with the leaves.

    • @guardiandogoargentinos1385
      @guardiandogoargentinos1385 4 роки тому

      @@greatescapefarms link to the winter preparation of hardy bananas?

    • @greatescapefarms
      @greatescapefarms  4 роки тому

      @@guardiandogoargentinos1385 Here you go: ua-cam.com/video/yATpmccX1Ug/v-deo.html

  • @bobwallace9364
    @bobwallace9364 3 роки тому

    Suggestion and question: if you leave the dead layers and don’t peel back all the way to new tissue, it will build up over the seasons and add more winter protection and you won’t have to add protection artificially. Have you had any actually bloom?

    • @greatescapefarms
      @greatescapefarms  3 роки тому +2

      Thanks for the comment. Your suggestion may work if you are careful about it. You will have to at least peel back last years growth to make room for this years growth. If you do not, the tangled top will not let the new growth through (as the new growth comes from the center). Another thing to note, is that if you have these planted to look nice, last years dead growth looks rather unsightly.

  • @gasubtropics
    @gasubtropics 3 роки тому +1

    Is this musa basjoo?

  • @davidhall9871
    @davidhall9871 3 роки тому

    This is great! Very helpful for my musa basjoo 👍

  • @brandondavies7684
    @brandondavies7684 5 років тому +1

    you seem to know a lot about banana trees I'm having problem with mine the trunk and everything is nice on it but it seems like the leaves are having a hard time unraveling I'm not sure if I should cut the top of it off to a certain point. or maybe it's because it's not summer yet it seems like last year and just put off Leaf after Leaf after leaf

    • @greatescapefarms
      @greatescapefarms  3 роки тому +1

      I have had problems with not unraveling early on in the season before. Usually it seems to have something to do with too much water sitting on the leaves to the point that they start to rot. Once we get past the initial jump in spring, it usually works itself out though.

  • @ramify
    @ramify 5 років тому

    if you do like the they fruit will produce small I think

    • @greatescapefarms
      @greatescapefarms  3 роки тому

      I have pulled some of the fruit off before and it is about the size of my pinky finger with no real pulp in it. If you get more than that then we likely have different varieties. Thanks for the input!

  • @Reefahholic
    @Reefahholic 3 роки тому

    Did the big boys come back good?!?!

  • @ishkaboooo
    @ishkaboooo 3 роки тому

    Hi just wondering I’m in Ireland and took my fleece of to soon and the frost got it I had to cut it right down, I’m devastated will it come back from the roors

    • @greatescapefarms
      @greatescapefarms  3 роки тому

      If it is the "Hardy banana" variety it will survive down to ~20F and even lower if the roots are heavily mulched.

  • @veroniquet3730
    @veroniquet3730 3 роки тому

    I am about to receive my first one. Will try to grow it in a big pot. What kind of dirt do I need to get for my pot? Do you think I can insulate it in the pot for winter? I am in KY.
    Thanks

    • @greatescapefarms
      @greatescapefarms  3 роки тому

      They love organic matter, so potting soil, garden soil amended with compost and pete moss or anything high in organic matter. As for growing - Mine were in Maryland - USDA hardiness zone 7a. I see some of Kentucky is in this zone as well. With that you can put it right in the ground with a little mulch over the winter. In zone 6, you would have to mulch heavily - like a foot or more in the winter. If you put them in a pot you'll have two issues to deal with - 1) they will grow very tall and act like a sail wanting to push the pot over, 2) with them being in a pot, to overwinter you'll need to add a LOT of insulation / mulch even in zone 7 or you could move it to a garage in the worst of winter.

    • @veroniquet3730
      @veroniquet3730 3 роки тому

      @@greatescapefarms Thank you for your answer.

    • @greatescapefarms
      @greatescapefarms  3 роки тому

      @@veroniquet3730 You are most welcome!

  • @BackyardGardening
    @BackyardGardening 6 років тому +3

    Don't cut it...that growing again
    just dark layer is enough to cut

  • @njw1383
    @njw1383 6 років тому

    Would the banana still re grow if you didn't cut the dead bits off?

    • @greatescapefarms
      @greatescapefarms  3 роки тому

      They absolutely would. They would just look a little rough and sometime may get tangled up with the dead growth.

  • @ftconformist
    @ftconformist 6 років тому

    When did you uncover these? im in Ohio zone 6 and wondering if i should uncover them soon like this week or if i should wait

    • @greatescapefarms
      @greatescapefarms  3 роки тому +1

      I uncover them in March sometime (zone 7). We still get frosts, but usually not prolonged freezes at that point.

  • @dinokubura4106
    @dinokubura4106 4 роки тому

    Last winter we in germany (zone 8a) we only hat minus 4 degrees celsius. I didnt have to do anything...

    • @greatescapefarms
      @greatescapefarms  3 роки тому

      Awesome! In zone 8a you may never have to do anything. We are in zone 7 and could do most years without doing anything.

  • @JBmusicart
    @JBmusicart 3 роки тому

    What if you allow the plant to do as it does in the wild...? Doesn't cutting into a plant like this allowing bugs and other varments and even disease to enter?

    • @greatescapefarms
      @greatescapefarms  3 роки тому

      I don't know that they normally grow into zone 7 and die back to the ground in the wild. My guess is that this was done by man. I grew mine from 2005 to 2020 the way it was grown in this video and never had an issue with bugs or other varmints, although I agree with you this could open it up to pests.

  • @frankkrischick3906
    @frankkrischick3906 5 років тому

    does it kill a banaplant when you cut it all the way down to the bottom where you have the bolge ?

    • @greatescapefarms
      @greatescapefarms  3 роки тому

      No, the life of the hardy banana is underground. It can be cut down even with the ground and I've had to do that a few years. It will come back, it is just a little slower coming back.

  • @mediocrefloridaman2607
    @mediocrefloridaman2607 6 років тому +1

    They will NOT produce fruit if you use this method, correct?

    • @chipcool6654
      @chipcool6654 4 роки тому

      Land Home & Lawn Services no, takes too long to produce fruit

    • @greatescapefarms
      @greatescapefarms  3 роки тому

      They will produce ornamental fruit. I have pulled some of the fruit off before and it is about the size of my pinky finger with no real pulp in it.

  • @aadamonis4726
    @aadamonis4726 7 років тому +1

    Could you use a saw?

    • @greatescapefarms
      @greatescapefarms  7 років тому

      You could, but it wouldn’t be as smoot of a cut because the bananas are so fibrous. That may not matter too much as they are very hardy plants. I have used a drywall saw in the winter and it worked great. I used it in the winter because it is much faster and I don’t worry about how smoot the cut is in the winter because it is going to die back anyway. Another thing to think about is your saw blade. The banana stalks have a large supply of water in the stalks and the saw will be very wet. If it is a good saw/blade, you’ll want to dry and oil the blade when you are done.

  • @lilakrs2616
    @lilakrs2616 6 років тому +1

    أنت رائع

    • @greatescapefarms
      @greatescapefarms  3 роки тому

      Sorry, I don't understand.

    • @tolikano1
      @tolikano1 3 роки тому +2

      @@greatescapefarms
      Hi said you are great in Arabic

  • @youpattube1
    @youpattube1 3 роки тому

    Why don't you use a bigger cutter?
    Very annoying to watch you fumble around.

    • @greatescapefarms
      @greatescapefarms  3 роки тому

      Sorry to have annoyed you.

    • @bettyboop8529
      @bettyboop8529 3 роки тому +1

      😂😂 bit rude! I’m sure he uses the tool he’s comfortable with and that works well for the job. You are free to turn the video off if you don’t like it, I’d hope no one has a gun to your head with your eyes held open making you watch it 😱😬😬😬😬