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JungleSeeds&Gardens - Specialists in Exotic Seeds & Exotic Plants
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Growing Bananas in the UK |
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Growing Bananas in the UK, is it just a pipe dream? Or is it reality? |
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Musa Sikkimensis in their Second Year from Seed
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How many of us have dreamed to grow a
banana plant at home after visiting an exotic location on holiday? With
their giant tropical leaves and superb architectural structure they
perfectly represent our vision of a tropical paradise. The good news is that
you can grow them at home, either outside as hardy perennials, as summer
bedding raised from seed or suckers, as indoor house plants or as superb
ornamental conservatory plants. You can now even grow your own edible fruit
with the right dwarf variety!
Musa Basjoo
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Outdoor Root Hardy Bananas The ultimate challenge is of course to grow them permanently outside in the UK as root hardy banana plants for tropical bedding. For many years now garden magazines and gardening programmes have expounded on the merits of Musa Basjoo, a root hardy Banana from Japan with plain green leaves. Until recently this was the only species available for this purpose as the root stock is capable of withstanding about -5C to -8C without any protection. However given some protection with 6" or more of a good mulch and the original root crown planted some 3" to 4" below soil level, the roots can survive up to about -20C. In late spring new shoots emerge from the ground and will grow on to make a clump of plants attaining about 5' by the end of the summer. Be aware though that treated this way it will not flower or fruit in the UK. For the entrepreneurial enthusiast, more extreme protection methods using straw bale structures or chimney liner concrete tubes filled with straw is worth a try. These structures are placed around the main stem up to about 6' protecting it from frost during winter. The subsequent regrowth out of the top of the trunk next spring can then reach maturity after two to three years, flowering when 8' to 10' high. The fruit is unlikely to ripen though and even if it does, it is not edible and full of seeds. Basjoo is only available in plant form from nurseries or by mail-order and I have never seen viable seed offered for sale. |
A more attractive option has been the arrival of two other
(maybe three) root hardy alternatives over the last few years. The first,
from the foot hills of the Sikkim region of the Himalayas, is Musa
Sikkimensis, presumably found by Hooker during his Sikkim explorations after
who it is sometimes named. It is readily grown from seed unlike Basjoo, and
is a more robust larger plant capable of reaching 10ft in its second year if
over wintered in a frost free greenhouse or conservatory. Once planted it should be treated in the same way as Basjoo. I have seen reports from the US claiming that it is hardier than Basjoo but the jury is still out on that one. On the real plus side the leaves can be quite ornamental with a strong purple bloom to the underside of new leaves and about 50% of seedlings exhibit variable maroon mottling on the leaves. I am sure that more colourful selected forms of Sikkimensis will become available over the next few years from micro propagation. In general the leaves are larger, stronger and wider than Basjoo with improved resistance from damage by high winds. This is a must for any Musa enthusiast ideal for tropical bedding. Available as plants by mail order or from seed. Over the last two years another reportedly hardy Banana has arrived on our shores from the Yunnan province in China. This is Musa Yunnan a slightly more slender plant with a white blush to the stems and undersides of the leaves.
Musa Yunnan |
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In my own trials Musa Yunnan grows well in our cool summer climate but winter hardiness has still to be proved. I have not seen many plants for sale but seed is available from a couple of sources. The last purportedly root hardy banana is not strictly a banana at all but a closely related species called Musella Lasiocarpa. You can see from the picture that it carries a large yellow flower head on top of 3ft stems in its second to third year from seed or micro propagation. A very ornamental plant with Banana like leaves but prone to red spider infection if kept indoors in a dry atmosphere.
Musella Lassiocarpa What about Banana's just raised for Summer Bedding?
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Another excellent alternative is to consider the Musa Ensete species sometimes listed as just Ensete within the Musacea family and not as a true Musa. These are plants widely grown in Africa as an important food crop (in particular Abyssinia from where it gets its name as the Abyssinian Banana). However it is not grown for the fruit as you might expect, but for the starchy pseudo stem and corm like root. They take about 5 to 7 years to reach maturity in their native habitat, reaching giant proportions 30ft tall with trunks up to 2ft across and massive 15ft leaves up to 3ft wide. For the UK garden it is easily raised from the large
marble sized seeds making attractive bedding plants with their large green
leaves and red tinged midrib. It does not produce much of a trunk in height
even if kept for about three years over wintered in a greenhouse. The one in
the picture was three years old about 12ft tall and too large to bring in
under cover for a fourth season. A stunning plant if grown well but very
easy to raise, tough, forgiving and responding admirably to a rich compost
and buckets of water.
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For Banana Enthusiasts
Ornamental Bananas are also becoming very popular Musa Velutina easily raised from seed bears flowers and "pink" bananas on two year old 4ft plants. The species have slender green leaves and are hardier than most people think with over wintering in a slightly heated greenhouse an easy option. It quickly produces a nice clump forming habit but is best used as a pot plant placed on a sunny patio in summer
Musa Velutina
Musa Zebrina |
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My favourite Banana though for shear visual impact is Musa Ensete Maurellii, this grows just like the ordinary Ensete but with amazing huge blood flushed leaves and trunk. I was amazed seeing these plants in Florida though where they hardly show any colouring with predominantly green leaves. In the UK when planted outside, the combination of high summer light levels and our cool conditions maximises the red hues. The one in the picture taken last year was two years old reaching 8ft in this it's second year! During a summer heat wave (I think we had one last year?) I noticed that the colour faded slightly as the green took over but the red quickly came back again as the summer temperature returned to normal. |
Ensette Maurelii
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I ought to mention one other ornamental
Banana, really sort after but nigh on impossible to obtain, which is the
Hawaiian AeAe a green and white variegated leaf form that has eluded micro
propagation specialist to mass produce for at least 6 years. The Banana is
also susceptible to reverting back to all green or pure white as the soil ph
varies. If you find one at a sensible price I would just love a pup from it
when available!
Musa AeAe |
At last a fruiting Banana in house plant size! |
If you insist on trying one of these though then Rajapuri is the hardiest fruiting banana from India that also makes an attractive summer bedding alternative. The plant thrives in our cool summers and is easy to over winter in a cool greenhouse. It is heavier leaved and more like Cavendishi in habit with a white bloom on the trunk and underneath the leaves. This has been used by Parks Departments as bedding for a number of years.
Musa Rajapuri |
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There are two alternatives though both of
which make excellent house plants with true fruiting potential. Anyone
visiting Cyprus will have seen the fields of banana plants and these are all
Dwarf Cavensdishi that bears a smaller sweet fruit on plants attaining 8ft.
Should you have a high ceiling conservatory or similar suitable heated
environment it is worth a try. Most small banana plants offered for sale in
garden centres are the Cavendishi showing the typical maroon blotch on young
leaves. To fruit it needs a large muck bucket sized pot with lots of manure
and water and about a three to four years wait depending on the growing
temperature. It can be done, I did it years ago but mine was by then crushed
against our conservatory roof!
Musa Cavendishi |
Super Dwarf Cavendishi The best news is that a new cultivar has just arrived, available this year for the first time in the UK. It is a super dwarf form derived from a Cavendishi parent and of similar habit. It makes an excellent house plant rarely exceeding 4 ft and fruiting at that size with medium to large edible bananas on small hands. I can't wait to have my own ripe bananas after picking up one of these plants last year in America. It looks just like a stunted Cavendishi with broad leaves exhibiting the typical maroon blotch on new leaves with a stout stem. It has been specifically bred for the lower light conditions found indoors and may not do so well in harsh sunlight preferring a shaded position.
Cavendishi Super Dwarf |
What about the future?
Rajapuri Chimera |