Nice information. I am planting 2 as soon as they come in the mail. I am in zone 8a near Dallas. It is Nov. 7, 2023. Subbed, liked, black belled. I have mostly animals on my channel.
It's interesting to see your banana plants near the end of October, especially as the first winter frost approaches. The lower leaves appear more cold (chilling) stressed, while the upper ones look mostly still lush and green.
That all changed this morning as it hit 32.3° as a low and had about two hours of 32° in total. That’s all it took to cook them. What’s sad is that we don’t have any more frost predicted for at least two weeks. Irritating but life dealing with plants haha.
@@JustMakinDoFarms Great, for transplanting in the height of the summer, be sure to water them like crazy to get started. I don’t even water mine anymore at this point even during prolonged dry spells and they still do great. Thanks!
Zone 6, Dwarf Cavendish Bananas. Tarp and pegs evenly on four corners up to just below the leaves and stuff it with straw. Preferably a straw that isn’t prone to mold or you just chop and drop and cover them with an entire hay bales worth broken up and placed in a chicken wire fence surround over it and cover with a frost blanket in both methods. It’s once a year so it’s not hard to do. Remove after any chance of frost or if it stays around 10 degrees or more.
I’m in growing zone 8b and just got one of these. It’s currently in a pot on my patio. I haven’t had it long enough to figure out what it likes but I’m keeping it watered and I’m having an issue with it bouncy back and forth from healthy to then dropping leaves. Any tips? We get direct sun in late afternoon through evening.
Hi Lisa, thanks for checking in! While they do best in full sun (at least here in the Midwest), they also sag and droop in the afternoon on sunny and hot days. It’s perfectly common for them to fold down almost like they are frowning and abused in the heat of the day. Once the heat relents and the sun dims, they perk back up and look more full and healthy again. As for being in a pot, that makes things a little tricker, as they do love water even more so in pots. I’ve only ever had two experiences with them in pots and one time it was horrible and like yours I kept on thinking it was dying, but the other time it did great. My recommendation is, if you can, give it morning sun and afternoon shade, and keep it watered, and maybe a little fertilizer, and see if that doesn’t do the trick!
Nice information. I am planting 2 as soon as they come in the mail. I am in zone 8a near Dallas. It is Nov. 7, 2023. Subbed, liked, black belled. I have mostly animals on my channel.
Nice, you will love them! And thanks, I appreciate that! Take care!
Great video, thanks for sharing, I never noticed what a big difference sun vs. shade can make for Musa basjoo. They look amazing!
Thank you! Yes, the difference is quite dramatic!
Beautiful plants! I look forward to planting some next spring.
Thank you so much! My average winter lowest temperature is about +2°F.
It's interesting to see your banana plants near the end of October, especially as the first winter frost approaches. The lower leaves appear more cold (chilling) stressed, while the upper ones look mostly still lush and green.
That all changed this morning as it hit 32.3° as a low and had about two hours of 32° in total. That’s all it took to cook them. What’s sad is that we don’t have any more frost predicted for at least two weeks. Irritating but life dealing with plants haha.
I bought a Musa this spring . I hope mine does good . Excited
Yes! Enjoy!
How did it do? Just curious.
I have a few not sure what kind they are but mine look like the ones you have. I just transplanted them. Thanks for the video.
@@JustMakinDoFarms Great, for transplanting in the height of the summer, be sure to water them like crazy to get started. I don’t even water mine anymore at this point even during prolonged dry spells and they still do great. Thanks!
Greetings to meet us tropical plant lovers from Indonesia
Nice to meet you and glad to have you!
Thanks for the video! It would be helpful to know what zone you're in. I love your plants.
It's nice that they stay smaller in shaded areas without getting leggy. Convenient if you don't want massive banana plants.
This is very true! That’s what we call a multi useful plant!
Exactly what I was looking for. I have to move mine in the spring. Thanks
Awesome! Good luck!
What a difference. I have 4 Musa Basjoo and the one that gets the most sun is triple the size of the others.
Sun lovers! I don’t blame them haha!
Congrats on 500 subs
Thank you so much! I appreciate you joining and also being #500 and for letting me know!
How can bananas survive in that very cold climate? I'm amazed.
This species is from way up in the mountains in China, so they are acclimated to cold temps. Mine struggled to come back this year but eventually did.
@@justhereforthefoliage I'm going to put Musa Basjoo on my list of future additions.
@@maryreynolds8568 Yes, absolutely!
Zone 6, Dwarf Cavendish Bananas. Tarp and pegs evenly on four corners up to just below the leaves and stuff it with straw. Preferably a straw that isn’t prone to mold or you just chop and drop and cover them with an entire hay bales worth broken up and placed in a chicken wire fence surround over it and cover with a frost blanket in both methods. It’s once a year so it’s not hard to do. Remove after any chance of frost or if it stays around 10 degrees or more.
@@daniellapain1576 Great insight! Thank you!
Those bananas in the sun are looking good!
Thanks! I was really pleased with how they turned out in this first year for them. From about two feet to fifteen feet in five months!
👍👍👍
Thank you!
I’m in growing zone 8b and just got one of these. It’s currently in a pot on my patio. I haven’t had it long enough to figure out what it likes but I’m keeping it watered and I’m having an issue with it bouncy back and forth from healthy to then dropping leaves. Any tips? We get direct sun in late afternoon through evening.
Hi Lisa, thanks for checking in!
While they do best in full sun (at least here in the Midwest), they also sag and droop in the afternoon on sunny and hot days. It’s perfectly common for them to fold down almost like they are frowning and abused in the heat of the day. Once the heat relents and the sun dims, they perk back up and look more full and healthy again.
As for being in a pot, that makes things a little tricker, as they do love water even more so in pots. I’ve only ever had two experiences with them in pots and one time it was horrible and like yours I kept on thinking it was dying, but the other time it did great.
My recommendation is, if you can, give it morning sun and afternoon shade, and keep it watered, and maybe a little fertilizer, and see if that doesn’t do the trick!
@@justhereforthefoliage thank you so much!!
@@lisa__rcs My pleasure! Take care!
No bananas though? I guess it’s hard there the growing season is too short
Nope, no bananas. Growing season is usually around mid April until late October here. Less than 200 days.
Banana trees like full sun - water.
They turn down and become droopy and sad looking during the heat of the day in full sun though. Just something to keep in mind.
@@justhereforthefoliage / my bananas trees in back yard is going well in full sun - . blooms 2nd flowers.
❤️bananas trees .
❤️papayas trees
@@tuyetvo4353 Awesome!
@@justhereforthefoliage / 🌺🌷🌺🌷🌺🌷🌺