4 Tips To Grow The Most BEAUTIFUL Banana Plants EVER Down To ZONE 5!

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  • čas přidán 30. 07. 2024
  • This video shares 4 tips to grow the most beautiful banana plants you've ever seen! With these banana tips, it's possible to grow bananas down to Zone 5, as cold as -20°F [-29°C]! If you've ever wanted to know how to grow bananas in your backyard, look no further!
    Many gardeners believe growing banana plants can only be done in the tropics, but most bananas easily recover from sub-freezing temperatures and grow back the next spring. Some cold hardy bananas can survive all the way to Zone 5! I've been growing bananas successfully for fruit for many years in Zone 8a North Carolina.
    Bananas are heavy feeders and enjoy rich soil chock full of organic matter. Heavy mulching and chop and drop grows beautiful banana plants! In addition, the following products* will help you grow bananas:
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    TABLE OF CONTENTS
    0:00 Introduction To Growing Bananas
    2:24 Banana Growing Tip #1
    4:48 Banana Growing Tip #2
    6:45 Banana Growing Tip #3
    8:06 Banana Growing Tip #4
    10:03 How To Fertilize Banana Plants
    11:46 The Banana Varieties I'm Growing
    13:47 Adventures With Dale
    If you want to know more banana tips for growing banana trees in your backyard, have questions about growing fruit trees or want to know about the things I grow in my raised bed vegetable garden and edible landscaping food forest, are looking for more gardening tips and tricks and garden hacks, have questions about vegetable gardening and organic gardening in general, or want to share some DIY and "how to" garden tips and gardening hacks of your own, please ask in the Comments below!
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    ABOUT MY GARDEN
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    34.1°N Latitude
    Zone 8A
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    © The Millennial Gardener
    #gardening #garden #gardeningtips #banana #bananas

Komentáře • 606

  • @TheMillennialGardener
    @TheMillennialGardener  Před rokem +46

    If you found this video helpful, please "Like" and share to help increase its reach! Thanks for watching 😊TIMESTAMPS for convenience:
    0:00 Introduction To Growing Bananas
    2:24 Banana Growing Tip #1
    4:48 Banana Growing Tip #2
    6:45 Banana Growing Tip #3
    8:06 Banana Growing Tip #4
    10:03 How To Fertilize Banana Plants
    11:46 The Banana Varieties I'm Growing
    13:47 Adventures With Dale

    • @alessandromariani3015
      @alessandromariani3015 Před rokem

      What about using the barrels to warm up the bananas?

    • @tpoe21
      @tpoe21 Před 2 měsíci

      I need one just like this one please!! Where can I get one? I live in Iowa.

    • @BAGINAZARD
      @BAGINAZARD Před 2 měsíci

      7:30 ... they're in overdrive... but they're likely very stinky. I can imagine that area smells like a gas station bathroom on overdrive.

  • @intuitivegina
    @intuitivegina Před rokem +105

    Oh my god I've been trying to grow banana plants and I had three growing two died and one is surviving with a pup. I have watched a zillion videos and resilient articles and your short video here was the most helpful yet thank you so much

    • @TheMillennialGardener
      @TheMillennialGardener  Před rokem +14

      Thank you! I'm really glad to hear that. If you're growing bananas in a cold climate, the key to overwintering the corm is to mulch is VERY WELL. Chop up the leaves and pseudostems after the first few light freezes kill them back and cover the corm to insulate it. Add more chopped leaves and grass to insulate if you need to. However, once spring rolls around, you then need to rake back the mulch. Otherwise, the soil won't heat up quickly enough, and the bananas could stall or fail. The mulch can work against you if you forget to remove it.

    • @intuitivegina
      @intuitivegina Před rokem

      @@TheMillennialGardener I don't live in a cold climate matter of fact it's too hot and too dry. I live just outside of Phoenix Arizona and this July the sun was extremely scorching we're having a lot of monsoons right now but June and July was scorching. But it's good to know I can grow bananas in a colder climate because my plan is to move to Oregon in a couple of years

    • @intuitivegina
      @intuitivegina Před rokem +3

      @@JuniorFarquar I was deciding whether to ignore your comment or say something. But I think that's a very negative thing to say. I don't put any labels on anything or anyone and moving there I'm moving to be with family. Love of family never goes to s*** as you put it

    • @charlessingletaryiii331
      @charlessingletaryiii331 Před rokem +1

      @The Millennial Gardener do you recommend using grass clipping along with mulch for bananas

    • @auvorthegreat9448
      @auvorthegreat9448 Před rokem +2

      @@charlessingletaryiii331 anything goes. I live in northern Arizona 7a Climate. I use old leaves and grass clippings. I just cut them back and cover them with burlap. Keeps them nice and insulated.

  • @erice3933
    @erice3933 Před rokem +37

    Something to consider, is pruning leaves to promote faster vertical growth. Then chop those leaves and spread them around the trunks to help feed your trees.

  • @chargermopar
    @chargermopar Před rokem +18

    Here in South Florida I can grow 30 foot tall banana plants. They often have so many bananas I have to use the Bobcat to get the bunch down without dropping it. I compost my plants using a lawnmower. All my yard trimmings get dumped on the bananas and shredded after sitting a few days. I have collected urine in a pitcher and dump it out when it is full on the bananas. Have plenty of ducks that deposit their waste everywhere. One tip you may like is that magnesium sulfate (epsom salts) is important when starting your cluster. I did dump the ash and char left over from my woodgas truck for years. I grow orinioco, namwa, cavendish grand nain, gros michel, saba and plantain. had dwarf cavendish but after decades of having it the plants died. I am amazed you can get bananas in a time cycle of less than a year.

    • @TheMillennialGardener
      @TheMillennialGardener  Před rokem +6

      The bananas here have to be overwintered. If they die back, they won't have enough time to fruit. Building a cage around them and stuffing them full of straw usually saves a few pseudostems from the previous year, and I'll usually get a couple that will flower during the season.

  • @marthareyes4024
    @marthareyes4024 Před rokem +17

    Dale, you've quickly become my favorite to watch.
    I learn so much from you.
    Plus your happy, enthusiastic personality is so attractive and catching!

  • @AXH24
    @AXH24 Před 3 měsíci +6

    I watched your video last year, protected and saved my banana plant in Switzerland. Now during the spring they are growing back. I will follow your tips for some fruits this year :). Thanks a lot.

  • @joeesposito6876
    @joeesposito6876 Před 5 měsíci +2

    Incredible video!! I can’t thank you enough for posting this - loaded with great info👍

  • @josephconroy8531
    @josephconroy8531 Před 2 měsíci +5

    21 plants last year MA.100 fruits,watch your videos for long time you are one of the 3 that i watch

    • @jefferytrapani9700
      @jefferytrapani9700 Před 2 měsíci

      You are in Massachusetts? What part? I'm interested in giving it a try.

  • @AngelaABrown-cd8kd
    @AngelaABrown-cd8kd Před rokem +11

    Wow!!!! I’m amaze at how you can grow bananas in zone 8a. You really inspire me and I’m so glad I found you and subscribed to your channel. I’ve seen so many videos on CZcams regarding how to take care citrus and avocados and now bananas, your channel is the BEST. ❤️❤️❤️ you’re very knowledgeable.

    • @TheMillennialGardener
      @TheMillennialGardener  Před rokem +2

      Thank you! I really enjoy challenging myself and growing some interesting things that turn heads. People are confused when they see all the citrus, the avocado tree and bananas growing, but it's doable if you're willing to help them along a little.

    • @macysondheim
      @macysondheim Před rokem

      Ty, I get told all the time by others that I’m really intelligent & inspire them to want to achieve greatness, but still nice to hear every now & then lol

  • @clairgoecke8264
    @clairgoecke8264 Před rokem +26

    Can't get mad at my son for peeing outside anymore 😂😂

  • @naturalflow157
    @naturalflow157 Před rokem +11

    Amazing video :) Truly is soothing, relaxing, and educating. I have learnt a lot from giving this a chance, and I am so glad. Thank you so much for taking the time to create this video with us, :) It really is special and inspiring to get into my own gardening as a way to battle and get better at handling the stressful life I got myself into. Finding the way to the roots of ourselves. Thank you again and wishing you the best :)

    • @TheMillennialGardener
      @TheMillennialGardener  Před rokem

      I'm glad you're finding the content beneficial! I appreciate you watching, and I'm glad to hear it's helping.

  • @jeffsartadventure3634
    @jeffsartadventure3634 Před rokem +20

    I live in Iowa zone 5b,i grow about 60 banana trees outside from May to October, they get about 16 ft tall and look amazing. Theyve been out in the garden for about 3 weeks now and are recovering well from the long winter. Its a LOT of work,but its worth the effort if you love gardening!

    • @whomeverwherever
      @whomeverwherever Před 8 měsíci

      Wow!

    • @kathleennye262
      @kathleennye262 Před 8 měsíci

      We are in uk. Have about six banana plants never take them inside ,leave them out all weather but cut them down in November..ours grow very tall too.

    • @user-pn8tm5eq3u
      @user-pn8tm5eq3u Před měsícem +2

      Do they fruit?

  • @frostylonewolf1700
    @frostylonewolf1700 Před rokem +3

    i'm amazed, i'm growing bananas in grow bags indoors for the winter and outdoors during summer and hope to get fruit off them

  • @ehamann2309
    @ehamann2309 Před 17 dny +1

    Im impressed of all the leaves looking fresh and green

  • @barco581
    @barco581 Před rokem +6

    It is so neat to see you pushing zones and having success.

    • @TheMillennialGardener
      @TheMillennialGardener  Před rokem +3

      The day I have to wrap the bananas for winter is a bit of an ordeal, but aside from that one day a year, they're really easy to grow. They're one of the only things that are invincible here. Extreme humidity and rainfall don't bother them. Hurricanes bounce off them. They have no pests or diseases. They're just a delight.

    • @barco581
      @barco581 Před rokem

      @@TheMillennialGardener now we just gotta get you to grow that giant pumpkin down in NC for 2023!

  • @tonybezanson9625
    @tonybezanson9625 Před 2 měsíci +1

    Just bought one of these today, can't wait. I'm in zone 6 in Nova Scotia.

  • @innerjon
    @innerjon Před rokem +1

    Really Great video! You unlocked the missing info I needed.

  • @OMWP3
    @OMWP3 Před 3 měsíci +3

    8:04 I’ve just purchased a Blue Java. It’s gonna love me. 😊

  • @Covamii
    @Covamii Před 9 měsíci +2

    Wow what’s a Great Millennial Farmer!! Awesome Video with great detail. I will be using the Potash.

  • @feliciaward6589
    @feliciaward6589 Před rokem +2

    Just subscribed....I wanted to know more about banana plants and your channel appeared.😁

  • @jonathandewitt4564
    @jonathandewitt4564 Před rokem +2

    Excellent content, style & delivery. Thanks man.

  • @anitaw7984
    @anitaw7984 Před 10 měsíci +1

    I have been trying to grow chiquita banana in a Container in zone 9. Thank you so much for your Information

  • @theconsultantceo
    @theconsultantceo Před měsícem

    I’m inspired to start growing bananas plants again. I have tried for three years and I couldn’t get them to grow tall, fruit, or survive the winter. I’m in zone 7a so your video helps a lot since our winters are similar.

  • @Vlog-uo5yp
    @Vlog-uo5yp Před 2 měsíci

    I like the explanations that's really get to the point without a lot of blabbing

  • @OlysZoo
    @OlysZoo Před rokem +1

    We are in our second year with the Musa Basjoo in zone 7b/8a upstate South Carolina. What fun. I keep all the pups off so the energy can go to the main stem.
    This year it is flowering and fruiting, although I know these are non-edible. On this variety, in our zone, no protection is needed. I will fertilize more next year.

  • @PsychicIsaacs
    @PsychicIsaacs Před rokem +8

    Pee in a bucket, empty the pee pot onto the bananas. And if you have a wood fire, use the cold wood ash as a fertilizer.

  • @eljefe8149
    @eljefe8149 Před rokem +3

    I'm in Springfield IL zone 5b/6a and have been growing Musa basjoo outdoors year round for about 12 years.

  • @sylvia10101
    @sylvia10101 Před rokem +3

    Wow! Love how your banana plants look! 😊👍

    • @TheMillennialGardener
      @TheMillennialGardener  Před rokem +1

      Thank you! I'm really happy how they're coming along. They look awesome from above. I need to get a drone shot.

    • @sylvia10101
      @sylvia10101 Před rokem

      That would be cool!

  • @1Mackadooz
    @1Mackadooz Před 10 měsíci +13

    Leave 4 leaves on plant. If you have 5, 6, 8 , 10 cut back to just 4. Thickens false stem and gets it growing. I'm in Norfolk. Have the "real" blue java. Have a rack that began August 9th. Takes the fruit time to mature. 115-150 days. Crossing my fingers. 1st frost usually 3rd week of November. But it's supposed to be a mild winter so. 🤞

    • @ladyhawk1083
      @ladyhawk1083 Před 8 měsíci

      Why only four leaves you'll actually get produce on them

    • @sunshinedayz2172
      @sunshinedayz2172 Před 5 měsíci

      Would that be 4 leaves starting from the bottom up?

    • @jacknac8432
      @jacknac8432 Před 4 měsíci

      @@sunshinedayz2172 leave the top 4

    • @iluvjay6911
      @iluvjay6911 Před 2 měsíci

      I'm in Richmond! Hello, fellow Virgin! Lol 😆

  • @emilyrissling9703
    @emilyrissling9703 Před rokem +3

    How Beautiful !! Thank you for your Tips iam gönne try that

  • @lynettetucker544
    @lynettetucker544 Před rokem +1

    Thanks again for sharing this good to know information.

  • @zacharywritesel7684
    @zacharywritesel7684 Před měsícem

    Great video and tips, thanks!

  • @teresadelgado1372
    @teresadelgado1372 Před rokem

    Thank you very much for answering my question that I ask a few videos ago. Your banana trees luck awesome. Great advise. Definite will do the pee and mulching down here in central Florida. As always a fantastic video.

  • @k-sell4065
    @k-sell4065 Před rokem +4

    Man thank you so much! I been trying to grow a banana plant for three years now.

    • @TheMillennialGardener
      @TheMillennialGardener  Před rokem +2

      You're welcome! If you're in a cold climate, make sure to mulch the corm very well. After the first couple light freezes knock it down, chop down the pseudostems, cut them into pieces and mulch the area with the cut up pseudostems and shredded banana leaves. If you need more insulation, toss on a couple inches of shredded leaves, etc. Then, when it warms back up in the spring, rake the mulch back to soil level so the ground can heat up and the corm will grow back. It's fairly important to pull the mulch back, because while the thick mulch layer will insulate the corm from cold damage, it'll prevent the ground from heating up in spring and could prevent it from regenerating.

  • @juschillin7894
    @juschillin7894 Před 4 měsíci

    I watched from brings to end. I'm soooo glad you didn't do one of those quick moving videos that change every 2 seconds. The video is paced perfect, great information and you are for questions. Thanks and great video...

  • @cyhomer
    @cyhomer Před rokem +1

    Wow! Those are so beautiful!

  • @jasonrodriguez3858
    @jasonrodriguez3858 Před rokem +1

    Nice bananas! We grow them here in Arizona too. People think they won’t grow here cause if the extreme dry heat. But we make it work!

  • @chellelosano5852
    @chellelosano5852 Před rokem +1

    I'm in Rocky Point (originally from Hawaii) and have been trying to fruit my bananas for years. Thank you for the tips!!!

  • @tyronefrielinghaus3467
    @tyronefrielinghaus3467 Před 9 měsíci +1

    nice to see you tske your fur buddy for a walk....my pooch loves them too.
    Great info on bananas im in a zone 10b, so fantastic.

    • @TheMillennialGardener
      @TheMillennialGardener  Před 9 měsíci +1

      Dale gets a walk every day, no matter what. He's a hound and he's very nose-driven, so he can't settle down until he gets it out of his system. He will not be content without it, but once he gets his walk, he's docile for the rest of the day. If I lived in Zone 10b, I would have a field of bananas 😄

    • @tyronefrielinghaus3467
      @tyronefrielinghaus3467 Před 9 měsíci

      Absolutely right...gotta 'pull my finger out' Thanks for the push. Paws gets a v early morning walk too,,calms her down. And I;m happy too..
      PS: having great success withsunflower microgreens (from a 1kg birdseed packet)
      @@TheMillennialGardener

  • @gendoll5006
    @gendoll5006 Před 8 měsíci

    A couple of my neighbors have these and they come back every year with little maintenance! I’ve never seen any bananas on them lol but I want to grow them to use the leaves in cooking and for food plates and more!

  • @ElimanGibba
    @ElimanGibba Před rokem +1

    Thank you for these tips.

  • @desertedenblooms
    @desertedenblooms Před rokem +8

    Gals can peeee too, we just need a pot to pee in and then we pour it. However, I always advise to delute the urine 1 part urine to 10 parts water because urine can burn the roots , etc. great info..thanks

    • @TheMillennialGardener
      @TheMillennialGardener  Před rokem +6

      If you're up for it, definitely go for it! The bananas will greatly appreciate it. I just can't suggest it or the crowd will turn on me 😂

    • @desertedenblooms
      @desertedenblooms Před rokem +1

      @@TheMillennialGardener oh you poor guy...I hear you. Its okkkay, I spoke up for ya! lol

  • @PoppyC62
    @PoppyC62 Před rokem +8

    I appreciate all of your videos because even though I have had vegetable gardens for 40+ years, I have learned so much from you. With that being said, I now live near Charlotte NC in zone 7a and wanted to know if you think I would actually be able to grow bananas on a tree and if so which variety of dwarf would be best for where I live? Again, thanks for sharing your gardening experiences and for your amazing videos, 🙏 poppy

  • @Sanchez96d
    @Sanchez96d Před 10 měsíci

    Love it! My banana flowered. Unfortunately late in the season. The dwarf Orinoco

  • @weallmadhere
    @weallmadhere Před 7 měsíci +1

    Thank you! Now I have some excellent tools for success🍌

  • @isaiahwall3689
    @isaiahwall3689 Před rokem +11

    You can grow faster if you maintain a 4 leaf stem, cut off the older leaves so you’re left with 4 leaves. The banana knows how many leaves it needs to produce before it sends a blossom.

    • @TheMillennialGardener
      @TheMillennialGardener  Před rokem +4

      I'm not sure what you mean. My thinking is that more leaves = more solar energy gathered, so that would help the banana complete the cycle more quickly and flower. Wouldn't removing leaves slow the banana down, because it wouldn't be able to absorb as much energy?

    • @edensgardenshed9622
      @edensgardenshed9622 Před 11 měsíci +3

      @@TheMillennialGardenerno actually it will rob energy from the plant to support all those leaves. Keeping fewer leaves gives it more energy to focus on fruiting. Definitely needs some for photosynthesis so 4 is a good number.

  • @metalaid9137
    @metalaid9137 Před 3 měsíci +1

    Thank you. Very useful

  • @jermainelindo6944
    @jermainelindo6944 Před 2 měsíci

    pertunial garden green 🌸🌼🌳🌳🌳🌳🌳bananas groove

  • @shiromyst6967
    @shiromyst6967 Před rokem

    Great advice, i might try and grow some for shade for my hardy Kiwi. Might not go well as ill be pushing the plant zone at 4b

  • @nateross14
    @nateross14 Před rokem

    Awesome video! I'm in Utah zone 6b and am just starting growing Dwarf Cavendish and Mahoi bananas for food. I built a heated greenhouse that will have a winter low temp of about 50 deg and a high of 75-80 so they will never die back. Do you think Dward Cavendish will fruit in my setup with low temps of 50? We get a lot of sun out here even in winter. I also want to get some Of the cultivars you have in this video!

  • @Kinjo2008
    @Kinjo2008 Před rokem

    *Great video these tips are exactly what I utilized to grow my first rack of bananas. Quick Q... Thoughts of Potassium sulfate 0-0-50 for bananas vs muriate?*

  • @jeffsartadventure3634
    @jeffsartadventure3634 Před rokem +3

    Also a great banana tree fertilizer is dead fish. Throw fishing scraps into the hole before you plant them. No smell. If you have an aquarium, the detritus from gravel cleaning is very effective.

  • @spiritworthyamericasdaught1734

    This was fantastic! I want to grow a banana tree. Thank you! 🍌

  • @trudymautz4388
    @trudymautz4388 Před rokem

    Great video, I was wondering what I could use for my dwarf bananas in my zone 6a garden. Do you think if I use these tips and bring them inside, they would fruit even if it was inside?

  • @steveng6269
    @steveng6269 Před 8 měsíci

    Great video as usual! Thanks for posting. 3rd year with bananas. I live in zone 7A and have always cut back my plants to about 12" and covered with yard leaves, NOT Banana cuttings. I will try the banana cutting process this year on your recommendation. My bananas are getting too thick and are spreading because the old dead trunks are no longer sprouting. What is the best practice to thin them out and should I dig out the old hard and dry trunk bases?

  • @ParqForrest
    @ParqForrest Před rokem +1

    Thanks for the info I ordered all 4 varieties today! Which will make 7 varieties in my food Forest!

  • @AJKammerer
    @AJKammerer Před rokem +1

    Also located outside of Wilmy and so inspired by your gardening videos! Hoping to get my little banana plant to bear some fruit!

    • @TheMillennialGardener
      @TheMillennialGardener  Před rokem +1

      Excellent! You may want to watch the banana protection video I have linked in the video. It works well enough to get them to fruit here on mild winters. Last winter was particularly bad, though, so this may be my first year without fruit in 4 years.

    • @AJKammerer
      @AJKammerer Před rokem

      Also, I was thinking about planting mine in a large pot that I could potentially drag inside during winter. Have you had any success doing that with your banana plants to keep them going through winter?

    • @AJKammerer
      @AJKammerer Před rokem

      @@TheMillennialGardener Thanks! I have watched that one in the past. My poor plant right now is in a pot that's way to small for it and I need to decide if I'm going to plant it in the yard or get a bigger pot and try and drag it inside when it starts getting chilly.

  • @raj16900
    @raj16900 Před 3 měsíci

    Thank you sir

  • @moo429
    @moo429 Před rokem

    Hahaha Dude wants me to R.Kelly my banana plants. Pee on 'em. had to burst your chops there. Love your videos. Great nuggets of information

  • @JessicaJLandi
    @JessicaJLandi Před 3 měsíci

    I just got two musa banana 6" trees. We're in zone 7b. I'm planting them near my chicken coop (lots of nitrogen!). Do woodchips make good mulch for banana trees? Or does it have to be straw?

  • @againstallodds404
    @againstallodds404 Před 9 měsíci

    I learned so much. I always cut my leaves and toss them. The pee though 😂😂😂. Thank you the information is priceless

  • @Dayota___
    @Dayota___ Před 3 měsíci +1

    Same here growing bananas, now its going bananas in my back yard 😂😂😂

  • @vinaynayak513
    @vinaynayak513 Před 2 měsíci

    Loved learning from your experience. I have a large plant that has been growing super nice for last couple seasons in zone 8a here in NC but it has not fruited. I got the corm from a friend who doesn’t know the variety either. Even though foliage of banana plant I wonder if it could be something related to banana but inedible.
    Any thoughts? Any way to determine the variety?

  • @tuyetvo4353
    @tuyetvo4353 Před 8 měsíci

    My banana tree doing well this year / have 2nd flowers .
    and some banana young trees around .
    I love ❤ banana trees
    I love ❤️ papayas tree
    Too banana trees plant in small lot …

  • @ultramagapatriot5874
    @ultramagapatriot5874 Před rokem

    Beautiful plants

  • @shirleya.farington2851

    AWESOME 👍!!!!!!!!!!!!!

  • @salguerrero1927
    @salguerrero1927 Před rokem

    Hello from California!!!Thank you for making me laugh this morning 😂 “about peeing on the banana”😂 I just bought a dwarf banana from HD and I’m keeping it indoor cause of extreme heat. Thank u so much for infos…love ur channel n finally subscribed😊

    • @TheMillennialGardener
      @TheMillennialGardener  Před rokem

      Thanks for subscribing! I appreciate it! Trust me on the bananas. They love human urine. Works like a charm!

    • @georgemukela7025
      @georgemukela7025 Před rokem

      Thanx it's been pleasurable listening to your professional presentation & equally the URINE trick!! When cutting off the last tip of the fruit's bunch why leave a single finger?

  • @SerHuntsReviews
    @SerHuntsReviews Před rokem +1

    Picturing you peeing on these bananas just made me laugh ridiculously. Thanks for the tips man! 🙏🏽🙏🏽

    • @TheMillennialGardener
      @TheMillennialGardener  Před rokem +2

      It happens every day during the growing season. No use paying for the city water 😂

  • @randyadams7269
    @randyadams7269 Před rokem +3

    Looks great. I tried your pizza dough recipe Friday and Saturday, turned out great. Thank you for the info

    • @TheMillennialGardener
      @TheMillennialGardener  Před rokem

      Awesome! I’m really happy to hear that! The more you make it, the better it gets. It is a dangerous addiction 😆

    • @TheMillennialGardener
      @TheMillennialGardener  Před rokem

      Awesome! I’m really happy to hear that! The more you make it, the better it gets. It is a dangerous addiction 😆

    • @SAllen-lf7ft
      @SAllen-lf7ft Před rokem

      Where do you find your pizza dough recipe?

    • @randyadams7269
      @randyadams7269 Před rokem

      @@SAllen-lf7ft it’s on the millennial gardener’s channel. 7 months back, pull it up. It is a very crispy dough.

  • @kevincrown7246
    @kevincrown7246 Před 4 měsíci

    idk you, but i love you for this, i bought a 4 foot winterized plant and im really hoping it starts back up. already ordered everything you suggested. and am getting ready to pee!

  • @spearageddon3279
    @spearageddon3279 Před rokem

    Florida here and I grow bananas. VERY IMPRESSED with your dedication and success growing them in your zone! Great tips, however, as my bananas are in my front yard, close to the street, AND I'm a chick, peeing on them is def out of the question! 😂👍😥

  • @spoonnwithsunshinehomestead

    Very informative video! My banana tree fruited this year and I'm in Zone 8a too. I mulch heavily and also chop and drop. This year I fed them kitchen scraps and covered it with the mulch. However when it fruited the flower only produced a few bananas. The rest didn't get pollinated or we're sterile. How do you avoid that?

    • @kylekoenig4730
      @kylekoenig4730 Před rokem +4

      The first crop is usually pretty bad. The next one should be better

    • @macysondheim
      @macysondheim Před rokem

      You avoid it by giving it proper care & nutrition. Let’s say it’s 2 years in the future, and you’re a banana tree. You sprout as a seed & into the sun as the season turns warm to spring. Now, would you like it if someone came along, dumped garbage all over you, and covered you in prickly wood chips? No, you wouldn’t. Do you get some kind of enjoyment out of suffocating plants? Mulch is for trees, genius… not smaller plants or shrubs

  • @carminec6498
    @carminec6498 Před 7 měsíci

    Will your fertilize process work with the Musa basjoo banana tree? I live in Connecticut and I started growing the Musa indoor and looking forward to transplanting them outside in the spring. Any recommendations on indoor growing? Thx for the help

  • @mylittletropicgardenflorid9877

    I only grow dwarf bananas. I’m not climbing a ladder to get my fruit. I grow dwarf cavendish and just started growing the truly tiny variety that only grow 3-4 feet tall. After the banana fruits and I chop off a bunch, then chop down the fruited stem. It will naturally die anyway. So I chop and drop, in addition I always mulch the area. The humidity breaks it down so fast in south Florida we don’t need to chop up the stem after fruiting. If your in a cold area, try the “truly tiny” variety. Thanks for the great video from zone 10b south Florida. 🍌🍌🍌

    • @TheMillennialGardener
      @TheMillennialGardener  Před rokem

      You're welcome! I also don't see much point in growing full-sized banana varieties unless you're selling bananas, or you want to grow a really cool variety like Blue Java and you have no choice. How can one person eat one of those full-sized bunches? There are like 80 bananas on a bunch, and they all ripen at about the same time! The dwarf bunches are perfect for a family garden, and you don't have to worry about climbing, support for the bunches, etc.

  • @anthonystewart8327
    @anthonystewart8327 Před 10 měsíci

    Thank you your ideas

  • @Lo1XDImNoob
    @Lo1XDImNoob Před 6 dny

    Hey I have a question, I have Hi-Yield potash 0 0 60 how much should I do? On the back it says a tablespoon, but I feel like that is too small because my plant is fairly large, so is that one tablespoon per plant?

  • @Billy.t.94
    @Billy.t.94 Před rokem

    I'm in north Mississippi zone 7b trying to grow banna fruit when I rap them in straw do I cover them all the way and do I leave all the leaves

  • @headybrew
    @headybrew Před rokem +12

    I love that you rise to the challenge of growing things that are not necessarily perfectly suited to your climate zone. I am on zone 9B... but zone isn't everything. My 9B is extreme. Blistering hot and dry in the summers, 105+ on a regular basis. But also frosts up in winter. So I'm scared to try certain things. Like Avocado trees... I recently bought an ice cream banana plant and a dwarf Cavendish... Wish me luck.

    • @cari3157
      @cari3157 Před rokem +1

      Me too. Same. But zone 9A

    • @scottL9111
      @scottL9111 Před rokem +2

      I'm zone Zone 9A, just north of Houston Texas. Last year I planted a Cavendish and Nam Wah ladyfinger and this year in April I transplanted them to a different location. And to my shocking surprise the Cavendish is producing bananas! Only two hands worth but I'm extremely happy with it. I protected them during the winter just like he showed us on his videos by putting a cage around them and stuffing it with hay and it worked great. I also just planted an ice cream banana tree and it's growing like crazy with four pups around it.

    • @anitaw7984
      @anitaw7984 Před 10 měsíci

      I am also in Zone 9A. Last my banana tree die down and it came back. I have it in a pot and want to take it inside this Winter. Right now it is beautiful and dont want to Lose it. Thanks for All the Info. Thanks Dale. Fantastic information

  • @marybethwhalen70
    @marybethwhalen70 Před rokem +5

    I almost choked when you said to pee on them, lol! The potash really makes sense. Bananas are high in potassium and I guess they have to get it somewhere. Does your bananas have large seeds? Or do they look like the ones you buy at the grocery store? Thanks for such great content!

    • @TheMillennialGardener
      @TheMillennialGardener  Před rokem +4

      It's funny, but it's true! Bananas LOVE being peed on. If you're willing to do it, they'll greatly appreciate you for it. All my bananas are edible and of high quality. They are all seedless.

  • @orowizard1369
    @orowizard1369 Před rokem +1

    Thanks for the great information. What kind of soil, drainage, watering do they need. You have me convinced to try several types in 8a zone near Dallas. I have nasty sand (really light and dusty?) over clay (about 6" down). I lose almost all plants I plant. May be watering them too much. OH, and when to plant tiny starters?

    • @TheMillennialGardener
      @TheMillennialGardener  Před rokem +2

      Bananas aren't picky. They grow in rainforests, so they tolerate extreme rain and heat. They are salt-tolerant, too. As long as they don't sit in standing water, they should be fine. Just keep them irrigated in summer, because they have a high water demand. I plant them at last chance of frost in spring so they have maximum time to acclimate so the corm can build strength to endure the winter die-back.

  • @tracywalker5431
    @tracywalker5431 Před 3 měsíci

    OHMYGOODNESS! Hi neighbor! I live in Maple Hill, NC about 45 minutes from you. I just bought a lady finger corm. Do you think I can grow her in the ground. Or do you think I should keep her in a pot and move her in & out? Thank you for the video. It was awesome!

  • @shanebep3135
    @shanebep3135 Před rokem

    thank you.

  • @dedsdidgdn
    @dedsdidgdn Před 2 měsíci

    Any tips on transplanting from pot to soil? Mine was stretching the pot so much with 3 big stems and a baby one. When i cut apart the plastic pot, i had thicks roots that hit the bottom and started curling up. Should I take the tree back out of the ground and separate all the bottom roots so they grow out instead of up?

  • @buentaste
    @buentaste Před 11 měsíci +3

    I cannot believe this you can plant bananas 🍌 in USA. I am from a banana republic and dont know how to plant bananas 😅 This is why
    I like greengoes. You try and try and get the impossible done ... unbelievable. This video gonna inspire me to start planting bananas.....Just one observation in tropical weather there are not winter or summer there are wet season and dry season.....at least in my country that us locate in the tropic of ecuator...

  • @lindaxx9640
    @lindaxx9640 Před rokem

    TY!!! Growing bananas now just transplanted 4 pups about 2’ high growing like crazy also have main about 8’ or more & one 4’ 2 more babies 🙂 coming perfect timing I want a wall! + fruit

    • @TheMillennialGardener
      @TheMillennialGardener  Před rokem +1

      Outstanding! Bananas grow like nothing else. They grow so fast, they make my fig trees look lazy. I love the way the leaves sound rustling in the wind. It makes me feel like I'm on a tropical island somewhere.

  • @jeev4divine
    @jeev4divine Před 2 měsíci

    I have dwarf cavendish. Is same method for fertilization? I am blocks away from Biloxi Beach in Mississippi. Few light freezes

  • @vmac8972
    @vmac8972 Před rokem

    I’m in a 6b-7a though our winters usually low average around 20-25 degrees F. I’m in Boise area Idaho which is very dry here with sweltering summers and don’t think they can do full sun but I do have a location in the front. Never tried growing these but my plan was to cut them down to 2 ft. once they die down and fill with dry leaves and the dead musa basjoo leaves inside chicken wire with a tarp over it. Hoping that’ll be good enough.

  • @noraerikaramirez5327
    @noraerikaramirez5327 Před 6 měsíci

    Pee Hahaha! Now I know why my neighbor has huge banana plants!! I hear them early in the morning around her banana plants!! Will try! 😅😂😂

  • @Go-Organic
    @Go-Organic Před 8 měsíci

    wonderful video, thank you so much for sharing , love it. I will try cold hardy banana plant for zone 5. LOL i have 3 boys i will have enough nitrogen solution for the banana plant.

  • @nicoleayala3791
    @nicoleayala3791 Před 2 měsíci

    ❤Thank you

  • @scottgraham7553
    @scottgraham7553 Před rokem +2

    Great video !! Question.. can the fertilizer mixture you outline be used for potted banana as well?

  • @RussellBooth1977
    @RussellBooth1977 Před rokem +1

    I'm lucky to live in an area in Australia which has a similar climate to Charleston in South Carolina which is north of Sydney in Australia in New South Wales (Newcastle) which has a 10a-b USDA plant hardiness zone.
    They do go semi dormant at winter time & our areas climate isn't much different to where my grandfather on my dads side used to grow them commercially 600 kilometres (360 miles) north near the Queensland border where he grew the same lady finger variety that I grow.
    They're grown in a subtropical climate & I am experimenting with growing the Cavendish variety which is commercially grown in the more tropical parts of Queensland in the Tully & Atherton Tablelands areas !

    • @TheMillennialGardener
      @TheMillennialGardener  Před rokem

      I live about 2.5 hours north of Charleston. They get around 5-6 hard freezes, and about 8-12 freezes total, a year there, so bananas still struggle. They're a *very* weak Zone 9a, so bananas often die back there and require some protection, though they perform better there than where I live in 8a. I've been to Sydney in May, and while it got cold there at night, it stays frost-free, so bananas perform a lot better. The stuff at the botanical gardens looks absolutely magnificent. Things were definitely in dormancy, but everything looked beautiful and held their form.
      I would actually advise against Cavendish, solely because they're found in grocery stores. You can get them anywhere. Most people say the best tasting bananas are Mysore and Namwah. Growers "go bananas" for Mysore. If you can find that, maybe give that a shot? I would grow it, but it is a tall banana that can grow 15-20ft (5-6 meters), so I can't protect it in my 8a climate.

  • @CaraHillVoiceoverArtist

    Great video! I was not doing any of these things with my banana trees. No wonder thay are only 2 ft tall after a year or two. Poor things have been starving. Off to your store to get them some food! Thanks so much! 😃

    • @TheMillennialGardener
      @TheMillennialGardener  Před rokem

      Bananas are very heavy feeders. I think they're the heaviest feeders of anything I grow, even more than figs. They need constant organic matter. The good news is that the banana plants themselves contain tons of nutrients, so if you chop up and mulch the old leaves and pseudostems religiously, the requirement for fertilizer goes down. When the bananas are young and you don't have that thick "rainforest mulch layer," they need more supplemental fertilizers.

  • @renovclean2
    @renovclean2 Před rokem

    Live in East Texas, pine needles OK for banana trees? And how do you prune them or do you?

  • @shantishanti1949
    @shantishanti1949 Před rokem

    What size do you get for your dwarf Bananas and where from... so they are delivered to you at what height before you plant them ??? The first time you plant them. I understand once planted they continue to throw up shoots as one fruits and dies etc

  • @barbarafritchie2000
    @barbarafritchie2000 Před rokem

    Thank you.

  • @lenacummings1313
    @lenacummings1313 Před 17 dny

    What about dwarf cavendish? What kind of sun exposure in zone 9? I did not realize they are undergrowth. Please help!

  • @justjenn9011
    @justjenn9011 Před rokem

    I live in zone 6b, we can get some cold tenps but it averages around 20 to 40 in the winter usually. Only dips below that when we have a big snow storm come in. Now, i have a dwarf cavendish and a dwarf basjoo. Could i grow these outdoors and do this method to help keep them alive? Or would one possibly do better? And i can keep the other inside like i was planning.

    • @TheMillennialGardener
      @TheMillennialGardener  Před rokem

      You can plant the Musa Basjoo outdoors, and it will survive. After the first few light freezes knock the pseudostems down, you will just need to dump mulch (grass clippings, chopped leaves, etc.) on top of the corm to insulate it, then chop-and-drop the leaves and pseudostems up around it. Then, rake the mulch off in the spring so the ground warms up and it regenerates. Musa Basjoo does not have edible fruit, so it doesn't make sense to overwinter the pseudostems. The cavendish probably won't survive in-ground in your zone, and it would be very difficult to keep them alive. You'd have to build a heated greenhouse around them.

  • @beautifulsunrise6308
    @beautifulsunrise6308 Před rokem +4

    Thanks for info! I am also in 8a NC zone, so your videos are very helpful to me. From where did you buy these varieties? Would love to get hold of one of them.

    • @TheMillennialGardener
      @TheMillennialGardener  Před rokem +7

      I recommend checking out Banana Man Larry at bountifulgardennursery.com. He always has a few things in stock. I've purchased several things from him. Super common bananas like Dwarf Namwah and Dwarf Orinoco can usually be purchased off eBay for dirt cheap. I wouldn't buy any "rare" banana off eBay. They're usually a scam.

    • @beautifulsunrise6308
      @beautifulsunrise6308 Před rokem

      @@TheMillennialGardener thanks for the prompt response

  • @lurklingX
    @lurklingX Před rokem

    you're right - i was totally surprised to see bananas pop up on your vids because i know you are north of me and that means freezes. had no IDEA you could grow bananas in non-tropical areas. i was getting so used to having to give up on a lot of things that would have grown in FL but i didn't have any space to. and now in GA, have space, can't grow things like lemons, limes, or passionflower. :/