Showing posts with label Musa basjoo. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Musa basjoo. Show all posts

Saturday, April 6, 2024

Musa basjoo flowering

I speculated at the beginning of March that my 'hardy' banana, Musa basjoo, might flower this year.  I was right.  Almost immediately after posting that I noticed a fat bud begin to emerge from the top of one of the pseudostems.  A little to my surprise it wasn't the tallest or the thickest of them.  Upright at first...


...the bud stem elongates and the fat bud droops below the horizontal.  Unfortunately for the display the wind has played havoc with the unfurling leaves of the banana and the opening bud now sits among the wreckage.


The bud then opens to reveal the flowers, clustered at the base of the bracts.  .


Each pair of bracts will open in turn to reveal another set of flowers as the season progresses.  I may even get small bananas forming though these are not edible.

I've grown Musa basjoo for many years but this is the first flowering.  With luck and more mild winters it won't be the last.


Sunday, March 10, 2024

Musa basjoo - the 'hardy' banana

I'm seeing new growth on my bananas.  New leaves are emerging.  This is the 'hardy' banana, Musa basjoo, from the foothills of the Himalayas.  I grow it unprotected in my Plymouth garden, accepting that, if we have a really bad winter, I'll lose the tall pseudostems to ground level.  Fortunately, we haven't had one of those for a few years and the pseudostems have grown tall.  Tall enough that, perhaps, one or more may even flower - and then die.  They leave offsets - but these take time to grow from the rootstock.  So, hopefully they won't all flower at once...

...and continue to provide these sort of displays in my small rear garden.





Friday, March 30, 2012

The bananas are back

A couple of weeks of unseasonal warmth for the end of March has really accelerated the new spring growth in the garden.  It has helped that the winter now, hopefully, over was shorter and milder than the previous three years - but even so, this year looks like being advanced in its seasons.  And it has certainly brought the bananas back to life a little earlier than I expected.

I grow three.  The 'hardy' banana Musa basjoo; the red abyssinian banana Ensete ventricosum 'Maurelii'; and the Chinese dwarf banana, Musella lasiocarpa.  All were new last year, replacements for older plants I lost over the previous two winters.  All three have survived last winter.  With protection.  I've learned a good deal since my more optimistic exotic gardening days of a few years ago.  Fortunately, all three are readily and cheaply available as summer bedding plants thanks to tissue culture propagation techniques so replacement wasn't too painful.  Even so, they'll be far larger and do far better in their second year so successful overwintering is a definite bonus

Musa basjoo spent last summer in a large pot.  I only bought it in July so it didn't really have a chance to get going before autumn and then winter slowed growth.  We had one bad week in early February when I had to provide some in situ protection but it has stayed outside all winter long.  I find that the fleshy stems will take about -5 or -6C before terminally succumbing to frost though well established clumps can regenerate from the roots after even lower temperatures.   For ultimate height, though, you do need to protect the stems from year to year.  I never did with my old clump and the 2009-2010 winter finished it off.  Though not before it got to this size:

Musa basjoo towers over Dicksonia antarctica summer 2007
Sadly this was the peak of it's growth.  My neighbours had removed a good deal of hedging and tall shrubbery which deprived the clump of wind protection.  The foliage never looked good and the clump was declining in vigour even before harsh winter weather finished it off.

Now I'm starting again. So it was a relief to lop the dry, blackened top third of my single stemmed plant to reveal an intact growing point.  Two weeks later and growth is evident. 

New roller developing on Musa basjoo
Now to find a well manured, sunny spot out of the wind for the explosion of summer growth.

Ensete ventricosum 'Maurelii' must be one of the most spectacular perennials that can be grown in cool temperate climates.  Even as a young plant it oozes exotica.  This was mine after four months growth last year:

Ensete ventricosum 'Maurelii', Autumn 2011
The standard advice is to grow the plant in full sun.  Mine was in the shade of my camellia / chusquea / cordyline dividing 'wall' in the middle of the garden.  It thrived.  I don't think I've seen better colours on this plant, sumptuous wine red undersides to the paddle shaped leaves, dark bronzed upper sides.  It looked spectacular. 

Overwintering consisted of digging up the plant with a small rootball, draining off the water that collects in the leaf bases by inverting it for a couple of days and then standing it upright in a tiny pot in the corner of my little shade house.  When the weather got frosty I moved it inside - then out again when conditions eased.  Here's the pot.  It's only for support.

Ensete ventricosum 'Maurelii' in its overwintering pot
It started regrowing about three weeks ago.  This is how it looked today:


Growth is astonishingly fast.  It's now too big for the spot I had it last year - but I've got another spot picked out.  Not in shade this time.

The final one of my bananas is Musella lasiocarpa.  Again, I've grown it before and lost it to the unexpected harsh winter of 2009 - 2010.  So I couldn't resist a very cut price end of season specimen in one of my local DIY sheds last Autumn.  This overwintered unprotected and is now sprouting again.  No pictures of this one yet - but I'll take some in the summer when I expect it to be an interesting part of my display.