which banana would be suitable for the north east coast?
which banana would be suitable for the north east coast?
i want to start growing a couple of specimen banana plants next year, but i'd prefer only the hardiest variety(ies) that would need minimum protection such as cutting them down and cover with mulch or something. no dig-up and bring in varieties as my mum is very awkward about having plants inside.
are there any types like that?
as i mention i'm not bothered if they get killed off and cut down in winter so long as they are reliably root hardy and will grow back without issues the next spring
cheers, PL
are there any types like that?
as i mention i'm not bothered if they get killed off and cut down in winter so long as they are reliably root hardy and will grow back without issues the next spring
cheers, PL
Re: which banana would be suitable for the north east coast?
I've never seen any banana grown up here - I suspect cold winds would do them in too much
- Dave Brown
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Re: which banana would be suitable for the north east coast?
Musa basjoo would be at least root hardy, but I'm not sure how much summer growth you'd get, and not the best banana for windy locations. Musella lasicarpa may also be winter hardy and more wind tolerant, but would probably need the most sheltered microclimate to grow in summer.
Best regards
Dave
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Roll on summer.....
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Dave
_________________________________________________
Roll on summer.....
http://www.hardytropicals.co.uk
Re: which banana would be suitable for the north east coast?
wouldn't hurt to try basjoo.
i'd also try sikkimensis and musella at least once.
i'd also try sikkimensis and musella at least once.
Re: which banana would be suitable for the north east coast?
It's the winds that would do them in, shred the leaves to bits and they'd look really tatty in no time.
Basjoo worth try if you can site it somewhere out of strong winds. Not easy in the NE especially near the coast.
Basjoo worth try if you can site it somewhere out of strong winds. Not easy in the NE especially near the coast.
Re: which banana would be suitable for the north east coast?
I've grown musa basjoo, these would overwinter ok for you I think.
I've grown musa sikkimensis , But I think you would struggle to overwinter unless you have a heated greenhouse. They do grow quickly and I found the sikkimensis fairly wind resistant.
Ensete grow well up here but again you will need to overwinter.
Mushtaq, pops in from time to time and he will give you some proper advice.
I've grown musa sikkimensis , But I think you would struggle to overwinter unless you have a heated greenhouse. They do grow quickly and I found the sikkimensis fairly wind resistant.
Ensete grow well up here but again you will need to overwinter.
Mushtaq, pops in from time to time and he will give you some proper advice.
Re: which banana would be suitable for the north east coast?
I think bananas would do ok up with you conifers especially in a sheltered place.
Re: which banana would be suitable for the north east coast?
Yep, easily. But remember the only sheltered place around here is inside a reinforced steel structureDarlo Mark wrote:I think bananas would do ok up with you conifers especially in a sheltered place.
Re: which banana would be suitable for the north east coast?
Dave - we do have a summer up here you know! quite a scorcher this year and last year too as a whole, dry season from late March to early May then a bit of rain inbetween apart from late July/August when we have tropical monsoons and hail storms every now and then..
goggle - very funny, haa
right then, well those two are deffs on me shopping list for next spring
cheers!
goggle - very funny, haa
right then, well those two are deffs on me shopping list for next spring
cheers!
Re: which banana would be suitable for the north east coast?
I have bought a couple of Musa basjoo this year that im planting out next year in the border and trying to overwinter outside, fingers crossed!!palm lad wrote:Dave - we do have a summer up here you know! quite a scorcher this year and last year too as a whole, dry season from late March to early May then a bit of rain inbetween apart from late July/August when we have tropical monsoons and hail storms every now and then..
goggle - very funny, haa
right then, well those two are deffs on me shopping list for next spring
cheers!
Re: which banana would be suitable for the north east coast?
palm lad wrote:Dave - we do have a summer up here you know! quite a scorcher this year and last year too as a whole, dry season from late March to early May then a bit of rain inbetween apart from late July/August when we have tropical monsoons and hail storms every now and then..
goggle - very funny, haa
right then, well those two are deffs on me shopping list for next spring
cheers!
Palm lad are you sure you live in the North East? I want to know what day was a scorcher, as I missed it
Re: which banana would be suitable for the north east coast?
If you can get a "proper" Helen's Hybrid that would be worth a go as the leaves are about the best of the many species i have tried in resisting wind shredding. Its a Sikki hybrid so planted deep enough should be root hardy but mulch heavily in winter to protect.
- Dave Brown
- Site Admin
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Re: which banana would be suitable for the north east coast?
Alan, I lost my Helen's Hybrid to ground level down here in the winter 2008/9 but came back to about 4 feet in summer 2009. Winter 2009/10 killed it outright, so may be a bit of a gamble in NE.
Palm Lad, I said about your lack of summer as that is what most people up there say. A 20C summer day here is cool, but I have heard some in NE refer to those temps as "a scorcher".
Palm Lad, I said about your lack of summer as that is what most people up there say. A 20C summer day here is cool, but I have heard some in NE refer to those temps as "a scorcher".
Best regards
Dave
_________________________________________________
Roll on summer.....
http://www.hardytropicals.co.uk
Dave
_________________________________________________
Roll on summer.....
http://www.hardytropicals.co.uk
Re: which banana would be suitable for the north east coast?
You call 20C cool? I remember this summer when it was 18C, the beach was packed, beer gardens full etc.......Dave Brown wrote: A 20C summer day here is cool, but I have heard some in NE refer to those temps as "a scorcher".