Ensete maurelli over wintered dry.

Basjoo

Sikkimensis

Musella lasiocarpa

Ensete Maurelii comes from around 1700 to 2400m so temps between 5 and 25 occur in it's winter and it withstands a 2 to 8 month dry season. This means it is adaptable to even cooler areas of UK in summer, and happy to overwinter dryRabbie wrote: Ensete maurelli over wintered dry.![]()
Basjoo![]()
Sikkimensis![]()
Musella lasiocarpa
I'm standing by my previous statement, Mekong won't be hardy here. I can't even get the bleedin' things to grow at any speed outside the greenhouse, next year they'll both go in the ground (was supposed to have been this year but they've no chance, grow slower than the other two Itinerans forms), year after they'll be dead. Absolutely certain of it.Mr List wrote:here, basjoo then nothing , unless Mekong scrapes a place on the list.
grub wrote:I'm standing by my previous statement, Mekong won't be hardy here. I can't even get the bleedin' things to grow at any speed outside the greenhouse, next year they'll both go in the ground (was supposed to have been this year but they've no chance, grow slower than the other two Itinerans forms), year after they'll be dead. Absolutely certain of it.Mr List wrote:here, basjoo then nothing , unless Mekong scrapes a place on the list.
About 4 years now, on a sheltered warm spot in compost and clay. Measured from the top of the highest leaf around 4-4.2 m (13-14 ft) For some reason mine is getting tall, not fat. Don't know why...DiCasS wrote:Wow Eddie, how old is your 14 ft. muerelli? I'd be surprised if I'd have seen it, as I had no idea they grew that big.
Di
like alocasia and colocasia that can be hardy for americans but not here,miketropic wrote:grub wrote:I'm standing by my previous statement, Mekong won't be hardy here. I can't even get the bleedin' things to grow at any speed outside the greenhouse, next year they'll both go in the ground (was supposed to have been this year but they've no chance, grow slower than the other two Itinerans forms), year after they'll be dead. Absolutely certain of it.Mr List wrote:here, basjoo then nothing , unless Mekong scrapes a place on the list.
You get the same lows that I do over winter and that is why I usually listen to what you say it hardy but I have to disagree. I will say I have never left them completly unprotected..mulch at the very very least but usually a tomato cage full of straw and some plastic does the trick..keeps about 4 ft of p stem and they take off as soon as it gets warm.