By
Norman Winter Next to
the leaf of the palm, the leaves of the banana tree are
perhaps the most decorative for lending a touch of the
tropics to our backyard. Gardeners
in northern states think we have a tropical climate. Coastal
areas along the Gulf of Mexico have a long summer lasting
from mid-May to October with more than 250 frost free days.
During our summer, tropical plants like the banana grow with
an almost reckless abandon. Late summer is when many of
these banana stalks are the most showy. Large
stalks can produce edible bananas after a mild winter like
this past one. Such is the case with Mrs. Ann Lee of Terry.
She cuts her bananas back in early winter, builds a wire
cage around the clump and fills in with leaves which add
good insulation. Mulch heavily year-round to hold summer
moisture and protect from winter freeze. If the bananas come
out and produce their flowers and fruit early enough, they
can reach the edible stage before the first freeze in the
fall. A friend
of mine in Tulsa annually cut his back to about three feet.
He then digs them up and places them in a protected area of
the garage. He always has bananas. In Texas, I dug mine but
only cut back the portion with leaves. Instead of a stack of
logs, I had a stack of banana trees. One
other cultivation practice that will help your plants
produce flowers and fruit is to keep sucker plants from
developing or growing until the mother plant produces the
bloom and fruit. Then select about two pups and let them
grow for the next year. If you
are eager to have larger fruit as well as to encourage
ripening, it is best to cut the flower stalk off after the
last hand of bananas has been formed. The rest of the
flower, which is pretty, is strictly the male or pollen
producing portion of the flower. No use letting the banana
use its energy for these flowers. Let me
remind you that this flower is pretty and unique, so if you
do not care about the fruit then let it be and get your
bananas at the grocery. We
really have a lot of choices of bananas for the landscape
from the giant sized, to the rose banana or ornamental
banana. This banana almost always flowers and forms large
clumps reaching about 10 feet in height. One
banana, known as Musa velutina, produces gorgeous flowers
followed by hot-pink velvety bananas. It is striking in the
tropical garden. This one is not too hard to find in garden
centers in the spring. If you want to check these out before
next year, look at the pretty ones at Mynelle Gardens in
Jackson. Some
bananas are grown strictly for foliage, such as the blood
banana. Mynelle also has the prettiest clump of these that I
have seen outside of French Martinique. They have leaves
painted with dark blotches of red on the top-side while the
bottom side of the leaf is all red. If you
give them lots water and fertilize monthly, bananas will put
on an astounding rate of growth. Those at Terry are about 20
feet tall. Bananas
with their huge leaves and massive stalks symbolize the
tropical garden and it's one you can have for your special
backyard retreat around the porch, patio, deck or
pool. Released:
Sept. 3, 1998 Editor's Note: Ideal publication dates of Southern Gardening columns are within one month of their release. Editors should examine older columns carefully for any information that could be time sensitive.
Southern
Gardening
Go Bananas With
Tropical Stalks
Horticulturist
Central Mississippi Research & Extension
Center
Contact: Norman Winter, (601) 857-2284
Visit: DAFVM
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Last Modified: Friday, 17-Aug-07 14:43:44
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