Both bunches continue to grow :)
Pioneering in aquaponics and high tunnel growing; specializing in bananas, rare figs, and pure blue tilapia.
Saturday, March 29, 2014
Friday, March 14, 2014
Another banana bunch, another mystery
Another bunch has arrived on the scene. This one was sold to me as a Raja Puri, but it lacks red lining on the edge of its petioles, so it isn't that cultivar. Probably another Dwarf Orinoco.
Here's a pic of the emerging bunch:
And here's a pic of both mystery bunches (older one is on the far right).
Here's a pic of the emerging bunch:
And here's a pic of both mystery bunches (older one is on the far right).
Saturday, February 22, 2014
Mystery Musa Update
The Mystery Musa is probably a Musa 'Dwarf Orinoco' (ABB). I had originally thought this bunch looked like that of a DO, but I had thought DO fruit had to be triangular in cross section, whereas these fruit had 4 or 5 sides. Turns out DO fruit just needs to be angular, not necessarily triangular.
The recent cloudy cold spell (temps down to about -8F) has kept growth to a minimum. The main change has been the appearance of brown spots on the tops of the fruits, presumably an indication of cold damage. Here are some pics:
And here are a couple of pics from a neighboring mat. This was sold to me as Raja Puri, but it lacks the requisite red edging on the petioles, so I fear that it, too, is a Dwarf Orinoco.
The recent cloudy cold spell (temps down to about -8F) has kept growth to a minimum. The main change has been the appearance of brown spots on the tops of the fruits, presumably an indication of cold damage. Here are some pics:
And here are a couple of pics from a neighboring mat. This was sold to me as Raja Puri, but it lacks the requisite red edging on the petioles, so I fear that it, too, is a Dwarf Orinoco.
Sunday, January 26, 2014
Unknown Musa
This banana was sold to me as a Musa 'Double' (AAA), which is a type of Cavendish banana, the yellow bananas so commonly seen in American grocery stores.
Cavendish bananas typically have wine marks on juvenile leaves and wide-open petioles (the part of the leaf between the blade and the trunk-like pseudostem), but my plant has never had any wine marks (I got it as a 4" tall baby) and has petioles that range from 2/3 to fully closed, which is a trait associated with ABB and AAB varieties rather than AAA varieties. Furthermore, whereas Cavendish bananas are extremely susceptible to cold (like my 'Dwarf Cavendish' and 'Williams Hybrid' planted nearby that went dormant early on and started dying back), this plant has kept pace with my hardiest varieties.
My best guess heading into the inflorescence was that it was either a 'Dwarf Namwah' (ABB) or 'Raja Puri' (AAB). Now that it has started flowering (p-stem 5'6") and the first hand is exposed, DN appears unlikely, since Namwahs have purple pedicels (the connectors between the individual fruits and the base of the hand), but this plant produces green pedicels. [see http://www.bananas.org/f2/ice-cream-blue-java-flag-leaf-16568.html for pics of purple pedicels on a Namwah]
Pics of the fruit and the petioles:
Some additional pics (I used a water heater to help keep the flower going):
Cavendish bananas typically have wine marks on juvenile leaves and wide-open petioles (the part of the leaf between the blade and the trunk-like pseudostem), but my plant has never had any wine marks (I got it as a 4" tall baby) and has petioles that range from 2/3 to fully closed, which is a trait associated with ABB and AAB varieties rather than AAA varieties. Furthermore, whereas Cavendish bananas are extremely susceptible to cold (like my 'Dwarf Cavendish' and 'Williams Hybrid' planted nearby that went dormant early on and started dying back), this plant has kept pace with my hardiest varieties.
My best guess heading into the inflorescence was that it was either a 'Dwarf Namwah' (ABB) or 'Raja Puri' (AAB). Now that it has started flowering (p-stem 5'6") and the first hand is exposed, DN appears unlikely, since Namwahs have purple pedicels (the connectors between the individual fruits and the base of the hand), but this plant produces green pedicels. [see http://www.bananas.org/f2/ice-cream-blue-java-flag-leaf-16568.html for pics of purple pedicels on a Namwah]
Pics of the fruit and the petioles:
Some additional pics (I used a water heater to help keep the flower going):
Tuesday, January 21, 2014
Winter 2014 Aquaponics Update
High tunnel aquaponics system (no need for this nonstop lettuce rotation to be pretty, most of the heads just get tossed into the water as fish food):
Semi-pit tunnel greenhouse:
Rooting some fig cuttings:
Semi-pit tunnel greenhouse:
Rooting some fig cuttings:
Friday, December 20, 2013
Fig pics
Here are some pics from early October of the 2nd-year figs I'm growing. They didn't start going dormant until the outside temps dropped to near-zero recently.
LSU Purple
Green Ischia
Black Mission
LSU Purple
Green Ischia
Black Mission
Sunday, October 27, 2013
Another Dwarf Cavendish Inflorescence
Here's a DC blooming at just 3.5' of pstem. It doesn't have many leaves because they kept getting fried from too much light/heat and not enough water.
Here's an updated pic of the Williams Hybrid bunch:
Here's an updated pic of the Williams Hybrid bunch:
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