The surprise success with plantings this year has been the banana “plant”….. Not really a tree but most folks refer to them as trees. This was the second year after panting the first corms. I was given one that should have produced “Manzano” bananas but has yet to fruit. The other was a mystery….If Marcelino’s father told me I must have not understood or heard. The unknown variety has produced a very nice large bunch and along the way I learned a lot about the growth habits of bananas. An internet search leads me to believe that the bananas are “Pera”.
Once the plant matures a stem growing inside the pseudostem (trunk for lack of a better term) emerges from the top. As it curls downward it has what looks like a purplish heart looking bulb, an “inflorescence”. Looks like tightly wrapped paired leaves.
“A stem develops which grows up inside the pseudostem, carrying the immature inflorescence until eventually it emerges at the top. Each pseudostem normally produces a single inflorescence, also known as the “banana heart”. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Banana#CITEREFStoverSimmonds1987.
It was interesting watching the top two leaves open up and expose the flowers. The first that are exposed are the female flowers that develop into fruit. Each time the purple leaves open it exposes another tier of flower bracts. As the bananas fill in, maybe 8 to as many as 20 tiers the heart now begins to produce male flowers that appear to be useless….once they appear, they dry up and drop off. At first I thought I had a problem but learned that was normal.
Once the banana has plumped up nicely and doesn’t seem to be enlarging I have been whacking off three or four at a time and allowing them to ripen indoors. They will stay nicely on the plant until the weather turns cold. After that I will cut the entire stalk and hang it in the garage to ripen slowly.
Indoor hanging storage
Gardening activities have included building up a raised bed by adding more compost and mounding it up for planting strawberries. The cucumbers are done but the dang asparagus keeps sending up new shoots, not many but enough to snack on while weeding. The Matt’s Wild Cherry tomato plant has begun producing again….they are small but tasty….pea sized to a little less than cherry sized. My Poblano pepper plant is churning out tons of dark green peppers.
My bees are now residing elsewhere but I am making more local contacts that are willing to host hives for me. I have a home for the top bar hives about 5 minutes from my house – Yee Haw. The productive Langstroth is too far away but it is in a good home. I am aiming for 10-12 hives next year and possibly 20 the year following. The new Texas regulations allow me to sell at Farmers Markets now….as long as I do not exceed 2500 pounds per year….that is a lot of honey!

This will give you an idea how big the slabs of comb are. This one had an ear on the left hand side broke off.
Side note; I bottled the Honey Blonde Ale a few nights ago…..made with MY honey. It will be awesome! The color was perfect, a hint of honey flavor but not too sweet.
TTFN
Bishop
Oct 19, 2015 @ 21:58:10
But you didn’t tell us how the bananas TASTE!
LikeLike
Oct 20, 2015 @ 00:51:56
Yes Patti, you are right. They taste superb. Texture is creamier and flavor is richer.
LikeLike
Oct 26, 2015 @ 02:37:07
Fabulous! Congratulations!! 😀
LikeLike
Oct 26, 2015 @ 17:08:48
The taste is wonderful. Similar to the store bought common banana but creamier in texture. They also make my smoothies much thicker.
LikeLike
Oct 28, 2015 @ 04:49:08
Your garden is just delightful! This is the first time in my life that I really don’t have much of a vegetable garden going, and I have missed it terribly. Thank you for sharing yours. And the banana plant (tree) is just wonderful. I’m so impressed!
LikeLike
Oct 28, 2015 @ 15:02:34
Thanks Debra. I remember there was a small banana plantation along 101 between Ventura and Carpenteria. They gree many varieties but I think a mudslide took them out. I am hoping the second variety I have produces next summer.
LikeLike