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Tim \(BBC\) 26-12-2002 10:17 PM

Unhappy Banana Plant
 
I have a small Banana Plant (indoor). Over the summer it was very healthy,
new shoots, leaves and a thick stem, however, some small shoots have opened
in the soil at the bottom of the plant. Now it's winter and the once healthy
thick stem (trunk) has got very thin. Does anyone know what I need to do to
get it healthy again? Or is this something that happens in the winter?

Any help would be great!

Best Regards

Tim



Dwayne 27-12-2002 04:48 AM

Unhappy Banana Plant
 
Hello. My wife says to get a plant light and shine it on the trees. She
also takes a water bottle and "mists" them every day. You dont want to over
water them. If the soil is damp a finger length down, leave it alone.

You might also take a long sharp knife and cut the small shoots off and
transplant them into a separate pot of their own. You might feed them all
with a balanced fertilizer also. She does it about every 6 months.

Good luck. Dwayne



"Tim (BBC)" wrote in message
...
I have a small Banana Plant (indoor). Over the summer it was very healthy,
new shoots, leaves and a thick stem, however, some small shoots have

opened
in the soil at the bottom of the plant. Now it's winter and the once

healthy
thick stem (trunk) has got very thin. Does anyone know what I need to do

to
get it healthy again? Or is this something that happens in the winter?

Any help would be great!

Best Regards

Tim





[email protected] 27-12-2002 01:38 PM

Unhappy Banana Plant
 
Nanas are a devil to keep looking healthy in winter due to their
preference for very high light levels, heat and humidity. Almost
inevitably, plants kept in the house will look much sadder than those
kept in a warm greenhouse, simply because light levels indoors at this
time of year are so low as to be almost useless to such sun-lovers.
They simply lose more and more leaves, reducing to a feeble-looking
'trunk. Your best bet is to keep the plant in a cool, brightly lit
spot for the rest of the winter and allow the compost to nearly dry
out between waterings. This will enforce semi-dormancy until
conditions are more amenable to strong growth.

In spring, when your plant appear to be making concerted efforts to
grow, move it to a warmer, well it spot and increase watering
gradually. Once several new leaves have been produced, pot on using a
much larger container. Place plenty of drainage material in the
bottom and infill around the roots using a 50/50 mix of mutli-purpose
compost and John Innes No2. You should add extra sand, fine grit or
perlite to keep the medium porous and free draining. After about 3 or
4 weeks, you can resume feeding using full strength Miracle-Gro or
similar.

HTH

Dave Poole
TORQUAY UK

Tim \(BBC\) 27-12-2002 04:03 PM

Unhappy Banana Plant
 
Thanks for your help with this!
I'll give you sugestions a try!

Best Regards

Tim

wrote in message
...
Nanas are a devil to keep looking healthy in winter due to their
preference for very high light levels, heat and humidity. Almost
inevitably, plants kept in the house will look much sadder than those
kept in a warm greenhouse, simply because light levels indoors at this
time of year are so low as to be almost useless to such sun-lovers.
They simply lose more and more leaves, reducing to a feeble-looking
'trunk. Your best bet is to keep the plant in a cool, brightly lit
spot for the rest of the winter and allow the compost to nearly dry
out between waterings. This will enforce semi-dormancy until
conditions are more amenable to strong growth.

In spring, when your plant appear to be making concerted efforts to
grow, move it to a warmer, well it spot and increase watering
gradually. Once several new leaves have been produced, pot on using a
much larger container. Place plenty of drainage material in the
bottom and infill around the roots using a 50/50 mix of mutli-purpose
compost and John Innes No2. You should add extra sand, fine grit or
perlite to keep the medium porous and free draining. After about 3 or
4 weeks, you can resume feeding using full strength Miracle-Gro or
similar.

HTH

Dave Poole
TORQUAY UK





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