Shipping Estimate
USA
- USA
- CAN
- USA
- CAN
Ships within 48 hours · Estimated delivery Jul 11 - Jul 16
For Your Every Summer RSVP, with Code: SUMMER15
Description
musa basjoo 10.5cm potted plant x 2 Musa basjooMusa basjoo Musa basjoo is the hardy Japanese fibre banana, grown for huge green leaves, fast summer growth, and regrowth from a protected rhizome in cold climates. The upright trunk like part is a pseudostem made from overlapping leaf sheaths, while the perennial growing point sits in the underground rhizome. In milder European gardens, sheltered patios, and large containers, Musa basjoo can build height quickly during warm weather. The leaves can
Musa basjoo
Musa basjoo is the hardy Japanese fibre banana, grown for huge green leaves, fast summer growth, and regrowth from a protected rhizome in cold climates. The upright trunk-like part is a pseudostem made from overlapping leaf sheaths, while the perennial growing point sits in the underground rhizome.
In milder European gardens, sheltered patios, and large containers, Musa basjoo can build height quickly during warm weather. The leaves can reach impressive size in a single season, while the pseudostems create a strong vertical clump. In cold winters the top growth may be damaged or cut back, but a protected rhizome can push fresh shoots again when temperatures rise.
Huge summer leaves from a hardy Musa basjoo base
- Growth habit: Suckering herbaceous perennial with pseudostems rising from a rhizomatous base.
- Foliage: Very large paddle-shaped green leaves arch from the top of the pseudostem.
- Seasonal behaviour: Evergreen in mild conditions, but often cut back by cold and regrown from the base.
- Flowering: Mature plants may produce cream to yellow flowers, followed by small inedible fruits.
- Outdoor use: Strongest in protected outdoor positions, large containers, and gardens where the base can be protected in winter.
Southern Chinese hardy banana background for Musa basjoo
Musa basjoo is an accepted species in the Musaceae family, native to southern China and widely grown as an ornamental hardy banana. It develops thick pseudostems from tightly packed leaf bases, while the rhizome can produce suckers around the main stem. Each pseudostem flowers only once when mature; after flowering and fruiting, that pseudostem dies, while the plant continues from new shoots.
This subtropical banana grows fastest with warmth, sun, moisture, and rich soil. During cold wet weather, the roots need drainage and aeration around the rhizome. In European climates, strong summer growth, winter drainage, and frost protection decide how much of the plant returns after winter. In pots, the root zone is more exposed to cold than in the ground, so container plants need extra attention before frost.
Summer growth and winter protection for Musa basjoo
- Light: Give full sun to bright partial shade outdoors. Strong light encourages thicker pseudostems and larger leaves.
- Watering: Water generously during warm active growth. In containers, check often because large leaves transpire quickly.
- Humidity and exposure: Outdoor humidity is usually less important than wind shelter and steady soil moisture. Dry wind can mark or split the soft leaves quickly.
- Substrate and soil: Use fertile, moisture-retentive but well-drained soil. Add organic matter for summer growth, but keep the root zone open enough to drain in winter.
- Repotting and pot choice: Use a heavy, stable container with drainage holes. Repot or root-prune container plants when the rhizome fills the pot or water runs through too quickly.
- Temperature: Musa basjoo is hardier than most bananas, but the leaves and pseudostems can be damaged by frost. Protect the base in cold regions.
- Winter protection: Mulch the rhizome heavily outdoors and protect the pseudostem if you want to preserve height. Potted plants kept leafy need a bright, frost-free place; cut-back dormant pots can be overwintered cool and frost-free with very little water.
- Feeding: Feed regularly in spring and summer. Large seasonal growth needs steady nutrients.
- Placement: Choose a warm, sheltered position with space for broad leaves and new suckers. Avoid exposed corners where wind hits the leaves directly.
- Wind protection: Banana leaves naturally split, but strong wind can shred them quickly.
- Pruning: Remove damaged leaves as needed. Cut frost-damaged pseudostems back only to firm tissue or to the base if they have collapsed.
- Growth rate: Growth is fast in warm weather with regular water and feeding, then slows sharply in cold soil.
- Semi-hydroponics: Use fertile soil or a large, well-drained container mix for long-term outdoor cultivation.
- Propagation: Divide strong, rooted suckers during active growth. Small unrooted shoots should be left attached.
Diagnosing wind, cold and rot damage on Musa basjoo
- Shredded leaves: Usually caused by wind exposure. Move container plants to a more sheltered place or plant in a protected position.
- Winter collapse: Soft pseudostems after frost are common. Cut back damaged tissue and protect the rhizome so new shoots can return.
- Yellowing leaves in summer: Check water and nutrients first. Musa basjoo is a heavy grower and can pale when underfed or dry.
- Rot at the base: Often caused by cold, wet, poorly drained soil. Improve drainage and avoid winter waterlogging.
- Slow spring regrowth: Cold soil delays new shoots. Keep the base protected until stable warmth returns.
- Pests under cover: Spider mites, aphids, and scale may appear when overwintering plants in sheltered spaces. Inspect new shoots and leaf undersides.
Growing Musa basjoo in pots or the ground
Musa basjoo can be grown in a very large container, but it performs best when the pot is stable, well-drained, and large enough to buffer moisture. In the ground, the plant has more root insulation and can build stronger seasonal growth. By late season, the leaves may look worn because wind, rain, and sun all mark the soft blades.
Musa basjoo safety and inedible fruit
Musa basjoo is not known as a toxic house or garden plant. Its small fruits are ornamental and inedible, so they should not be treated as dessert bananas. Keep cut leaves and damaged stems tidied away if pets or children are likely to chew fibrous plant material.
Botanical name and bashō background of Musa basjoo
Musa basjoo belongs to the Musaceae family. Musa basjoo Siebold ex Miq. was first published in Annales Musei Botanici Lugduno-Batavi 3: 203 in 1867. The genus name Musa was established by Linnaeus. The species name basjoo is derived from the Japanese bashō, a common name associated with this fibre banana. Although often called Japanese banana because of its long cultivation history in Japan, modern botanical sources place its native range in southern China.
Shipping Notes
- Free Standard Shipping on $100+ Orders to the USA.
- Except Preorder products are shipped in 48 hours.
- Delivery to the USA:
- Standard Shipping : 3-10 business days
- If time is of the essence, please consider selecting expedited delivery for faster service.
Exchange/Return Notes
- We offer a 30-day return/exchange service after receiving.
- Final sale items are not eligible for returns or exchanges.
- To process your return/exchange, please contact us at [email protected]
- Please click here for more details>>> Return & Exchange Policy