How to Take Care of a Banana Leaf Plant

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The key to growing a banana leaf plant is to remember that plants from the ‌Musa‌ spp. family originate in the tropics. As most plants do the best when given conditions similar to their native environment, banana plants prefer lots of bright sunlight, high humidity, and consistently warm temperatures. Because they need such warm temperatures, most of these fruiting perennials will need to be brought indoors during the winter, unless you live in warm climates like those found in USDA zones 10 and 11. However hardier banana species, such as ‌Musa basjoo‌, can survive winters outdoors in the cooler climates, up to USDA hardiness zone 5. Aside from protecting these plants from low humidity and freezing temperatures, caring for a banana leaf plant mostly involves providing the plant with basics, such as water and fertilizer.

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Sunlight, Humidity, and Temperature

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Choose a full-sun location for your banana leaf plant. It will thrive if it can get at least 8 to 10 hours of sunlight each day, which can be difficult to attain even with a bright south-facing window. However, bananas are also known to grow as understory plants in their native habitat, so less light or partial shade may be sufficient as long as all other conditions remain ideal. Provide an artificial grow light if you don't have a suitable window in your home.

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Keep humidity levels above 50 percent for houseplants by running a humidifier in the same room as the banana plant or by setting up an evaporation tray. You can also mist the leaves with water from a spray bottle. Finally, try not to expose it to temperatures less than 57 degrees Fahrenheit; otherwise, its growth will slow down significantly.

Water and Fertilizer Requirements

In the tropics, banana plants enjoy consistent rainfall and virtually never have to suffer through a drought. To keep your banana plant healthy, give it small amounts of water every day if it's growing in a container. Banana plants grown outside should be watered deeply every two or three days. If you lose track, a good rule of thumb is to water banana plants when the top half-inch of soil is dry.

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Banana plants should always be planted on rich, dark humus to provide them with plenty of macronutrients and micronutrients right away. When the plant's leaves are actively growing, it can be given a balanced N-P-K fertilizer. Once it starts to flower, switch to a high-phosphorus fertilizer, especially if you plan to harvest fruits from your banana plant.

Container-grown banana plants should be fed on a "little and often" schedule since nutrients leach out of containers much faster than in the ground. Liquid fertilizer is often used for container-grown plants since it is immediately available for the plant to absorb. Granular or slow-release fertilizer is better for banana plants that aren't suffering from a nutrient deficiency and are grown on the ground.

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Overwintering Banana Leaf Plants Indoors

If you can provide ideal growing conditions year-round whether indoors or outdoors, you can keep your banana leaf plant growing at all times. However, the climate in most of the United States simply isn't tropical enough for most banana plants to survive outdoors. Fortunately, they don't require much pampering during the winter because they stop growing and enter a period of dormancy. As long as the temperature always remains above freezing, your banana plants can spend the winter in a garage, basement or closet with no water, fertilizer or sunlight, unless you're growing a hardy banana that's compatible with your hardiness zone.

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When it's time to prepare your banana plants for winter, remove all leaves from the plant. Dig up outdoor banana plants and make the root ball small enough to fit inside your chosen bucket or container. You don't need to plant the banana on fresh soil at this time; that can wait until spring. Indoor plants don't need to be dug up; just move their pot into your chosen overwintering room.

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When spring arrives, water the banana plant deeply and let it sit in front of a sunny window. Once a few leaves sprout, you can transplant the banana outdoors with plenty of rich, organic humus. If it's destined to be an indoor banana plant, give it fertilizer along with its first drink of water.

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