| Encanto Farms Nursery > Categories > Banana Fig |
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Sas
Registered: Posts: 1,363 |
Apparently there is a variety in the Houston area, called the Banana Fig. |
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dkirtexas
Registered: Posts: 1,329 |
I used to Live in Seabrook, when it was very small and I did not see any fig trees there. I have been back several times and have looked for any older trees, I have not found one. We had a member that promised me one but he didn't stay around very long. |
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Porfirio
Registered: Posts: 103 |
Congratulations on the aquisition Sas. |
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dkirtexas
Registered: Posts: 1,329 |
OBTW - I am not looking for that fig. Didn't want it to sound like I was fishing. |
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Sas
Registered: Posts: 1,363 |
Danny, |
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dkirtexas
Registered: Posts: 1,329 |
I really appreciate it but I simply do not have room for any additions right now. LSU Red, different story, I would toss some to make room for that one, LOL. |
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Selkirk
Registered: Posts: 9 |
My banana fig is about 15 yrs old or so. Pretty good tasting fig. Not really red flesh, maybe light pale strawberry. They do tend to blow up with not much rain at the time of ripening. Get a crop about every other year due to bad timing of rain. |
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CliffH
Registered: Posts: 125 |
I was at a nursery on the far north side of Houston this morning. They had a large yellow fig tree that the said was a Banana fig. It was covered in large yellowing figs. Pics attached. The pulp is actually a dark amber, and not really the pale red. I asked if they had this fig in stock. They said no. But said that we could take a bunch of figs home. We loaded a plastic grocery bag mostly full. And as we were about to leave a worker there said that I could take a couple of small cuttings if I wanted. They are in the moss to root.
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leon_edmond
Registered: Posts: 923 |
Years back, JH did a nice comparative and found that the Banana Fig is most likely synonymous with Kadota. |
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Sas
Registered: Posts: 1,363 |
Very helpful, Thank You Leon. I guess I ended up with a Kadota. LOL |
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brianm
Registered: Posts: 971 |
Definitely Kadota.. |
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CliffH
Registered: Posts: 125 |
I'm going to revive this post because I am trying to determine if there truly is an "Banana" fig to be found. I have been visiting many nurseries around the Houston area, and asking about this fig (including nurseries in Seabrook). Like many of you, I have read a description that states that the Banana fig originated in Seabrook Texas. That it is "yellow fig with pale strawberry flesh", "closed eye", and "local fig not grown anywhere else in the US". This definitely does not sound like a Kadota. However, after many discussion with nursery people I have arrived at the conclusion that most people in Houston use the term "banana fig" to describe the Kadota variety. I have had people at very reputable nurseries, including their "fig experts", tell me that they have never heard of the Kadota fig. I showed most the pictures posted above. They said that was the correct fig and the one they were selling, but their's is a Banana Fig and not a Kadota. Most never heard of this name. I am still searching and hoping.....
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