Please read the description and our terms and conditions below. By purchasing you are agreeing to them.

This root hardy Musa has typical banana, large, paddle like leaves that eventually develop a maroon midrib and on more mature plants maroon tiger stripe patterns on the foliage. Young plants do not start to develop the red patterning until they are around 30 to 45cm tall, sometimes later. Best colouration seem to develop on plants kept in part shade out of full midday summer sun. The leaves are massive on mature plants, often reaching up to 6ft + in length and around 2ft in width. Almost as hardy as Musa basjoo it’s roots should be heavily mulched in the winter and if temperatures are going to drop below -3 the trunk should be wrapped in straw. If the trunk freezes then it will die back to the ground with new growth coming from the rootstock in late spring early summer. Plants that are not wrapped and are allowed to die down to the ground for winter usually only reach around 4 to 5 ft in height each season. Wrapped plants will achieve much larger sizes. Plants grown in pots will need to be kept in a frost free greenhouse, conservatory or brightly lit open room. Alternatively trim off the leaves, allow the compost to dry to the point of being only just moist and keep dormant in a cool, dark, but frost free room.


Greedy and thirsty when in growth copious amounts of food and water should be given during the growing season. Stop feeding in October resuming from April onwards. Best leaves are produced in a sheltered spot, windy positions will give tatty shredded leaves. Suckers are produced from the base as the parent plant matures and can be left to grow as a clump or be removed with a sharp spade to maintain more architectural single stemmed plants. Plants that are grown in a conservatory or greenhouse can grow very quickly putting on several inches a day during the summer and can soon outgrow their surroundings. Don’t panic, just use a sharp saw or even the kitchen bread knife, cut straight through the trunk, as low as you like, even cutting them down to almost ground level and watch it start all over again. Bananas grow from the rootstock with new growth coming up through the centre of the plant.

Typically dispatched within 3 to 5 working days in a 9cm pot. Fully tracked postage. Ebay will give you basic tracking info but to view your parcels full tracking history use the couriers own tracking site. The tracking info ebay provides is usually inaccurate and does not allow you to re-book delivery if you miss the first attempt. Your ebay order details will show the tracking number and who it has been sent with. 30 day Free returns, if you are not happy with your plants just open an ebay returns case and we will send you a prepaid postage label to return the item for a full refund.  


We state *other courier* in the postage section. This is due to the fact that we send items via several different couriers as well as Royal Mail. Who we send by will depend entirely on the size and weight of your parcel and the area it is being sent to.

If plants have arrived in poor condition through transit delays or miss-handling we ask you to follow the enclosed potting on/ planting out instructions and allow two weeks for the plants to start to recover, if they do not start to recover and show signs of fresh new growth within that time then please email us with a photo and we will happily send replacements. Obviously dormant plants will not recover until their growing season arrives so we are happy to guarantee regrowth on them for longer.

Contacting us. If you have a question relating to your eBay order or an item listed on eBay please contact us via the eBay messenger service so the item details come up. Please do not contact us via our email or website address.

We will no longer reply to messages that have the answer already answered in the description or chasing orders before the stated delivery date is up.

Collections and Visits. The nursery is not a retail nursery so sorry but we do not allow collections or visits under any circumstances. We would like to open the nursery for visits as it would greatly increase turnover but the terms of our lease prohibit us from doing so.