It may never fruit and if it did it would be thousands to one that it would be any good.
Approximately fifteen years, compared to five years for a grafted tree.
9 years on average but that just depends on where you are.
varies by tree type
about 1 whole year
It depends on the type of tree you buy.
2 weeks
Bananas can be grown from a seed, although commercially they are grown from their rootstocks.
the first banana seed was peed on in 1245 BC
You cant grow bananas from seed as the seed is not viable, you have to use an offset from a banana plant to produce a new plant
it is the seed pod/ fruit. the seeds are found in the centre of the fruit, the seeds do not mature and are normally observed small dark specks
Mostly just short, I suppose. Bananas are the rapidly decomposing seed case (fruit) of the banana plant.
in a banana tree, buds usually appear. they are much younger and grows into another banana. that's why you can see a small cluster of banana trees. so when you see a bud which is still a foot high, remove it by digging a portion of land that surrounds it. never forget to include the root when you uproot the bud. then simply plant it to another area.
No. Banana plants (They are not called trees) do not grow from seeds. It is because they lost their ability to produce seeds a very very long time ago (It is not known if they ever produced seeds). So they are grown by a vegetative mode of propagation. It is something more like replacing the older plants. Banana plants grow from rhizomes or bulbs. In this way, the original plant is replaced (Banana is a perennial plant which replaces itself).
Bananas have seeds; however the "seedless," cultivated variety are propagated from a rhizome.
The seeds start from the ground. Eventually the seed turns into a banana TREE.
bananas do in fact seed, they are very seldom fertile or fertilised. the small, immature seed can be seen towards the centre of the fruit as small dark specks. bananas are normally propagated vegetatively
You can't get bananas on acww, you can only get apples, pears, oranges, peaches and coconuts.
yes