🍌Growing Bananas in -30C in Canada in a Passive Solar Greenhouse.

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  • Опубликовано: 9 фев 2025
  • We Did It! Bananas grown & harvested in northern Canada. It was -54 Celsius🥶 (-65 Fahrenheit) last week. Gardening zone 3. Passive Solar Greenhouse almost entirely heated by the sun, designed by Dean at Arkopia.
    Part 2: Final Results & Harvesting the Bunch: • 🍌Harvesting Banana Bun...
    Greenhouse Build video: • One Man Build - Deep W...
    Everything you wanted to know about growing bananas in a greenhouse.
    We have received no government grants or financing for any aspect of our operations.
    #homestead #greenhouse #farmlife #bananasinthesnow #bananas #snow #winter
    Like, Comment, Subscribe and follow @ArkopiaRUclips We are experts in preparedness, homesteading, sustainability, high efficient construction, passive solar technology, deep winter greenhouses, freeze drying & other food preservation, economics, and small sustainable food production.
    We are the inventors of the Best Selling Smoothie on amazon: Arkopia Freeze Dried Smoothies. We are also a small, multifaceted farm located in Saskatchewan, Canada where we are striving to provide our hyper-local community with food (and flowers), direct to customers off our farm.
    Arkopia Website: arkopia.ca/
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    AMAZON CANADA: www.amazon.ca/...

Комментарии • 917

  • @PeterSedesse
    @PeterSedesse Год назад +292

    I lived in Nicaragua and had a few hundred banana plants for about 5 years. What I learned from the locals regarding pups. You only ever want to have 4 stalks at any one time, and in fact most of the time you only want 3, and you want them to be staggered in size. You don't want any two of your stalks to be the same size. So for example, you will have your tallest stalk with developing bananas, your 2nd stalk, and then your 3rd stalk. Keep eliminating your 4th stalk until such a time that your 3rd stalk is pretty big ( I waited for 6 feet). So then when the 3rd stalk hits 6', you let a new stalk come up, but shortly after that you will be harvesting your bananas from the tallest stalk, and then immediately cut down that stalk and go back to having only 3 stalks. If you do it that way, your 2nd stalk will be flowering while the 1st stalk is finishing off the bananas. You can be harvesting about 2.5 times per year. All of those extra small stalks are just stealing energy from your 2nd stalk and preventing it from flowering. Just keep chop/dropping that 4th stalk until the 3rd stalk gets big. There should be a mess of dead stalks under your plant, and once you harvest the bananas, cut that stalk also and let is decay under the plant. This creates a lot of mulch and the stalks are almost entirely water.
    The other thing is to learn to recognize the difference between stalks, and hijos(children). If you think of indeterminate tomatoes... a stalk will be like a branch, but a hijo is a sucker. The way you can tell the difference is at the very base of the plant. A stalk will develop out of the same base as your other stalks, but an hijo will develop it's own base. So if it is all stalks, the top view of the base will look more like an 0 (an ellipse), but if it is a hijo, it will look more like a number 8. Hijos should always be removed. You can take a shovel and basically split between the number 8 and create a separate plant if you want to give it away, or you can just dig it up and drop it to die. I never really counted, but I would guess that about 50% of the time something comes up, it will be an hijo, and 50% a stalk. Hijos can get really out of hand if you don't dig up the base of it, and they just take so much energy/space away from your main plant. For instance, we had areas that had thousands of wild banana plants, but the hijos developed so close and so often to the parent, that you never see wild bananas develop, just the plant. I think banana plants want to propagate using hijos, and producing actual fruit is a secondary means to reproduce. Kinda like if you don't trellis and prune indeterminate tomatoes, you may never get fruit as the suckers will just develop roots and grow and compete with the original plant.

  • @lyndalovesraccoons
    @lyndalovesraccoons 11 месяцев назад +29

    ..." it warmed up abit, its only -22°C ...
    😂...ohhhhhh caaaanada🎶🎵

  • @tuvoca825
    @tuvoca825 10 месяцев назад +7

    Imagine! You could make the most expensive tropical crops... in the least tropical place? TAKE THAT SHIPPING AND HANDLING 😂🎉

    • @ArkopiaYouTube
      @ArkopiaYouTube  10 месяцев назад +3

      We also solve tropical fruit issue with our freeze dried smoothies, reducing shipping by 95% and zero food waste. 👍

  • @BouncingTribbles
    @BouncingTribbles Год назад +270

    I've been hesitant to farm in Canada, for a variety of reasons, but a greenhouse like this seems like a dream come true. Congrats brother.

    • @bobsmith8124
      @bobsmith8124 Год назад +6

      You should do some more research on all the amazing fruit and nut trees you can grow naturally in Canada. From zones 3-8, much better than these cavendish bananas grown with synthetic nutrients.

    • @BouncingTribbles
      @BouncingTribbles Год назад +6

      @@bobsmith8124 I was talking about the greenhouse, but okay. I'm sure everyone has their preferred produce, i'm glad you enjoy yours.

    • @bobsmith8124
      @bobsmith8124 Год назад +4

      @@BouncingTribbles have you researched the cavendish banana and the dangers of monoculture?

    • @ranch_enthusiast
      @ranch_enthusiast Год назад +13

      @@bobsmith8124 have you researched minding your own business and letting other people have their own opinion?

    • @BouncingTribbles
      @BouncingTribbles Год назад

      @@bobsmith8124 are you okay?

  • @scottfraser706
    @scottfraser706 10 месяцев назад +14

    Truly amazing 👏. We should be doing this across Canada especially in the far remote communities up north

    • @renamaemcdonald2075
      @renamaemcdonald2075 2 месяца назад

      We live up close to the Yukon border. The challenge in the winter is the lack of daylight. We would need to add some lights as well as lots of heat at that time to keep the plants alive.

    • @jean-raphaellavoie34
      @jean-raphaellavoie34 День назад

      Ya u right, might cost more up there.

  • @dougwarren5471
    @dougwarren5471 10 месяцев назад +12

    This is awesome! With the amount of land we have here in Saskatchewan there's no reason we can't have more of these and stop relying of goods coming out of country.

  • @sharonsomers
    @sharonsomers 10 месяцев назад +10

    What a beautiful greenhouse! You must be so beyond proud you not only built it, but are creating food for your family, and you know exactly where it came from, what sprays if any are on it. What a dream setup. Just lovely.

  • @revk8611
    @revk8611 10 месяцев назад +7

    Damn! I am so impressed and this has given me “food for though” for building a better greenhouse for growing in Canada. Well done!!!

  • @roselewis1426
    @roselewis1426 Год назад +84

    Please show us the ins and outs of how you built your passive solar greenhouse. What considerations you made, how you figured out how to angle it from the sun, what you use for solar mass, what you built out of and all of it please!

    • @ArkopiaYouTube
      @ArkopiaYouTube  Год назад +35

      In all previous RUclips videos. Playlist for “Arkopia greenhouse” on our channel. ✌️

    • @DerekJohn
      @DerekJohn Год назад +6

      @@ArkopiaRUclipsthank you! I was about to say the same thing, we live in America, but on the Wisconsin/Illinois border and I LOVE tropical fruit and also that feeling of being around green and feeling natural sun hit

    • @naturefreek1953
      @naturefreek1953 Год назад +9

      Me and my wife are doing this in saskatchewan as well, we have a year round climate battery greenhouse

  • @TheChapExp
    @TheChapExp Год назад +5

    We need a million more of you, in Canada! :)

  • @abbyiyer2011
    @abbyiyer2011 11 месяцев назад +55

    As a canadian im so proud you have shown to the world where there is a will there is a way❤❤❤❤

  • @can-cruiser
    @can-cruiser 10 месяцев назад +4

    Incredible.. Great accomplishment.. Greetings from Alberta...

  • @redshedacres
    @redshedacres Год назад +35

    I'm old enough to be your mother, but we are kindred spirits. When you talked about wrapping your Tilapia in a banana leaf with herbs, your face and passion of what you are doing resounded with my soul. So glad your generation get to enhance this science with the know how you have acquired with your talent and trade. Well done you.

  • @lb6110
    @lb6110 10 месяцев назад +4

    Awesome and Very Impressive! Good on You!! I'm in BC and wish you continued success with your labour of love!

  • @Camberlea17
    @Camberlea17 10 месяцев назад +4

    Awesome, finally Canadians can have fresh food year round ❤👍🕯

  • @EDX2308
    @EDX2308 10 месяцев назад +5

    You are absolutely nuts. You really have gone Bananas. My absolute respect coming all the way from BC.

  • @thewitchyprepper8396
    @thewitchyprepper8396 11 месяцев назад +5

    Sooooo proud of you and your Canadian bananas Arkopia!!! Amazing work!! 😍😍😍

  • @Misssunshine6767
    @Misssunshine6767 5 месяцев назад +3

    Awesome 👍 we get to -40 in Calgary I'm zone 3 also I'm trying this I want to grow pineapple oranges cherries peaches ❤

  • @kathyjames9250
    @kathyjames9250 Год назад +21

    Hmmmmmm! 💡 I imagine all the closet mad-scientist passions re-awakening in the hearts of guerrilla gardeners of the North with their impossible dreams and fresh possibilities that your videos have inspired! Thanks for sharing… Blessings from Manitoba 🦬

  • @loriwiggins3892
    @loriwiggins3892 11 месяцев назад +9

    Beautiful!! We've been off grid for 6 years, our house is designed to be warmed much like your greenhouse with passive solar heating. Looking forward to making my greenhouse of wonder now, too!

  • @OutThere5
    @OutThere5 Год назад +4

    Such a wonderful job you’re doing. When I discovered the passive solar greenhouse, I’ve always said this is the answer to greenhouse growing in Canada

  • @metabuilders
    @metabuilders 11 месяцев назад +4

    You're living my dream. I am about to do this in the Dakotas in zone 3-5, I will be watching the rest of your videos for some insight. Thanks for the great content.

  • @nadinehanchar1752
    @nadinehanchar1752 10 месяцев назад +6

    WOW! CONGRATULATIONS BEAUTIFULLY DONE.. ❤️ 👏 ❤️

  • @BreakingBarriers2DIY
    @BreakingBarriers2DIY Год назад +30

    You’ve done so much more than build the greenhouse but that was the hook for me. This feels the awesome major milestone.
    I’m celebrating this grand thing that you guys are doing. It is so hopeful for fellow Canadians.

  • @loriwoloshyn7266
    @loriwoloshyn7266 Год назад +3

    I do believe the time is coming where we will be growing fruit and veggies inside large warehouses or buildings. If you can control the environment, anything is possible. Hats off to you for thinking out of the box.

  • @kylepflanzer7429
    @kylepflanzer7429 10 месяцев назад +2

    You’re my greenhouse hero! I hope to build my own greenhouse one day here in northern Ontario

  • @chargermopar
    @chargermopar Год назад +4

    I don't eat bananas but I grow them and give them to friends. It's good to know that when I move from south Florida I could take my banana plant collection with me and grow them inside a greenhouse.

  • @bethwhite2857
    @bethwhite2857 Год назад +23

    Once again proud of you Dean.
    Your passive solar Greenhouse is exceptional, and your tropical garden frickin amazing 👍
    leaves the Piggies don't eat, can be used finely ground up for a compost for the kekis (Kay key) baby in Hawaiian.
    Like most plants bananas feed bananas. So you could also use the peels finely chopped up for compost.
    Try take the kekis away from stalk before 2 ft tall.
    For mealy bug..mix a pour of rubbing alcohol, a squeeze of dish soap in a medium hand sprayer spray bottle, fill with water. You can spray the crotches of the leaves in the banana plants where they may be hiding.
    Wow man great job loving your videos.
    I want to come camp in the jungle and sit by the wood stove and have a smoothie. 🤣🌴🤠

    • @ArkopiaYouTube
      @ArkopiaYouTube  Год назад +3

      Thanks so much. All great advice. 💪👍

  • @marley7659
    @marley7659 Год назад +8

    This is my dream. As someone who graduated in horticulture and love tropical fruit. I have always wanted to move to an affordable province and set up shop.

  • @raksha1940
    @raksha1940 11 месяцев назад +2

    Plant a moringa plant. This is a magnificent plant to have. Very versatile & healthy. God bless 😊

  • @alicialane-jd7sh
    @alicialane-jd7sh Год назад +26

    Fantastic! What an inspiration to promote self sustainable healthy living, & environmentally friendly, so no comebacks. Keep up the great work & sharing.

  • @mammyoffgrid
    @mammyoffgrid Год назад +10

    Yes you should be very proud!!! I had a smile on my face through the whole video😅

  • @MrDee001
    @MrDee001 11 месяцев назад +9

    This greenhouse looks amazing.

  • @belieftransformation
    @belieftransformation Год назад +10

    Fantastic accomplishments! Thanks for sharing! My daughter & her partner bought a property with huge greenhouses; now to get them to the passive solar! We’re in central Alberta so we had the same bone chilling temperatures! Enjoy those bananas🤗

  • @clearasmud1945
    @clearasmud1945 Год назад +12

    Definitely something to be proud of. Just starting to warm up in ND. Having a greenhouse such as yours would be a dream come true. Congratulations Dean! You deserve all the rewards of your hard labor.

  • @deanorr5378
    @deanorr5378 Год назад +55

    This is how tropical fruit in Canada should be grown! It is crazy to ship fruit 1000's or tens of 1000's of KM! No brainer for improving food security and reducing travel costs/ logistics/ pollution.

    • @K12war
      @K12war 11 месяцев назад +1

      This 1000%

    • @Serrated_Leaf
      @Serrated_Leaf 11 месяцев назад +3

      It’s a cool idea for a hobby and possibly small farmers markets but this isn’t cost effective for selling tropical fruit. If this was how all tropical fruit was grown for grocery stores in Canada no one would be able to afford it. Shipping fruit into Canada is much more cost and energy efficient than growing it here.

    • @sidekickmusic5936
      @sidekickmusic5936 11 месяцев назад +1

      @deanor5378 I would need to see studies and evidence on this.

    • @blackmoonlilith455
      @blackmoonlilith455 10 месяцев назад

      ​@Serrated_Leaf I just don't believe this to be true. If our government rebated farmers related to clean farming and gave allowable permits to anyone with space who can grow these kinds of foods, then we wouldn't be paying much, if not less than what we do now. Right now, what is happening is that our farmers are being told how to farm, being forced to use pesticides, and are charged so much tax that even simple vegetables are insanely expensive when buying local.

    • @martinlebreton6391
      @martinlebreton6391 10 месяцев назад

      A waste of ressources.
      Would much more efficient and productive to grow grains on that field.
      But if suckers like u want to pay 10$/bunch for hutterite bananas at the farmers market. U are free to do so.
      But it is better for the planet to grow them in the south and grow grains in the north.

  • @goblue1238
    @goblue1238 Год назад +13

    So impressive!! I have been following you since the beginning of building your greenhouse. This is my dream to live such a paradise like this!!

  • @kws1957
    @kws1957 Год назад +4

    You are great and the music too. God bless and protect you, thank you. I didn’t think that this is possible…

  • @marvettebarkerthompson455
    @marvettebarkerthompson455 Год назад +10

    You are the real big man. Big up yourself. What an achievement!🎉

  • @BeneathTheGold
    @BeneathTheGold Год назад +8

    Without adding high intensity light that is an amazing accomplishment. Well done guys. Very well done indeed👏

  • @ThePhiphler
    @ThePhiphler 11 месяцев назад +5

    You could legitimately perform agriculture on Mars with your setup, it's a very well designed system.

    • @UnsaltedCashew38
      @UnsaltedCashew38 11 месяцев назад

      Except Mars goes to -100C, gets 2/3rd the sunlight and the soil is poisonous.

  • @AlexanderSupertramp142
    @AlexanderSupertramp142 11 месяцев назад +3

    Impressive! You give a new meaning to no excuses..

  • @ZiThief
    @ZiThief Год назад +7

    Man this shit is amazing! You're so cool! Keep doing what you're doing king!

  • @thefutureofgardening5912
    @thefutureofgardening5912 11 месяцев назад +2

    Dude that is something to be absolutely proud of!!! Amazing!! Congratulations on your achievements bro!

  • @TBonerton
    @TBonerton 11 месяцев назад +3

    Thank you for sharing. This is my life goal.

  • @wd8131
    @wd8131 Месяц назад +1

    That's amazing.

  • @shantibronowicki9565
    @shantibronowicki9565 Год назад +3

    Omg I was thinking green houses to grow tropical veggies and fruits in Canada
    And what I see on my you tube this morning new subscriber
    You make my day🥰🥰🥰🥰

  • @russellwood8750
    @russellwood8750 5 месяцев назад +2

    As an Irish Alberton, I just like to congratulate you. That’s amazing growing tropical fruits in the middle of a Canadian winter that’s absolutely amazing. They give people Nobel peace prizes for crapper reasons than that. Growing tropical fruits in Canada in the middle of winter so they don’t have to travel from tropical places we can have Canadian bananas yeah that’s definitely the Nobel peace prize in my book.. Bananas split sundaes all year round.

  • @rosemondadjaidoo9001
    @rosemondadjaidoo9001 Год назад +3

    That is incredible, you doing a great job

  • @TenleyAtwood
    @TenleyAtwood 10 месяцев назад +1

    Oh Bravo! Well Done Sir. 0:20

  • @raeleenrobinson5749
    @raeleenrobinson5749 Год назад +3

    You are very clever, , all you need now are bees for pollination and you will be sooooooo self sufficient. You certainly are not letting your local environment stop you, go you!

  • @ralfbeckmann6167
    @ralfbeckmann6167 Год назад +1

    Wonderful greenhouse. Here in germany it is not possible without artificial light, because in Nov, Dec.and January it is 80% cloudy, but not so cold like your location.

    • @ArkopiaYouTube
      @ArkopiaYouTube  Год назад

      Making my location work to my advantage. You would have to likely do less glazing and have artificial light.

  • @lizabouchard5706
    @lizabouchard5706 Год назад +4

    Absolutely incredible- coming from another Canadian farmer. Respect. I am so excited to have found your channel. Can’t wait to see all your content

  • @DramaticFlora
    @DramaticFlora Год назад +2

    These updates always make me excited about my own dwarf cavendish i got last summer. I dont have anywhere clise to a place like that greenhouse but i csnt stop them from growing even in poor conditions

  • @melonetankberry5211
    @melonetankberry5211 Год назад +4

    my heart dropped a little when you just opened the door outside. congratulations. if the banana (daughters) grow so fast and take so much room maybe you should sell them instead of just giving them away? it will reach more people and fast if you place an offer where people are looking for it^^ + might help your piggy bank for future projects.

  • @mailobiker9525
    @mailobiker9525 5 месяцев назад +1

    Great Job you're doing there, greetings from a Tropical Country 🌴(Mexico)

  • @homesteading
    @homesteading Год назад +4

    Very inspiring - well done! Having grown up in Australia's "Banana Republic" - Coffs Harbour (home of the "Big Banana") I can say your plants look as good as any in their natural climate. One note: In Oz the growers refer to the new shoots as " suckers" and the wide leafed ones as "water suckers."

  • @missy3609
    @missy3609 Год назад +3

    Wow! I am impressed and amazed at what you have built!

  • @Momo_Gt
    @Momo_Gt 11 месяцев назад +2

    Im from Montreal Canada.
    I discovered your channel 24h ago, and I'm already a subscriber 🤓 .
    your content is inspiring,
    Thanks for sharing your experience and knowledge.

  • @alexandreveilleux9854
    @alexandreveilleux9854 Год назад +3

    Hey Dean! Congrats for the bananas!! Hard work pays off 👌 really nice !!

  • @rogerkenworthy6380
    @rogerkenworthy6380 7 месяцев назад +1

    We lived in Thailand and grew our bananas, they are so much tastier than the ones you buy in a Canadian grocery store. And CONGRATS well done. Those pups will take over your entire greenhouse. Cheers Roger

  • @sreykmao69
    @sreykmao69 Год назад +3

    Love seeing self sustainable folks working outside of the box. If you harvest green bananas, you can use them like you would potaoes. Cook them up in water or bake them, skinned the green parts out, and fried them as well.

  • @tammyraby7630
    @tammyraby7630 Год назад +2

    VERY excited to find your channel! I live on mountain in Central BC zone 3 also! My first year off grid and there are two greenhouses out here. Its unusual warm for jan and im already inside greenhouses planning an attack...lmao 🤣 tonight ill be watching more!!! Bananas 🍌 🍌 who would have thought!!

  • @ahmadshukry3731
    @ahmadshukry3731 Год назад +4

    Unbelievable. Congratulations for successfully growing bananas in the midst of ice, literally. I'm from a tropical part of the world. Been growing bananas for a while now. No problem here for sure. I used to harvest the whole bananas and had to deal with more than I can consume, afterwards. But I learn a new trick here. Now I know how to enjoy my bananas for longer.

  • @jmfrc
    @jmfrc Год назад +2

    I would love to have that I’d just go sit in it all day. Good for mental health in the prairies when it’s cold. Good job, nice build too. I can’t stand Sask in the winter anymore lol. Having that would help.

  • @2listen2u
    @2listen2u Год назад +3

    Truly inspirational! Well done!

  • @Joseph_Dredd
    @Joseph_Dredd Год назад +2

    It's only MINUS 22 degs outside he says as he walks around in a short sleeved tshirt!!
    Amazing what one can do if one sets one's mind to it.
    Bravo indeed.
    :)

  • @Mrs.LadeyBug
    @Mrs.LadeyBug Год назад +3

    That is Thee Coolest! My King James/Shakespearian comes out when I am truly impressed! 😃

  • @FarmsteadForge
    @FarmsteadForge 11 месяцев назад +2

    Wow, congratulations, that is so cool!

  • @chrisgibson9629
    @chrisgibson9629 Год назад +4

    Great job

  • @Universalhealing-bo3ir
    @Universalhealing-bo3ir Год назад +2

    Great video from Alberta your neighbor 😊💜

  • @meowmix3129
    @meowmix3129 Год назад +4

    Beautiful and yes it was freaking cold last week in Saskabush!

  • @BennLuvsYou24
    @BennLuvsYou24 10 месяцев назад +1

    This is incredible! Congratulations!

  • @stevenjohns7017
    @stevenjohns7017 Год назад +5

    Awesome.

  • @d.m.w.2035
    @d.m.w.2035 11 месяцев назад +1

    Also living in Sk. Nice to see whats possible. Gonna be showing my husband this as inspo.

  • @HillsideHomesteading
    @HillsideHomesteading Год назад +6

    I love watching fellow Canadians thrive on their farms! The greenhouse is a dream come true

  • @B30pt87
    @B30pt87 Год назад +2

    Man, I am so impressed with your greenhouse results! (With your greenhouse too.)

  • @HDHhomestead
    @HDHhomestead Год назад +3

    Impressive greenhouse. 💪💪💪💪

  • @pragmaticbeaver1555
    @pragmaticbeaver1555 11 месяцев назад +1

    I don't know why this video was recommended to me, but I love it! Last year I started loving plants and veggies and grew a few Tomatoes, Paprika and Cabbages on my balcony. This year I want to try my hands on aquaponics and your video just inspired me to try even more crazy stuff, thanks a lot!
    Cheers from germany

  • @wildadavis5139
    @wildadavis5139 Год назад +3

    Congratulations on growing tropicals in your greenhouse!
    FYI: the small bunches you mentioned is call "hand" in the Caribbean. Hope this helps.

  • @davidstock8379
    @davidstock8379 Год назад +2

    Dude! Liked and subscribed in the first 20 seconds!
    Greetings from Vancouver Island!

  • @davidjondoh8671
    @davidjondoh8671 Год назад +3

    Where the heck do fruit flies come from in the middle of winter?! I store my fresh fruit in the garage in the winter as the temps run in the low 50's F. I'm always amazed to find the fruit flies buzzing around the garage in the dead of winter.
    You must be the envy of your neighbors with your tropical conditions!

    • @sionemataele7900
      @sionemataele7900 Год назад +1

      Guess you don’t understand when fruits start ripening that’s where the fruit flies come from, maybe try leave over ripe bananas on the counter and see the fruit flies coming out in a few days even winter time

  • @DCChau-or9ji
    @DCChau-or9ji 10 месяцев назад +1

    Amazed. You have two big green thumbs.

  • @StanHowse
    @StanHowse Год назад +4

    lol -65 out, I know exactly where I would be... Out in that greenhouse, hanging out with my Plants.

  • @SuperRollinthunder
    @SuperRollinthunder Год назад +1

    Man so many question are running through my mind now...Great video

  • @lpi6608
    @lpi6608 Год назад +3

    The banana blossom are eatable. Sell your banana leafs there is a local Asian Thai and Filipino market for it. And feed the trunks to the pigs

  • @tersta1
    @tersta1 Год назад +2

    Now that's SUCCESS! Thanks for sharing your techniques and letting the world know that the impossible is possible! I'm over in Ontario, growing my veg in a greenhouse, that can be worked 9-10 month of they year in a climate with a 4 month growing season. It's so good to see people putting their time into creating food sovereignty and self-sufficiency for themselves.

  • @GtJrGrowsItAlaska
    @GtJrGrowsItAlaska Год назад +3

    Bananas 🍌 in the cold, nice 💪🏾

  • @JonathanSladkoTV
    @JonathanSladkoTV Год назад +2

    This is amazing! I’ve always wanted to have something like this in Alaska

  • @fabiancanada8876
    @fabiancanada8876 Год назад +4

    You made it with the bananas, congrats!! -54 C ? Holy cow that is cold!! I know that you have a nicer dry cold than us but that is still extremely cold. We came close to -20 recently but overall had quite a mild winter so far here in Nova Scotia. We have an outdoor furnace but no money for the greenhouse yet (thanks to Trudea who destroyed this country). Have you heard the recent interview of UFC champ Sean Strickland who is for freedom and common sense, attacking Trudeau and the communist Canada? Sean is not the most sophisticated person but it was very refreshing to see, maybe there is a tiny hope that people will stand up some day?

    • @ArkopiaYouTube
      @ArkopiaYouTube  Год назад +2

      I’ll be on with Canadian Prepper shortly. We chatted about the state of things. I have to hold back a bit, but said my piece. Watch for it soon. ✌️

    • @fabiancanada8876
      @fabiancanada8876 Год назад +1

      @@ArkopiaRUclips Awesome, looking forward to it! Happy new year!

    • @fabiancanada8876
      @fabiancanada8876 Год назад +1

      I thought about it. I think what you are doing is not safe. It needs to be regulated&inspected more but most importantly at the end you need to give 50% of your bananas to the government- maybe you will have the honour of Trudeau visiting you personally to eat them. I remember a small distillery in Germany where that was (is) actually the case. The government came and physically took 50% of the alcohol.

    • @ArkopiaYouTube
      @ArkopiaYouTube  Год назад +1

      😂 They don’t care about my 3 banana plants. Gotta watch getting big for sure. They also don’t care about hilly, small farms. They’ll like stealing big ones for sure.

  • @CoffeeWalksandWhatever
    @CoffeeWalksandWhatever Год назад +2

    This awesome great video, we are in southern Manitoba. Have a awesome week ☕️

  • @nateross14
    @nateross14 Год назад +5

    One thing to know is that the white very innermost core of the Banana plants pstem is edible and very nutritious. It can be treated like a vegetable and used in salads, steamed, or whatever.

  • @bloodnwine
    @bloodnwine 10 месяцев назад +1

    Amazing job!

  • @PeterEntwistle
    @PeterEntwistle Год назад +3

    Absolutely incredible, Dean! It's always been a dream of mine to one day get an edible banana to fruit here in the UK. I think I might be getting close with my ornamental Musa basjoo banana plant, but the edible ones will be much harder to get to fruit.

  • @RandomGreymane
    @RandomGreymane 11 месяцев назад +1

    I’m Zone 5 and this totally gives me hope for growing tropical stuff! Now I just have to figure out where to put a passive greenhouse in my small back yard. 😆

  • @jackieow
    @jackieow Год назад +9

    This is the right way to do it. None of those nasty venomous tropical spiders.

  • @NFT2
    @NFT2 Год назад +2

    Congratulations brother. I have similar plans in Toronto with passive greenhouses so I'm glad to see it works well in your extreme temperatures.

  • @jburbinski7057
    @jburbinski7057 Год назад +15

    perhaps build another greenhouse that is designated strictly for the tropical plants - a enclosed orchard of citrus and tropical plants -
    When i had my freeze dryer i would purposely buy a ton of bananas to freeze dry. I love the chunks of freeze dried bananas, such a great snack.
    I met a fellow years back, about 2007 who had built a earthship in Bancroft ON, he had avocados growing in it.

  • @kjw7815
    @kjw7815 Год назад +2

    Impressive. Love it. Good job man.

  • @raeleenrobinson5749
    @raeleenrobinson5749 Год назад +4

    We got to visit Canada before COVID locked the world down and apart. We loved it , such a beautiful place with beautiful polite people. Congrats on your achievement.