Pawpaw - the "Banana" for Northern Gardeners

Jonni Good
Jonni Good
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The pawpaw tree is a native American fruit that really does taste much like a banana. The creamy white flesh may also have hints of vanilla custard, pineapple and mango. You'll rarely, if ever, see th
is fruit in the local grocery store, but you can easily grow a few trees in your garden for a yearly treat of fresh, banana flavor for northern gardens.

The pawpaw tree grows wild all along the eastern seaboard, and as far west as Nebraska. At one time pawpaw fruit was sold in many city and village markets, but the fruits are fragile and do not travel well for long distances. You may be able to find these fruits in your local farmer's market.

Recent research has discovered natural pesticides and antitumor agents in all parts of the pawpaw tree, so you can expect to see more orchards specializing in this uncommon fruit tree for the pharmaceutical industry.

To grow pawpaws in your back yard, you will need two trees, because they are not self-fertile. When you buy your young trees, they will need shade for the first few years, but can be grown in the sun when they're mature. Permaculture enthusiasts might plant the young seedlings in the shade of a Siberian pea tree, and then remove the nurse tree when the pawpaws are old enough to tolerate direct sunlight. You may also want to plant your new pawpaws a certain distance from the house, because the flowers have an unpleasant fragrance.

The pawpaw tree is easy to grow, and is cold hardy from USDA zones 4 through 8. These trees usually grow wild in forests, so they do like cool, moist soil under a mulch of leaves or straw. The fruit needs warm summer weather and at least 160 days to ripen, and the trees also require a cold period each winter. They do not do well in the maritime Northwest.

 
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Thanks for the great article! I will be planting my first paw paw seeds tomorrow...

Posted on 04/19/2008 at 8:04:09 PM

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