Tropical Gardening: Begin the new year like bamboo
Your garden has many lessons to teach, especially if you have bamboo in the landscape.
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If you don’t have bamboo, it is time to get some.
It’s a new year and time to shed those things that do not serve you. That way, you can fill your life anew. Much like the new shoots of bamboo pushing skyward as they shed the culm sheaths that protect them.
Also, with the new year comes a renewed commitment to greening our islands, and bamboo is a great way to accomplish this goal.
So, if you want to learn more about bamboo and obtain some new rare species, come to the Hawaii Chapter of the American Bamboo Society open house and meeting at noon Sunday, Jan. 10. The event will be hosted at Christian Robinson’s Bamboo Zoo in Hawaiian Paradise Park. The address is 15-1110 Amau Road.
Sunday’s bamboo meeting and tour will start with a potluck lunch, so come a bit early to get acquainted and bring your favorite dish. The program about growing and using bamboo will follow.
Expending commercial groves and obtaining certification for local bamboo construction also will be discussed.
Call HCABS president Jacqui Marlin at 966-5080 to RSVP, for directions and for other for details. You also can check out the chapter’s website at http://hcabs.webs.com and click on “Newsletter” for more information.
Asia is the ancestral home of many locals — people and plants. When it comes to plants, one of the most valuable of these is bamboo. Although there are many species found in Central and South America, tropical and subtropical Asia has used bamboo for thousands of years. It is said bamboo and rice are the very foundation of these cultures.
The Hawaiian ohe kahiko can be found in many parts of Polynesia. The actual genus and species is not clear, with taxonomists and botanists not all agreeing. We do know it is a tropical clumper, probably originating in Southeast Asia.
It is likely a Schizostachyum species. There are vast stands in the mountains of high islands such as Raiatea in the Society Islands. Polynesians there still use it in crafts.
With large tracts of land now available for forestry, and our local interest in sustainable agriculture, bamboo might become one of our major resources. It has many commercial and ornamental uses. These will be discussed during the Sunday meeting along with discussion about bamboo for food, construction, art and crafts.
Some folks only know bamboo from their experience with the rampant running species. Needless to say, these types are not for the small garden unless contained. However, they have been used very effectively to stabilize steep slopes prone to erosion.
That is why we find large stands of Phyllostachys running bamboos on the steep slopes above Waiohinu in Ka‘u or at the back of Manoa Valley and on Maui. The intricate mat of roots and rhizomes hold soil and rocks in place and save roads, homes and streams from mud and rock slides.
Bamboos certainly are a more attractive and environmentally sound approach to steep slope erosion control than concrete, wire or chain link screens. Erosion on East Hawaii gulch roads is a serious problem that could be addressed with certain bamboo species.
Bamboos also are excellent cattle feed and have a place in supplying nutritious greens at a low cost. Society members have been working on the potential of growing bamboos for multiple use sustainable agriculture, incorporating the animal feed component, and it looks very encouraging. There are plans to work with University of Hawaii agronomists in the near future to expand this project by using bamboo for windbreaks and feed.
Even though bamboos are excellent sources of edible shoots and construction material, most folks are interested in ornamental bamboos for their looks.
Bamboos, of one type or another, are a natural for almost any tropical garden. In fact, many of the hundreds of types of bamboos grow in the tropics, but some species grow as far north as New York or Seattle, and can be found growing up to 10,000 feet in the mountains of Asia and Central and South America. Bamboos vary from forest giants of 120 feet to dwarfs of 6 inches.
Many specimens of bamboo are suitable for ornamental purposes. The clumping bamboos are ideally suited for ornamental uses in their area of adaptation. They can be planted in groups for hedges or singly for specimen plantings. They spread very slowly and are easy to keep within bounds.
One of the best for sunny locations is the Mexican weeping bamboo. Others to consider are the Bambusa multiplex forms such as Alphonse Karr, fern leaf, silver stripe and feather bamboo. These delicate clump types range from 10-20 feet high. Other rare clumping types are beginning to show up in our nurseries such as the Chusqueas, Drepanostachyums and Fargesias.
For larger gardens, try Buddha’s belly, Oldham bamboo, punting pole bamboo and Weaver’s bamboo. These are all clumping types in the 40 to 50 foot high range with fancy Latin names and multiple uses.
The giant tropical clumping bamboos need plenty of room since they soar from 50-120 feet tall under ideal conditions. This group includes the larger Bambusa, Dendrocalamus, Guadua and Gigantochloa species that can have culms 6-12 inches in diameter. They are grown for edible shoots, construction material, windbreaks and furniture.
One of the most spectacular giant bamboos for large gardens is the Dendrocalamus asper variety “Hitam,” with black culms up to 100 feet in height and 1 foot in diameter.
Miniature bamboos well-suited to container growing are the Sasa species and Shibatea kumasasa. These and other running bamboos such as black bamboo can be kept small or bonsai when contained.
The running bamboos are more difficult to keep in bounds than the clump bamboo. However, many are desirable as ornamental plants because of diversity in their habit of growth, appearance and size.
Bamboo does best in a moist, well-drained soil with some organic matter. Apply complete fertilizer such as organic 8-8-8 or manures four to six times a year to the planting.
Mulch the soil around the planting. Mulches add organic matter to the soil, help restrict the growth of weeds and conserve soil moisture. Dead leaves or dry grass clippings can be used for mulch. Apply a layer of mulching material at least 3 inches deep.
For more details about rare species, check out bamboonursery.com. One of the most popular new species now is Bambusa chungii variety “Barbie.”
Another opportunity to score some rare bamboos will be the plant sale at the Old Kona Airport park pavilion, from 8 a.m.-1 p.m. Saturday, Feb. 14.
If you are interested in bamboo culture for economic and agricultural uses, contact your Extension Office for UHCTAHR Extension circular “Bamboo for Forest and Garden,” and be sure to come to the Hawaii Bamboo Society meeting open house.
This information is supplied by the University of Hawaii College of Tropical Agriculture and Human Resources. For further information about gardening and landscaping, contact one of our master gardeners at 322-4892 in Kona or 981-5199 in Hilo.