Large air-Paw-Paw to Indian banana

Fruit of the banana tree Indians, which can be up to 4 m high

The climate pious Bonner General-Anzeiger recently waited again with a climate headline: "Soon tropical fruits from MeckPomm?" There was the story of an experimental plantation in Mecklenburg-Vorpommern the State Research Institute for Agriculture and Fisheries in Gulzow in Rostock:

Then comes the famous lyre: The experimenter would in the face of climate change to plant new fruit varieties. "Here in the north it becomes increasingly warmer. Since the tropical fruits are increasingly a chance. "Especially excited to be on the so-called. Indians banana (also known as Paw Paw or Pawpaw.), The fruit tastes simultaneously for all possible fruits and melts creamy on the tongue, if you have the seeds removed. However, their flowers stink and are therefore an outspoken bees fright.

What the GA Bonn presented on the first page as air sensation, however, is - unfortunately wrong.
The own-GA Article hinted at it already: The experimenter namely frozen last winter, the apricot trees one, it was simply too cold to them.

The article fails to mention that the Indians banana comes from North America, is very robust and can withstand temperatures down to minus 20 degrees . She is, in fact adapted, however, to colder expectant winter, the trend of recent years should continue.

Anyway, my outdoor tomatoes are no longer ripe for the third year in a row. Gone are the sunny 1970s, where I earned endlessly as a child tomatoes in the same garden.

The tomato is known from South America, like so many of our crops (beans, corn). The naturalization of vegetables or fruit from other latitudes so says basically nothing about the climate - unless one is religious climate.

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