Largest diameter culms of any known bamboo - commonly a foot in diameter with
20" by 4" leaves in habitat! On August 28, 2003 the bamboo
institute attached to Yunnan Normal University in China announced they found
a dendrocalamus giganteus measuring 46 meters (150') tall with a diameter of
36 cm. (14"). It's growing in a grove planted in southwestern China.
Sections of the culms are used in some tropical countries for piping & buckets.
To grow plants that big requires lots of heat & moisture - more than we
have in most S. California climates away from the coast. The plants at
Quail are spectacular! But our plants in Tustin only achieved 2"
in diameter with about 6 years of growth in the ground. However, the very
large leaves & spectacular fresh new growth make it a very nice plant regardless
how large the culms get in diameter. A few large plants have been grown
up to the tops of the glass roofs in tropical greenhouses in Germany.
The new culms come up in September, grow free of foliage 10-20' high & then
leaf out in all directions. Large plants in Florida, 10' & taller
during the 1989 & 1995 freezes were killed dead to the ground when the night-time
temperature dropped to 27 degrees for one night, then grew back with new canes
& foliage. It grew well for Gary Stinson in Menifee, California which
regularly gets down to freezing in the winter. 5 gallon pots containing
rooted cane cuttings in one of our unheated greenhouses in Perris died in the
winter of 2006 when the temperature went down to 25 degrees F. for a few hours
in the winter of 2006. A few plants were imported from Taiwan into the
U.S. by the ABS in 1981. A 15 gallon plant we supplied to the ABS in '87
for their auction sold for $500. A 7 gallon plant sold at the '88 auction
for $650. A 15 gallon pot sold at the '91 SCABS Sale for $300. A
3 culm 4' 5 gallon pot sold at the Sept '91 NWABS Sale for $110. 2 10"
pots about 3' tall sold for $95 each at the '95 SCABS fall sale.