Not naturally, no.
However it is possible to grow bananas in a cold country, as long as the growing environment is warm.
In Iceland, for example, bananas are grown in a large greenhouse.
The greenhouse is fed heat from pipes passing through it, which have hot spring water from the nearby volcanoes flowing through them, to heat the greenhouses.
No, of course they don't unless they are in a specially built building with a very warm thermostat. Bananas grow in tropical countries as they need the heat to survive. The cold would kill them.
No they do not. They grow in climates around 80 degrees F.
Bananas grow best in warm, wet tropical climates.
By adapting themselves to such conditions.
Sugar cane is grown in hot climates and wheat can be grown in cold climates
Yes, it is and we are studying this in Social Studies. Banana trees only grow where it is warm and they need lots of water to grow plentiful.
Ghana grows so many bananas, the country could become a banana republic. (by the way - bananas are not trees, they are a large herbaceous plant and the upright stem is called a psudostem)
Bananas don't grow well in cold countries. they need the heat.
The same reason avacado's don't grow in Arizona, the wheather
No, the weather in the UK is much too cold for bananas. The only places in Europe that are hot enough to grow bananas are Cyprus and the Canary Islands.
Bananas do not grow on trees. The plant bananas grow on are herbs.
Yes, bananas grow on the tree in a cluster referred to as a 'hand'.
No. you cannot grow bananas in illonois.
The worst season to grow bananas is winter
yes you can! you can even search how to grow bananas in your backyard
bananas grow on trees :(
Bananas are plants.
Where Bananas Grow Bananas grow in South America, Florida and places that are warm.
Bananas grow on trees. They are native to tropical regions of Southeast Asia.