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dorry2

Cannas in zone 7

dorry2
16 years ago

I just love these plants and was wondering if they will overwinter in my zone or is it treated more like an annual in zone 7? Thanks.

Comments (18)

  • redsnowflake
    16 years ago

    I'm a newbie to cannas myself, but everyone I know around here who has cannas (my grandmother, aunt, neighbor, and kind stranger who shared his 'Richard Wallace' cannas with me) just leaves them in the ground and they come back each year with no problem. We're in 7A - Chattanooga, TN - if that helps.

  • chrystallake_2007
    16 years ago

    Im in zone 7 near the jersey shore, and they do not winter here.
    Hope it helps.
    melanie

  • west_texas_peg
    16 years ago

    I'm zone 7b in Texas and they come back just fine for me.

    Peggy

  • islandbreeze
    16 years ago

    There are people around here in zone 6 that have cannas planted and come back year after year. We saw -5F last winter. I planted several, and none came back. I think it just has to be an established planting for them to come back.

  • Sheila Edmond
    16 years ago

    7b VA cannas come back and reproduce.

  • nehketah
    16 years ago

    unless they are overgrown i leave them in the ground and they come back fine by spring

  • weirdtrev
    16 years ago

    For me they only survive the winter if I plant them up against the foundation of the the house. I always dig up all my other ones.

    To those of you that have cannas that survive the winter in zone 7 which ones are they? I would love to be able to leave them in the ground.

  • watergal
    16 years ago

    I have Red King Humbert that survives every year planted up against a south foundation wall. None of the others have come back. We have clay soil, and usually get a lot of rain in the spring, which I'm sure contributes to rotting.

  • JohnnieB
    16 years ago

    Some gardeners in my area seem to have luck with cannas overwintering, especially in a sheltered location or near buildings, but I've never had any of several different cannas survive a winter outdoors even with mulch. I do see them popping up around the city in spring, apparently having survived the winter with no care at all, so maybe my clay soil is just too wet in the winter.

  • bubba62
    16 years ago

    No problem to overwinter them here in heavy clay, with maybe a layer of chopped leaves for mulch (if I get around to it!). They've come back every year for 15 years, although I will admit to being only 10 miles away from the "dividing line" for zone 8 (and it seems to be moving this way!).

  • ekoboat
    16 years ago

    For the past two years I have overwintered Red King Humbert, Wyoming, Lucifer and Tropicanna. The first year I threw a couple of inches of straw over them. This year I just took some trash bags full of leaves and put them on the beds. I overwinter calla lilies the same way. My low last winter was 4 deg F, this year 10 deg F.
    Steve

  • happyseed
    16 years ago

    I live in Western North Carolina Zone 7 and they come back each year bigger and better for my ex. This will be my first year but all my friends say they will come back. Good luck, Happyseed (Sonja)

  • rosemallow
    16 years ago

    I live in Pikesville Md. The only ones that make it through the winter are the ones against the house.
    All the others get dug up and are stored along with my Bannanna Trees.
    Some have made it through the winter with mulch, but it is not worth taking a chance.
    Growing Stuttguart, Lucifer,Bengal Tiger and Tropicanna.

  • dpolson37
    16 years ago

    This is my first season of overwintering cannas and so far so good. I might mention that I cover them with a foot of leaves in the fall too. I peaked at them the other day along with my ginger plants and they all seem to be growing under the leaves. With it still early in March I covered them back up though. I also have had luck with a banana tree. It came back very well last summer and was covered the same way. I live in near Mt. Vernon Virginia close to the Potomac river which keeps me a little warmer than surrounding areas.

  • xerophyte NYC
    16 years ago

    they probably can be protected in zone 7 but it takes a long time in the spring until they emerge.

    if you store them, they can be given a head start indoors and will be very large plants by the summer

  • greenman28 NorCal 7b/8a
    16 years ago

    My canna are pushing up their first shoots right now. We cut the
    dead leaves back in late fall, and then mulch with about six inches
    of material (mostly oak leaves).

    Josh

  • daffodillady
    16 years ago

    Western central Alabama- mine are about 4" tall, cannas grow everywhere here- all overwintered outside.