![]() |
From Our Newsletter: Cannas
From America’s Expert Source for Heirloom Flower Bulbs | My Basket |
|
|
|
|
|
| Here’s a wealth of information about CANNAS from our email Gazette and past catalogs, starting with the most recently published. For other topics, please see our main Newsletter Archives page. To subscribe to our FREE email newsletter, click here. |
Tips for Storing Cannas (But Only If You Want To!) Our best advice can always be found under Planting and Care at our website. Remember, though, that temperatures and humidity vary from region to region and even house to house, so you may have to experiment to find what works best for you. When you do, send us your tips! We’re always eager to learn. (Nov. 2007) Cannas in Colonial Gardens Though cannas may seem flamboyantly modern, these New World natives were pictured in John Gerard’s Herbal of 1597, and in 1735 Peter Collinson of London wrote to his friend and fellow plant-collector John Custis of colonial Williamsburg: Canna Poetry: “Sprouting Across Time” If you don’t already have a favorite poem about cannas, here’s one we highly recommend. Inspired by our heirlooms (check out the dedication) and written by our good customer Diane Dees of Covington, Louisiana, it not only won a prize in the Binnacle Second Annual Ultra Short Competition, but just last month it was published in Australia’s Bikwil magazine. Nationwide Canna Shortage Last year’s erratic weather was tough on canna farmers throughout the US, with some reporting crops reduced as much as 50%. So don’t be surprised if you can’t get the varieties or quality you want this spring, both locally and by mail. We reserved most of our cannas months ago, but our sales are up and it looks like we’ll sell out of many of them earlier than ever. We’d get more if we could, but we can’t, so please order now! (Jan. 2006) Cannas Are Great in Pots, Too Most of our spring-planted bulbs – including cannas – are as easy and fun to grow in pots as they are in the garden. Cannas like heat, so they’re typically happy on decks and paving where pots may get too hot for other plants. They’ll want lots of water, so keep their saucers filled with water or try mixing hydro-gels into the soil. They’ll also get big, so plant accordingly. (2005-06 catalog) Get Inspired by a Real Victorian Pattern-Bed A hundred years ago and more, Victorian gardeners were enjoying many of the same, vibrant, spring-planted bulbs and annuals that are thrilling gardeners again today. So how about jazzing up your lawn this year with a Victorian-style island bed? For inspiration, take a look at a real 1880s pattern-bed. You could reproduce it in the middle of your own lawn with castor-beans in the center ringed by cannas (our heirlooms, of course!), then elephant ears, coleus, and finally dusty miller. One Customer’s Vibrant Bedding Plans Our good customer Diane McCue of Wethersfield, Connecticut, wrote in response to the Victorian bedding plans we offered in our last newsletter: Canna History 101 For our brief and entertaining history of cannas, click here. Read what gardeners from 1629 through the 1893 World’s Fair and beyond have had to say about these bold summer beauties. Get growing tips and links to other canna resources, too. Then you can say, “I’ve been to Canna College!” (June 2003) Fine Gardening Spotlights Our “Antique Beauties” The May/June issue of Fine Gardening magazine features a great article (if we do say so ourselves) by our own Scott Kunst. It’s titled “Antique Beauties: Heirloom Dahlias, Gladiolus, and Cannas,” and it includes dramatic photos of a baker’s dozen of our very best. Check it out! (June 2003) “The Outhouse Canna” ‘Robert Kemp’ looks like a species canna from the earliest days of cannas in gardens, before late-Victorian breeders introduced the blowsy, wide-petaled cannas that were to become the norm. Its tiny, vibrant red petals – like flickering tongues of flame – are massed together into torch-like clusters on six-foot stalks above luxuriant green leaves. One of the fastest-growing cannas, its height and vigor – and probably its antiquity – have in some places earned it the role and nickname of “the outhouse canna.” Beyond that, its history is obscure (please tell us anything you know). Hummingbirds love it! (Feb. 2003) The Gardener’s Guide to Growing Cannas New in 2002, this is the first book devoted to cannas in almost a century, a testament to their resurging popularity. Written by our friend Ian Cooke, who visited us on his research tour for the book, it includes chapters on canna history, botany, cultivation, and on weaving cannas into the garden. Best of all is a comprehensive A-to-Z of cannas, including scores of both subtle and flamboyant garden forms – many historic – as well as the diverse species. With 92 gorgeous color photographs, it’s a fascinating book for connoisseurs and newcomers alike. (Feb. 2003) Marybeth (and Hummingbirds) Recommend Cannas Our good customer Marybeth Hawn of Aylett, Virginia, writes: Keeping Your Cannas Hydrated and Thriving Cannas like LOTS of water. In our trial gardens here we build a ring of soil around each plant and fill it with water every day or two, or we set pots of them in saucers kept full of water. Regular fertilizing helps these heavy feeders, too. (Sept 2002) Pearly, Mysterious, Subtle, Sophisticated – Cannas! Our good customer Susan St. Maurice of Bedford, Massachusetts, writes: Keeping Cannas in Pots Well-Watered with Less Work Here’s a helpful tip from our good customer Melissa Oldsberg of Chaska, Minnesota: For articles on other topics, see our main Newsletter Archives page. |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
| For our print catalog click here or send $2.00 to Old House Gardens 536 Third St., Ann Arbor, MI 48103. phone: 734-995-1486 fax: 734-995-1687 email: charlie@oldhousegardens.com | ![]() |
For our free email newsletter, “The Friends of Old Bulbs Gazette” with tips, news, history, & special offers, send us an email with “subscribe” in the subject line to newsletter@oldhousegardens.com. |
| © 1993-2008, Old House Gardens. All rights reserved. | ||