
Canna Tropicanna®: The original Tropicanna, Tropicanna Gold, and Tropicanna Black
Planting, Growing, and Caring for Cannas
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- ‘City of Portland’: 4 to 5 feet tall; green foliage with coral-pink flowers
- Ehemann’s canna: 5 to 8 feet tall; green foliage with deep rose-pink flowers
- ’Pretoria’, aka Bengal Tiger: 4 to 6 feet tall; variegated yellow-and-green striped foliage with orange flowers
- ‘Futurity Red’: 2 to 4 feet tall, on average; burgundy foliage with crimson flowers; self-cleaning (drops spent flowers)
- ‘Toucan Yellow’: 21/2 to 4 feet tall; deep green foliage with golden-yellow flowers
- For a tall canna, the Canna Tropicanna® is a popular choice. Growing 4 to 6 feet tall, ‘Tropicanna’® boasts tangerine, iris-like blooms and exotic bronze foliage. Plant in the back of your garden bed or large containers for a dramatic statement on your porch or patio.

- A medium-size gem is ‘Los Angeles’, which has large, deep pink florets and opens out so that you can see the face. Growing 4 to 5 feet tall, this canna blooms from June to August.

As well as medium- to tall-size cannas, you can find smaller “dwarf” sizes and dramatic “giant” sizes!
- Dwarf cannas stand 2 to 4 feet tall and are easy to fit into our downsized modern gardens. The ‘Picasso’ is a real attention-getter with bright yellow flowers and deep red leopard-like spots; it blooms from July to frost. The ‘Wyoming’ has dark burgundy stems and lush orange flowers that bring life to a quiet bed from mid-summer until frost.
- Interested in a giant canna? One of the most popular is the ‘Musifolia,’ which grows up to 8 feet! With 3-foot-long red-vein leaves and red blooms, it makes a statement.
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Those are the seed pods. Some people leave them on for a while for ornamental interest.
I have Canna in a pot on my deck in sun but one of the flowers were i dead head is forming a green like sack on the steam were the new flower should be what is this
I'm in zone 6. My dwarf Cannas are in large pots. After a freeze blackens the foliage can I just move the pots into the garage (attached to the house and does not get below freezing) and stop watering or must I dig up the rhizomes and store?
The best course of action that would be safest for your cannas is to dig up the rhizomes and store them.
Is there an underground barrier to keep year-around canna rhizomes from spreading?
I planted some Tropicsnna black a month or two back and while on the same bunch of flowers all blooms were red, one just sprouted a lighter yellow bloom! Never seen this in my life, any ideas?
That is called a sport—essentially a plant mutation that changes the growth habit or flower color of the parent plant. In some cases the new trait can be handed down to that plant’s offspring.
I moved red cannas from Illinois to north Florida and they bloomed beautifully for years. Two years ago I moved them to south Florida and they have beautiful leaves, but no flowers. How do I get them to bloom. They are in pots on the screen porch in full sun.
You might try getting them on a monthly fertilizing schedule. Also consider whether it might be time to divide them.
After flowers I had a spike with 2 round 1" pods on the stem. What are they and what do I do with them. Are they seeds