
Caption
Canna Tropicanna®: The original Tropicanna, Tropicanna Gold, and Tropicanna Black
Big, Bold, and Beautiful: How to Grow and Care for Canna Lilies
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Types
- ‘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’: 2 1/2 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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More Like This
See our Frost Chart: http://www.almanac.com/content/frost-chart-united-states
Remember that these are historical averages! You need to keep an eye on your local weather.
Dig up the canna rhizomes in the fall after the leaves have yellowed, died back or have been killed by frost, but before the ground freezes. Find more information on this page.
Canna do spread so if you're concerned, we would plant canna in their own garden bed. We're not sure where you live, but cannas are generally dug up annually and stored anyways. You can always dig up the clumps, keep what you wish, and give some of them away! Another solution is to plant canna in containers to control the spread. Some folks even sink the containers into the ground.
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