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Canna indica Pink and Roses - Indian shot

Canna indica Pink and Roses
Indian shot, Canna, Cann Lily, African Arrowroot, Edible Canna, Purple Arrowroot, Sierra Leone Arrowroot

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This modest-sized canna offers a profusion of bright pink flowers throughout the summer, highlighted by dark, bronze to purplish foliage. This variety fits well at the border of a flowerbed as well as in a large pot on the terrace. Plant its rhizomes in spring in rich, well-drained soil, in full sun, for flowering from July to September. This canna is not very hardy; it should be cultivated like a summer bulb and kept frost-free in winter.
Height at maturity
55 cm
Spread at maturity
50 cm
Exposure
Sun
Hardiness
Hardy down to -4°C
Soil moisture
Moist soil
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Best planting time April to May
Recommended planting time March to May
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Flowering time July to September
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Description

Canna ‘Pink and Roses’ is a dwarf Indian shot with an exotic look and vibrant colouring, combining bright pink flowering with purple to bronze foliage on a compact clump. Perfect for adding a touch of the tropics to borders as well as large containers, it flowers abundantly in full sun from mid-summer until early autumn. This variety is well-suited to city gardens, large borders and balcony displays.

Belonging to the large horticultural group of Canna × generalis, hybrids from several American tropical species, this Indian shot is a rhizomatous perennial cultivated as a summer bulb. Cannas form an upright clump with broad foliage reminiscent of banana plants, and inflorescences in spikes that rise above the foliage.
In the case of Canna ‘Pink and Roses’, the plant does not exceed 50 to 60 cm in height, with a similar spread. Its sturdy stems bear large ovate leaves, of a very dark green washed with purple to purplish-brown. The medium to deep pink flowers are typical of the Canna genus: irregular, a little like small irises, composed of several broad floral segments that overlap to form an open corolla. They are grouped in upright clusters at the top of the stems, with buds opening one after another from July to September. The foliage is deciduous: it disappears in winter. In most regions, you will need to keep the rhizomes dry and frost-free. Cannas are normally treated as summer "bulbs": their rhizomes are similar to those of achira (Canna edulis), a species long cultivated in the Andes for its edible starch, sometimes called Canna arrow-root.

In the garden, Canna ‘Pink and Roses’ fits into lush scenes alongside plants with decorative foliage. It can be paired with the generous silhouette of Colocasia esculenta ‘Black Magic’, the soft spikes of Pennisetum x advena ‘Rubrum’, or the salmon flowers and purplish foliage of Dahlia ‘Waltzing Mathilda’. To enhance this tropical atmosphere, you can rely on another compact, dark-leaved canna, ‘Mme Angele Martin’. In containers as well as in open ground, these combinations create colourful summer displays that remain decorative until the first frosts.

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Canna indica Pink and Roses - Indian shot in pictures

Canna indica Pink and Roses - Indian shot (Foliage) Foliage

Plant habit

Height at maturity 55 cm
Spread at maturity 50 cm
Growth rate fast

Flowering

Flower colour pink
Flowering time July to September
Inflorescence Spike

Foliage

Foliage persistence Deciduous
Foliage colour purple

Botanical data

Genus

Canna

Species

indica

Cultivar

Pink and Roses

Family

Cannaceae

Other common names

Indian shot, Canna, Cann Lily, African Arrowroot, Edible Canna, Purple Arrowroot, Sierra Leone Arrowroot

Origin

Cultivar or hybrid

Product reference25275

Planting and care

Dig up the rhizomes of the Canna Pink and Roses at the time of the first frosts or just before. Important: leave some soil around the roots, then store in a frost-free place, even without light. Divide the crowns if necessary, only in March. Replant the divisions in pots, in a bright and heated room to start them off, then plant them in the garden when frosts are no longer expected. For a few years now, given the scale of the task, we have decided to leave the plants in the garden in the ground all year round. As soon as the first white frosts appear, we cut back the foliage to ground level and then cover the crowns with a layer of 15-20 cm of straw or dead leaves. This mulching can be practised in all regions; the important thing is that the frost must never reach the rhizomes which lie just below the soil surface. 
We have found that this method gives better results in our garden: the crowns are more robust, the plants are larger and the flowering is earlier.

Canna is capable of enduring brief frosts of around -5°C in well-drained and fairly dry soil and under a protective mulch.

Planting period

Best planting time April to May
Recommended planting time March to May

Intended location

Suitable for Meadow, Pond edge
Type of use Edge of border, Small gardens, Container
Hardiness Hardy down to -4°C (USDA zone 9b) Show map
Ease of cultivation Amateur
Planting density 3 per m2
Exposure Sun
Soil pH Any
Soil moisture Moist soil Fertile, well-draining.

Care

Pruning instructions Prune the faded flowers to extend the flowering
Pruning Pruning recommended once a year
Pruning time July to August
Soil moisture Moist soil
Disease resistance Good
Overwinter Needs protection

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