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-   -   Cannas in the Pond (http://www.fishkeepingbanter.com/showthread.php?t=20082)

~ jan JJsPond.us May 7th 05 05:32 AM

Cannas in the Pond
 
Below is a write up I did for my pond club a number of years ago:

Cannas in the pond. By Jan Jordan

Do you love to have something in bloom in the pond? Water lilies usually
take a center stage as they have been bred for their spectacular beauty.
Many of the marginal plants have not. They are mostly kept for the
variations in their foliage rather than their blooming ability. On the
other hand, their terrestrial cousins have been bred over the years for
both spectacular blooms and foliage. Would you like to find this in a water
plant? Well, you can, and if you do it yourself, for as little as $1.25.

Enter your terrestrial cannas and calla lilies. Start watching for the
bulbs and rhizomes to come into stores around March. Pick a color you like
and plant it in regular garden soil, using a pot or basket that you can
eventually put in your pond. Follow the directions for planting on the
package and place next to a sunny window. Water as needed to just keep the
soil damp. When the plant gets one to two leaves, it's time to slowly
introduce it to more water.

Start by placing the pot in an inch of water. Then raise the water level
another 1/2-1 inch each week. During this time, if weather permits, you
should also have the plant outside in a protected area to harden it off.
When you have the water level up to the surface of the soil, you need to
slowly start conditioning the plant to being in the sun, while maintaining
the water level. Once the plant is conditioned to the same amount of direct
sun as your pond, you can put it in the pond with about 2-3 inches over its
crown. Expect blooms long before the terrestrial cannas you planted in the
ground to occur.

During the conditioning time if the plant tends to wilt or not mature, you
may be increasing the water level too fast. Lower the level until you see
the plant recover, then wait another week before continuing to raise the
water level.

You can buy terrestrial cannas and callas lilies that are already
conditioned to water from some of the local nurseries. Expect to pay
between $10-$20 depending on type.

There are two ways to save the plant for next year. One way is to bring the
plant inside and keep it in a shallow saucer of water and treat it like a
house plant. The other is to go through the process of drying the bulb or
rhizome and storing in peat moss. ~ jan

See my ponds and filter design:
www.jjspond.us

~Keep 'em Wet!~
Tri-Cities WA Zone 7a
To e-mail see website


~Power to the Porg, Flow On!~

Elaine T May 7th 05 06:18 AM

~ jan JJsPond.us wrote:
Below is a write up I did for my pond club a number of years ago:


Cannas in the pond. By Jan Jordan

Do you love to have something in bloom in the pond? Water lilies usually
take a center stage as they have been bred for their spectacular beauty.
Many of the marginal plants have not. They are mostly kept for the
variations in their foliage rather than their blooming ability. On the
other hand, their terrestrial cousins have been bred over the years for
both spectacular blooms and foliage. Would you like to find this in a water
plant? Well, you can, and if you do it yourself, for as little as $1.25.

Enter your terrestrial cannas and calla lilies. Start watching for the
bulbs and rhizomes to come into stores around March. Pick a color you like
and plant it in regular garden soil, using a pot or basket that you can
eventually put in your pond. Follow the directions for planting on the
package and place next to a sunny window. Water as needed to just keep the
soil damp. When the plant gets one to two leaves, it's time to slowly
introduce it to more water.

Start by placing the pot in an inch of water. Then raise the water level
another 1/2-1 inch each week. During this time, if weather permits, you
should also have the plant outside in a protected area to harden it off.
When you have the water level up to the surface of the soil, you need to
slowly start conditioning the plant to being in the sun, while maintaining
the water level. Once the plant is conditioned to the same amount of direct
sun as your pond, you can put it in the pond with about 2-3 inches over its
crown. Expect blooms long before the terrestrial cannas you planted in the
ground to occur.

During the conditioning time if the plant tends to wilt or not mature, you
may be increasing the water level too fast. Lower the level until you see
the plant recover, then wait another week before continuing to raise the
water level.

You can buy terrestrial cannas and callas lilies that are already
conditioned to water from some of the local nurseries. Expect to pay
between $10-$20 depending on type.

There are two ways to save the plant for next year. One way is to bring the
plant inside and keep it in a shallow saucer of water and treat it like a
house plant. The other is to go through the process of drying the bulb or
rhizome and storing in peat moss. ~ jan

See my ponds and filter design:
www.jjspond.us

~Keep 'em Wet!~
Tri-Cities WA Zone 7a
To e-mail see website



~Power to the Porg, Flow On!~


Jan's suggestion is a great one!

I have a dwarf variegated canna in my pond right now. I bought it as a
blooming plant in a gallon pot for $7.99. I removed all the dirt I
could, soaked it in permanganate, repotted it in a basket of Schultz
aquatic soil and stuck it in the pond with the water at the crown. It
seems to have survived my total ignorance about acclimation and is
growing well. ;-) It's the most colorful plant in the pond and the
only one flowering thus far.

--
Elaine T __
http://eethomp.com/fish.html '__
rec.aquaria.* FAQ http://faq.thekrib.com

George May 7th 05 12:02 PM


"~ jan JJsPond.us" wrote in message
...
Below is a write up I did for my pond club a number of years ago:

Cannas in the pond. By Jan Jordan

Do you love to have something in bloom in the pond? Water lilies usually
take a center stage as they have been bred for their spectacular beauty.
Many of the marginal plants have not. They are mostly kept for the
variations in their foliage rather than their blooming ability. On the
other hand, their terrestrial cousins have been bred over the years for
both spectacular blooms and foliage. Would you like to find this in a water
plant? Well, you can, and if you do it yourself, for as little as $1.25.

Enter your terrestrial cannas and calla lilies. Start watching for the
bulbs and rhizomes to come into stores around March. Pick a color you like
and plant it in regular garden soil, using a pot or basket that you can
eventually put in your pond. Follow the directions for planting on the
package and place next to a sunny window. Water as needed to just keep the
soil damp. When the plant gets one to two leaves, it's time to slowly
introduce it to more water.

Start by placing the pot in an inch of water. Then raise the water level
another 1/2-1 inch each week. During this time, if weather permits, you
should also have the plant outside in a protected area to harden it off.
When you have the water level up to the surface of the soil, you need to
slowly start conditioning the plant to being in the sun, while maintaining
the water level. Once the plant is conditioned to the same amount of direct
sun as your pond, you can put it in the pond with about 2-3 inches over its
crown. Expect blooms long before the terrestrial cannas you planted in the
ground to occur.

During the conditioning time if the plant tends to wilt or not mature, you
may be increasing the water level too fast. Lower the level until you see
the plant recover, then wait another week before continuing to raise the
water level.

You can buy terrestrial cannas and callas lilies that are already
conditioned to water from some of the local nurseries. Expect to pay
between $10-$20 depending on type.

There are two ways to save the plant for next year. One way is to bring the
plant inside and keep it in a shallow saucer of water and treat it like a
house plant. The other is to go through the process of drying the bulb or
rhizome and storing in peat moss. ~ jan

See my ponds and filter design:
www.jjspond.us

~Keep 'em Wet!~
Tri-Cities WA Zone 7a
To e-mail see website


~Power to the Porg, Flow On!~


Thanks for that wonderful suggestion, Jan. Keep the great posts coming.

George we're not worthy! We're not worthy!



kc May 8th 05 04:08 PM

Excuse my ignorance, but what is permanganate and what is its purpose?
Kirsten
(I too stuck a canna in the pond last year, but too quickly I think because
the leaves started rotting...)
"Elaine T" wrote in message
m...
~ jan JJsPond.us wrote:
Below is a write up I did for my pond club a number of years ago:


Cannas in the pond. By Jan Jordan

Do you love to have something in bloom in the pond? Water lilies usually
take a center stage as they have been bred for their spectacular beauty.
Many of the marginal plants have not. They are mostly kept for the
variations in their foliage rather than their blooming ability. On the
other hand, their terrestrial cousins have been bred over the years for
both spectacular blooms and foliage. Would you like to find this in a
water
plant? Well, you can, and if you do it yourself, for as little as $1.25.

Enter your terrestrial cannas and calla lilies. Start watching for the
bulbs and rhizomes to come into stores around March. Pick a color you
like
and plant it in regular garden soil, using a pot or basket that you can
eventually put in your pond. Follow the directions for planting on the
package and place next to a sunny window. Water as needed to just keep
the
soil damp. When the plant gets one to two leaves, it's time to slowly
introduce it to more water.

Start by placing the pot in an inch of water. Then raise the water level
another 1/2-1 inch each week. During this time, if weather permits, you
should also have the plant outside in a protected area to harden it off.
When you have the water level up to the surface of the soil, you need to
slowly start conditioning the plant to being in the sun, while
maintaining
the water level. Once the plant is conditioned to the same amount of
direct
sun as your pond, you can put it in the pond with about 2-3 inches over
its
crown. Expect blooms long before the terrestrial cannas you planted in
the
ground to occur.

During the conditioning time if the plant tends to wilt or not mature,
you
may be increasing the water level too fast. Lower the level until you see
the plant recover, then wait another week before continuing to raise the
water level.

You can buy terrestrial cannas and callas lilies that are already
conditioned to water from some of the local nurseries. Expect to pay
between $10-$20 depending on type.

There are two ways to save the plant for next year. One way is to bring
the
plant inside and keep it in a shallow saucer of water and treat it like a
house plant. The other is to go through the process of drying the bulb
or
rhizome and storing in peat moss. ~ jan

See my ponds and filter design:
www.jjspond.us

~Keep 'em Wet!~
Tri-Cities WA Zone 7a
To e-mail see website



~Power to the Porg, Flow On!~


Jan's suggestion is a great one!

I have a dwarf variegated canna in my pond right now. I bought it as a
blooming plant in a gallon pot for $7.99. I removed all the dirt I could,
soaked it in permanganate, repotted it in a basket of Schultz aquatic soil
and stuck it in the pond with the water at the crown. It seems to have
survived my total ignorance about acclimation and is growing well. ;-)
It's the most colorful plant in the pond and the only one flowering thus
far.

--
Elaine T __
http://eethomp.com/fish.html '__
rec.aquaria.* FAQ http://faq.thekrib.com




Elaine T May 8th 05 07:12 PM

kc wrote:
Excuse my ignorance, but what is permanganate and what is its purpose?
Kirsten
(I too stuck a canna in the pond last year, but too quickly I think because
the leaves started rotting...)


Potassium permanganate is an oxidizing agent like bleach but milder and
purple in color. Soaking plants for 10 minutes in a medium pink (purple
is too strong) solution of permanganate kills most bacteria and fish
parasites and some snail eggs and algae. Unlike bleach, permanganate
doesn't harm plants and it's easy to tell when it's rinsed off.

I think I had an episode of beginner's luck with my canna. :-)

--
Elaine T __
http://eethomp.com/fish.html '__
rec.aquaria.* FAQ http://faq.thekrib.com

~ jan JJsPond.us May 8th 05 07:23 PM

On Sun, 8 May 2005 11:08:15 -0400, "kc" wrote:

Excuse my ignorance, but what is permanganate and what is its purpose?
Kirsten


Potassium Permanganate - an oxidizing agent and disinfectant. Some
pond/garden centers carry it. Be sure and read all the warning listed if
you've never used it before. ~ jan

~Power to the Porg, Flow On!~

~Roy~ May 8th 05 11:46 PM

On Sun, 8 May 2005 11:08:15 -0400, "kc" wrote:

===Excuse my ignorance, but what is permanganate and what is its purpose?

snip

Potassium Permanganate is a dark black / purple crystal compound
ponders mix up on hot days and drink under the shade tree to clean out
there innerds..............ooops nope thats not it, its what Jan said.
I had it confused with grape juice and Everclear.....sorry!
Anyway PP if used correctly is a very great product to have on hand,
as it does lots of marvelous things in a fish pond from cleaning up
nasty water , clearing out fungus and pathogens, and sanitizing the
pond, and plants and making life in general lots nicer once the
treatment is finished.

I know you know what Everclear is....190 proof straight grain
alchohol......

==============================================
Put some color in your cheeks...garden naked!

~~~~ }((((o ~~~~~~ }{{{{o ~~~~~~~ }(((((o

billfish September 22nd 05 11:09 PM


Thanks Jan,

I am definitely going to try that. We have a big clump of a cannas that
live in the corner of our yard. We just leave the rhizomes to get on
with it over winter as we don't get much frost here. They are a very
tall (5ft) variety with dark purple/marroon leaves and bright orange
flowers. If they'll work they'll look great in the back of the pond.


~ jan JJsPond.us Wrote:
Below is a write up I did for my pond club a number of years ago:
-
Cannas in the pond. By Jan Jordan

Do you love to have something in bloom in the pond? Water lilies
usually
take a center stage as they have been bred for their spectacular
beauty.
Many of the marginal plants have not. They are mostly kept for the
variations in their foliage rather than their blooming ability. On the
other hand, their terrestrial cousins have been bred over the years
for
both spectacular blooms and foliage. Would you like to find this in a
water
plant? Well, you can, and if you do it yourself, for as little as
$1.25.

Enter your terrestrial cannas and calla lilies. Start watching for the
bulbs and rhizomes to come into stores around March. Pick a color you
like
and plant it in regular garden soil, using a pot or basket that you
can
eventually put in your pond. Follow the directions for planting on the
package and place next to a sunny window. Water as needed to just keep
the
soil damp. When the plant gets one to two leaves, it's time to slowly
introduce it to more water.

Start by placing the pot in an inch of water. Then raise the water
level
another 1/2-1 inch each week. During this time, if weather permits,
you
should also have the plant outside in a protected area to harden it
off.
When you have the water level up to the surface of the soil, you need
to
slowly start conditioning the plant to being in the sun, while
maintaining
the water level. Once the plant is conditioned to the same amount of
direct
sun as your pond, you can put it in the pond with about 2-3 inches over
its
crown. Expect blooms long before the terrestrial cannas you planted in
the
ground to occur.

During the conditioning time if the plant tends to wilt or not mature,
you
may be increasing the water level too fast. Lower the level until you
see
the plant recover, then wait another week before continuing to raise
the
water level.

You can buy terrestrial cannas and callas lilies that are already
conditioned to water from some of the local nurseries. Expect to pay
between $10-$20 depending on type.

There are two ways to save the plant for next year. One way is to bring
the
plant inside and keep it in a shallow saucer of water and treat it like
a
house plant. The other is to go through the process of drying the bulb
or
rhizome and storing in peat moss. ~ jan

See my ponds and filter design:
www.jjspond.us

~Keep 'em Wet!~
Tri-Cities WA Zone 7a
To e-mail see website-

~Power to the Porg, Flow On!~



--
billfish


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