Viewing comments posted by FleudeLisCanna

23 found:

[ Canna (Canna x generalis 'Fairy Queen') | Posted on December 26, 2014 ]

C. 'Fairy Queen' is an old French hybrid from late 1800's - mid 1900's. It has been noted in other Internet info & research I received that 'Fairy Queen' is possibly the "ancestor" of more modern hybrids -- eg., C. 'Lucifer' and others.

These blooms are prolific on medium height (to 4ft) growth and the foliage is green with a slight "blue" hue. Clumping habit is "tight," as is the tillering. New sections may be so close to the old rhizome that they resemble bulbs!
The plant is fertile both ways (but not necessarily self pollinating) and produces good quantities of seed, provided enough pollinators are around when it flowers. I plant masses of Catmint around my canna gardens, as I find it attracts a multitude of pollinators during the day and night.

The red is quite "eye popping" and the yellow is intense and bright, but it fades off to white as the bloom ages. The red remains intense.
This canna was given its first mention in Conard & Jones Catalogue, 1899. The margins of yellow will vary in width and irregularity, depending on the heat of the season: When it is colder, they narrow!

My first division of this was acquired from an old garden in my area. The original owner's soldier husband brought her a section back from France after WWI. It still grows in that garden!

[ Canna (Canna x generalis 'Angel Pink') | Posted on December 25, 2014 ]

This gorgeous canna was introduced by Kent Kelly, Arkansas, USA. Year unknown.
In Australia, it has been incorrectly retailed as a dwarf named 'Tropical Peach' by some outlets.

C. 'Angel Pink' is fertile both ways, readily cross pollinates via pollinators, and grows easily from seed with variable results in plant size and bloom colours.
To produce plants and blooms exactly like the parent plant, it is essential to grow via rhizome divisions.

It is possible to grow this as a "shorter" canna by confining it to pots or garden areas with gravel rather than prime soil content and low watering. It is usually a "medium" height, to 5ft, but will grow taller in prime conditions with heavy fertilizing and watering.

[ Canna (Canna x generalis 'Alsace') | Posted on December 25, 2014 ]

Just for some more info on this canna, it was introduced by Dr. van der Fleet in 1894.
It is fertile in both seed and& pollen, but not "self pollinating" and therefore requires a pollinator. Results from seed may well differ from the parent plant, and the only way to get a plant exactly like the parent is by rhizome divisions.
C. 'Alsace' is not known by any other name to my knowledge.

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