About
Canna 'Richard Wallace' is a robust perennial that reaches heights of up to 1.5 meters, characterized by its vibrant apple-green foliage. In summer and early autumn, it produces clear yellow flowers featuring delicately frilled petals, each adorned with orange-red speckles near the base.
About the genus
Canna are herbaceous perennials characterized by their rhizomatous growth and upright stems. They feature broad, oval leaves and prominent flowers that include petal-like staminodes along with smaller, colored petals and sepals. These blooms appear in clusters, such as racemes or panicles, during the summer and autumn months.
Growing conditions
- Sunlight
- Full sun
- Soil type
- Loam, Sand
- Soil pH
- Acid, Alkaline, Neutral
- Soil moisture
- Moist but well-drained
- Aspect
- South-facing, West-facing
- Exposure
- Sheltered
- UK hardiness
- H3
Plant details
- Plant type
- Herbaceous Perennial, Conservatory Greenhouse
- Habit
- Bushy, Clump forming
- Foliage
- Deciduous
- Height
- 1-1.5 metres
- Spread
- 0.1-0.5 metres
- Time to full height
- 2-5 years
- Suggested uses
- City and courtyard gardens, Coastal, Cottage and informal garden, Architectural, Patio and container plants, Sub-tropical
Care notes
- Cultivation
- As a patio plant grow in pots of peat-free compost in a sheltered site in full sun. Plants can also be planted into a sunny border. Water freely and apply a high potassium feed every 2-3 weeks in the growing season. Lift the rhizomes in autumn when frost blackens the foliage. Store over winter in barely moist compost in frost-free conditions. See canna cultivation for further information
- Pruning
- Deadhead flowers to promote continued flowering. Leave to dieback in autumn
- Propagation
- Propagate by division of tubers in early spring
- Pest resistance
- May be susceptible to aphids, glasshouse red spider mite, slugs and snails, and caterpillars
- Disease resistance
- May be susceptible to canna viruses