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How to Keep Tropical Plants Through the Winter


FILE - This 2006 image provided by Chris Petersen shows an orange canna plant in bloom at Landcraft Environmentals in Mattituck, N.Y. (Chris Petersen via AP)
FILE - This 2006 image provided by Chris Petersen shows an orange canna plant in bloom at Landcraft Environmentals in Mattituck, N.Y. (Chris Petersen via AP)
How to Keep Tropical Plants Through the Winter
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Are you dreaming of a vacation to a warm place next to the sea?

You may be thinking of sitting under a palm tree, or next to a banana plant. Or you may dream of walking on a faraway island in the tropics surrounded by colorful flowers such as birds of paradise and cannas.

Tropical plants make us feel like we are in warm places with a pleasing climate. In cold climates, these plants can grow outside during the summer. But they suffer in cold weather.

The gardening expert for the Associated Press, Jessica Damiano, says most people in the United States have to treat tropical plants like annuals because they do not survive cold winters. An annual plant is one that dies after one growing season.

Following her guidelines you will find out how to save both tropical plants and money. You also can make future summers at home feel like an exotic getaway.

This undated image provided by Beth H. Brenner shows a border of elephant ears outside a home in Atlantic Beach, N.Y. (Beth H. Brenner via AP)
This undated image provided by Beth H. Brenner shows a border of elephant ears outside a home in Atlantic Beach, N.Y. (Beth H. Brenner via AP)

Colocasia

If you bought potted elephant ear plants, also called Colocasia, cannas or caladiums, bring the pots inside instead of putting them into the waste collection. Place them near a sunny window, water often and fertilize as directed with ordinary houseplant fertilizer at half strength.

If the plants are too big for the house or have been planted in the garden, leave them outdoors until the first frost turns their leaves brown. Then cut the plants down to 15 centimeters tall and dig them up.

Rinse and separate their roots, which might have small, rounded parts, and let them dry completely. Then prepare a box with some air holes and peat moss to store the roots. Place the box or container in a cool, dark place.

Examine them once a month, adding water if they seem to be drying out, and throw out any rotten pieces. Plant outdoors and fertilize when the soil has warmed up to 16 degrees Celsius in spring. You also can start them indoors in potting mix one month earlier. Set them by your sunniest window or under grow lights, keeping the soil a little wet.

This 2022 image provided by Chris Petersen shows a hibiscus flower in bloom. (Chris Petersen via AP)
This 2022 image provided by Chris Petersen shows a hibiscus flower in bloom. (Chris Petersen via AP)

Potted hibiscus and angel trumpets

Gardeners should also bring potted hibiscus and angel trumpets, also known as Brugmansia, indoors before the first frost. Treat them as houseplants by placing them next to a sunny window during winter. These plants may lose their leaves, but they will come back in the spring.

If there is no room for the plants in your living space, you can help them get through winter by storing pots at six to seven degrees Celsius. Examine them twice a month and water them very lightly when the soil feels dry at finger depth.

Before moving them outdoors, place the plants in a warm, sunny spot. Lightly prune them, water and fertilize the plants about one month before it is safe to move them back outdoors.

This 2003 image provided by Chris Petersen shows tropical banana plants growing on the Farmingdale State College campus in Farmingdale, N.Y. (Chris Petersen via AP)
This 2003 image provided by Chris Petersen shows tropical banana plants growing on the Farmingdale State College campus in Farmingdale, N.Y. (Chris Petersen via AP)

Banana plants

Potted banana plants should be cut down to soil level when the first frost browns their leaves. Store the containers in a dark place at roughly six to seven degrees Celsius. Look at the soil monthly, watering very lightly only when completely dry. Growth will begin again in spring but keep the plants indoors until the danger of frost has passed. Fertilize and resume regular watering.

Do not cut back bananas that are growing in the ground in the fall. Just dig them up and contain their roots in a plastic waste bag. Store them as you would a potted banana plant. Cut them down to 15 centimeters in spring and plant them in the garden after the danger of frost has passed.

Then, put the money you would have spent on new plants toward a water container, a firepit or tropical fruit juice. You can then sit back and enjoy your tropical backyard oasis.

I’m Jill Robbins.

Jessica Damiano reported this story for the Associated Press. Jill Robbins adapted it for Learning English.

Quiz - How to Keep Tropical Plants Through the Winter

Quiz - How to Keep Tropical Plants Through the Winter

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Words in This Story

tropics – n. the part of the world that is near the equator where the weather is very warm

exoticadj. of a plant or animal - not living or growing naturally in a particular area: from another part of the world

potted – adj. grown in a pot, a round container usually made out of clay, ceramic or plastic

frostn. a thin layer of ice that forms on the ground, on grass, etc., when the air becomes cold

prunev. to cut off some of the branches of (a tree or bush) so that it will grow better or look better

oasisn. an area in a desert where there is water and plants

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